For somebody who was not exposed
to any literature on middle classes before, the readings prescribed for this
class were a revelation in many senses. While going through the readings,
especially Lietchy’s formulation of middle class as a ‘suitably modern’ group
constantly engaged in the process of ‘becoming’ a class in a performative space
reminded me of the experience that I underwent looking for a house in a decent
locality close to NIAS. I wish to be autobiographical this time sharing my own
experience of ‘class’ in a middle class neighbourhood in Bangalore. I also want
to draw your attention to how ‘class’ in India is unavoidably filtered through
the lenses of caste and religion, and how a class experience cannot be spoken
of without qualifying it by caste. This seems to be very evident to me the way
our neighbourhoods are segregated (who will get to live where?) even in a metropolitan
city like Bangalore.
When I went looking for houses within
2kms radius of NIAS, my aim was to find a middle class locality, a decent
residential area away from the common din (maybe you can read it as lower class
din). If I deconstruct what I had in mind (when I went on telling people I
needed a middle class locality) in the light of the readings for discussion
today, I could locate myself in a middle class position (desiring a healthy
distance from the lower classes and their noise which I thought Mathikere was
so full of) and also get a sense of how my own class position was evaluated (by
the people who rented their place to me) when I finalised a house in ITI
Layout.
My survey of the neighbourhood of
ITI layout, going around asking for houses (many people do not entertain
brokers), gave me a sense of the kind of neighbourhood the very first day. A
few inquiries and stops told me they preferred Brahmins (the very first
question most people asked me was about my caste and my eating habits and then
the size of my family). There were many who said that they won’t rent the place
to anyone other than Brahmins. I was let in many places to see the house but
they had other tests to confirm if I was really a Brahmin (maybe my looks were
not that assuring of my Brahmin self) by asking me about my subcaste and gotra.
I found a lot of these questions irritating but I had no option to answer them.
When they learned I was going to live alone, they wanted to make sure that I believe
in and act according to certain middle class morals and values. Some owners
said they don’t want to rent the place to a single women because they don’t
want to take the ‘risk’ (by that maybe they meant a woman living alone without
parents or husband is not to be trusted). That’s when I realized maybe I will
not be able get a place on my own because most of them evaluated me as not
belonging to ‘Brahmin middle class’ category inspite of my telling them so. I
liked the locality very much and wasn’t ready to go seek houses elsewhere. There
was a gap between what they meant by ‘Brahmin middle class’ and what I was
conveying through my very appearance- ‘Brahmin middle class’. The two did not
match. That was when I realized the burden of ‘caste/class expectations’ and
how I didn’t completely fulfil them. I wasn’t ‘suitably’ middle class Brahmin girl
of 25 years age (in saying that I will be living alone, I somehow did not fit
neatly into their image of a middle class Brahmin girl).
To cut the long story short, I made
my father negotiate the deal for me because I couldn’t take all the enquiries
after sometime. After my parents intervened, the owner was willing to rent the
place to me on condition that I don’t bring boys and use the place for any
other purpose than residence. My father was made to vouch for my middle class
Brahminness. My parents visit me often to just give the sense that I am not
some totally unmonitored young woman living in a city all by myself. In my
everyday interactions with the people around me, I often get questions like
when I’m going to marry (the fact that I speak Kannada makes them ask these
questions easily). My parents are also asked the same question sometimes when
they visit me. Whenever I bring people to home I get a sense that my neighbours
are watching me (till date I’ve not taken any of my male friends home). My
neighbours take great pride in how the locality has remained a Brahmin locality
since its beginning and how anybody who has come to occupy one of the houses in
the neighbourhood has made it big in life but has still remained true to the
middle class roots. I’m also expected to be the same. I’m surrounded by all
Brahmins who make sure that the next one who comes to occupy the place will also be a ‘Brahmin’ who doesn’t unsettle their
ways of life and beliefs. Outside the walls of my house I have to play or
perform to conform to their Brahmin middle class mores, if I want to deviate, I
can do it only at the risk of leaving the place.
Rashmi, Thanks for sharing this. I think that recording and reflecting on such experiences are important as a kind of auto-ethnography that can help us think through broader issues. You are absolutely right about the complex intersections of caste and class -- except for Leicthy, the readings we are discussing today do not address this issue head-on, but we can pursue that question if you like later. A book on this subject that I highly recommend is Ramesh Bairy's Being Brahmin, Being Modern: Exploring the Lives of Caste Today (New Delhi: Routledge, 2010), where he argues that the Brahminical identity of the middle class (at least in South India) gets elided by the discourse of middle-classness. I am also trying to address this problem in the book I am working on about IT workers.
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