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Description
Eco-Folk Rhythms: A Puttinai Analysis of Mavilan Songs examines the oral traditions of the Mavilan tribe through the ecocritical lens of puttinai, an indigenous theoretical framework. Dr. Abraham's research bridges traditional ecocritical approaches with indigenous knowledge systems, offering fresh insights into how tribal songs encode environmental wisdom and sustainable practices. The book analyzes the Mavilan songs as repositories of ecological knowledge, demonstrating how these oral traditions reflect inter connections among humans, nature, and supernature. Through a close analysis of agricultural, nuptial, and ritual songs, the author reveals how the Mavilan worldview presents an alternative paradigm for addressing contemporary environmental challenges.
Drawing on extensive fieldwork and documentation of Mavilan oral traditions, this study advances puttinai as a theoretical tool that emerges from indigenous perspectives rather than Western academic frameworks. puttinai, formerly known as oikopoetics, was propounded by Nirmal Selvamony from the theory of tinai in Tolkappiyam, the ancient Tamil grammatical treatise.
The analysis demonstrates how Mavilan songs articulate environmental ethics, bioregional consciousness, and sustainable cultural practices. This pioneering work contributes significantly to ecocritical scholarship, indigenous studies, anthropology, folklore and tribal studies for further research.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: The Mavilan Tribe
Chapter 2: puttinai
Chapter 3: The Mavilan Tribe's Trajectory in and through the tinaikal
Chapter 4: Agricultural Labour Songs
Chapter 5: Nuptial Songs
Chapter 6: Ritual Songs
Product details
| Published | 05 Feb 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781666980066 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 12 b/w |
| Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
| Series | Ecocritical Theory and Practice |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"Lillykutty Abraham is remarkable for braving many firsts -- for compiling the first ever anthology of the songs of the Mavilan tinai (Adivasi) community in the Western Ghats, the first to unveil the integrative tinai (the pre-state lifeway) embodied in their songs, and also to author the first full book applying puttinai theory. Abraham's work is a reaffirmation of the urgent need and momentousness to birth a brave new tinai world, and has the political muscle needed to persuade any conscientious powers-that-be to end the present Anthropocene and usher in the Neotinaicene."
Nirmal Selvamony, author of Tinai Philosophy: The Indigenous Lifeway for the Anthropocene
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"This is a splendid book: an informed, engaging study of the oral traditions of the Mavilan tribe that highlights their deep ecological wisdom and cultural fortitude. It locates indigenous knowledge within a deeply textured eco-critical frame through putti?ai, as it becomes the narrative point of intersection between theory and lived experience. With the help of extremely detailed field research, the author succeeds in capturing details of not only agricultural, nuptial and ritual songs but also how these practices have perfected a symbiotic relationship with nature." It symbolizes the resilience of Indian Knowledge Systems in interpreting human-environment interlinkages. Required reading for folklorists, ecocritics, and scholars of indigenous literatures alike, it paints an engaging picture of the continued relevance of Mavilan oral culture."
Anupama Nayar, Christ University

























