Aninhalli Vasavi


Prof. Aninhalli R. Vasavi is a Social Anthropologist and an Independent Researcher-based out of Bengaluru, with interests in agrarian studies, sociology of India and educational studies. She did her M.A. and M.Phil. in Sociology from the University of Delhi, and her PhD in Social Anthropology from Michigan State University in 1993. with a thesis "The harbingers of rain : culture and drought in Bijapur, India." She has worked at the Indian Institute of Management ̶ Ahmedabad, and for 14 years at National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru, including a year as Dean of Social Sciences.

Biography

She holds a B.A. ; Stella Maris College, Chennai. M.A. and M.Phil from the Dept of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi. PhD in Social Anthropology from Michigan State University, USA. She has worked from 1997 to 2011 as Faculty at National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, and had also been Adjunct Faculty at Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode, Kerala, and Visiting Professor, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA. 1992–93.
She is currently with Punarchith Collective, an alternative learning place for rural youth at Chamarajanagar, Karnataka.
Vasavi is a founder and active member of the Centre for Research and Education in Social Transformation , Kozhikode, Kerala, an institute that facilitates comprehensive learning for the scheduled castes and tribes.
Her work appears in academic journals and in books authored or edited.
Vasavi left NIAS in 2011 to pursue her own research and to develop Punarchith, an organization for alternative learning she helped set up in Chamarajanagar district, Karnataka.

Academic Work

Vasavi has four different areas of research. She has made seminal contributions towards an environmentally-aware ethnographic perspective on agrarian economy and culture. Her book on farmers' suicides demonstrates how the individualization and alienation produced by industrial farming methods generate unbearable social suffering that goes far beyond mere indebtedness or drought.
Her research on primary education offers an insightful analysis of the cultural embeddedness of the school, the teacher and the child as simultaneously social and administrative entities. Her concept of 'school differentiation' appears in key reports written for international agencies and the governments of India, Karnataka and Rajasthan. She is a contributor to the ethnography and political economy of the IT profession in India. She is also the executive producer of a documentary trilogy on the IT industry in Bengaluru, Coding Culture.
As a locally rooted and globally reputed public intellectual, She has facilitated a productive engagement between Kannada writers and westernized social science in Kannada.

Key Publications

Harbingers of Rain: Land and Life in South India , according to WorldCat, is held in 144 libraries; In an Outpost of the Global Economy ; Inner Mirror: Translation of Kannada Writings on Society and Culture, Volagannadi ; Shadow Space: Suicides and the Predicament of Rural India.