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Casteless Mumbai is a myth

A California-based professor dips into Dalit literature, poems and manifestos to discuss how a city that's hailed as cosmopolitan is not just one of haves and have-nots, but one steeped in caste prejudices too

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1990s saw regularity of violence directed at Dalits. Firing at Ramabai Nagar in Ghatkopar left 10 dead. It made Juned Shaikh realise caste violence was not just a feature of rural India. File photo from 2020. Pic/Getty Images

1990s saw regularity of violence directed at Dalits. Firing at Ramabai Nagar in Ghatkopar left 10 dead. It made Juned Shaikh realise caste violence was not just a feature of rural India. File photo from 2020. Pic/Getty Images

In Mumbai, class differences are stark. A high-rise abutting a slum, a swimming pool within shouting distance of a swollen drain, and the homeless taking shelter outside a five-star hotel, are everyday sights. As a land of opportunity and challenges, it has continued to straddle these contrasts for over a century. Rarely ever, though, have we seen the megalopolis through the prism of caste.

In a new book, Juned Shaikh, associate professor of history at the University of California, Santa Cruz, examines why our view of Mumbai as a city of haves 
and have-nots alone, could be a narrow one.

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