
New Books Network P. C. Saidalavi, "Seeking Allah's Hierarchy: Caste, Labor, and Islam in India" (U Pennsylvania Press, 2025)
Feb 4, 2026
P. C. Saidalavi, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Shiv Nadar University, explores Muslim barbers in Kerala and how Islamic values shape intra-communal hierarchy. He discusses fieldwork origins, ethical listening, competing lineage claims, patronage and labor relations, jurisprudential labels that justify humiliation, and how unionization and migration reshaped dignity and status.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Rethinking Caste Among South Asian Muslims
- Caste as a category flattens and misrepresents Muslim social hierarchies in South Asia.
- P. C. Saidalavi argues Muslims exercise distinct, agentive mechanisms to justify hierarchy, not merely Hindu acculturation.
Use Ethical Listening To Check Bias
- Practice 'ethical listening' by treating yourself as morally educable and examining your prejudices.
- P. C. Saidalavi used this method to recognize his inherited hierarchical biases during fieldwork.
Barbers' Origin Myth Reclaims Status
- Barbers claim descent from an Arab companion of Malik ibn Dinar to assert seniority over Mapilas.
- This origin myth reframes a derogatory label into a dignified genealogy that contests local hierarchies.

