According to M.N. Srinivas, the Backward Classes Movement especially in South India, is fundamentally a movement evolved to achieve mobility. It was started by those groups which had lagged behind the Brahmins in Westernisation.
Education, employment in the Government, and participation in the new political processes are essential for such mobility. Education is a necessary means for securing the other two involved in it. It has led to the “Self-Respect Movement”.
It has contributed to the widespread rivalry between castes which have shown eagerness to move-up. It has assaulted the Brahmins’ cultural and social dominance and exclusiveness.
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Increase in Horizontal Solidarity:
In the process of participating in the modern political, educational, economic and other processes, the caste system has undergone a significant change. The caste has been made free from its traditional local and vertical matrix. Within the local area, the stress is laid on the interdependence of castes or local sections of castes.
The coming into existence of new opportunities, educational, economic, and political, brought about an increase in horizontal solidarity. Internal differences of a caste are undermined now.
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“Different sections of a caste” are coming closer and getting united. Hence, the term ‘ Vokkaligas’ today includes the ‘Nonaba, Hallikara, Halumatha, Morasu, Kunchutiga,’ and such other different sections of Vokkaliga caste. The term ‘Brahmins’ includes the Smarthas, Madhvas, Iyers, Iyegngars and other sub-sections.
It is difficult to say whether the increase in horizontal solidarity has occurred equally with all the castes. It is certainly taking place among the high castes. The Scheduled Castes have come together for political purposes. It is true that political forces have played a vital part in stimulating horizontal solidarity. Urbanisation has increased spatial mobility. Westernised style of life and modern ideology has also played an important part.
The spread of equalitarian ideology, and increasing political and social mobilisation, reveal that a fundamental change is taking place. This does not mean that this movement cannot be described as a movement from a ‘closed’ to an ‘open’ system of social stratification.