Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India. / Andersen, Peter Birkelund; Paul, Sujit Kumar; Biswas, Buddhadev .

In: ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS ), Vol. 2, No. 1, 2024, p. 88-95.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Andersen, PB, Paul, SK & Biswas, B 2024, 'Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India', ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS ), vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 88-95. <https://www.espjournals.org/IJSHMS/ijshms-v2i1p110>

APA

Andersen, P. B., Paul, S. K., & Biswas, B. (2024). Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India. ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS ), 2(1), 88-95. https://www.espjournals.org/IJSHMS/ijshms-v2i1p110

Vancouver

Andersen PB, Paul SK, Biswas B. Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India. ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS ). 2024;2(1):88-95.

Author

Andersen, Peter Birkelund ; Paul, Sujit Kumar ; Biswas, Buddhadev . / Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India. In: ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS ). 2024 ; Vol. 2, No. 1. pp. 88-95.

Bibtex

@article{de1e7c57b67248a69c4bca04bc4adf77,
title = "Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India",
abstract = "This article addresses the living pattern of the Santal Scheduled Tribe in India, a group of more than 6 million people, but here described on the basis of a few villages in Birbhum, West Bengal. The aim is to document how far a typical settlement and living pattern of rural Santals of West Bengal in India led to a lesser dissemination than among so many other Indian communities. In this way the article, accepts the general argument forwarded by Prof. A.B. Ota on the Scheduled Tribes in Odisha, but aims at adding content to the inner Santal perspective to his observations from outside. In this way the pandemic and the closedowns become a prism breaking the evidence regarding isolation in ways which makes implicit knowledge of integration evident.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Santal, COVID-19, Birbhum India, India Birbhum, Santals of West Bengal",
author = "Andersen, {Peter Birkelund} and Paul, {Sujit Kumar} and Buddhadev Biswas",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "88--95",
journal = "ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS )",
issn = "2583-9756",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Isolated Yet Living and Working among others during COVID-19 – Santals of Birbhum in India

AU - Andersen, Peter Birkelund

AU - Paul, Sujit Kumar

AU - Biswas, Buddhadev

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This article addresses the living pattern of the Santal Scheduled Tribe in India, a group of more than 6 million people, but here described on the basis of a few villages in Birbhum, West Bengal. The aim is to document how far a typical settlement and living pattern of rural Santals of West Bengal in India led to a lesser dissemination than among so many other Indian communities. In this way the article, accepts the general argument forwarded by Prof. A.B. Ota on the Scheduled Tribes in Odisha, but aims at adding content to the inner Santal perspective to his observations from outside. In this way the pandemic and the closedowns become a prism breaking the evidence regarding isolation in ways which makes implicit knowledge of integration evident.

AB - This article addresses the living pattern of the Santal Scheduled Tribe in India, a group of more than 6 million people, but here described on the basis of a few villages in Birbhum, West Bengal. The aim is to document how far a typical settlement and living pattern of rural Santals of West Bengal in India led to a lesser dissemination than among so many other Indian communities. In this way the article, accepts the general argument forwarded by Prof. A.B. Ota on the Scheduled Tribes in Odisha, but aims at adding content to the inner Santal perspective to his observations from outside. In this way the pandemic and the closedowns become a prism breaking the evidence regarding isolation in ways which makes implicit knowledge of integration evident.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Santal

KW - COVID-19

KW - Birbhum India

KW - India Birbhum

KW - Santals of West Bengal

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 88

EP - 95

JO - ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS )

JF - ESP International Journal of Science, Humanities and Management Studies ( ESP IJSHMS )

SN - 2583-9756

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 384191654