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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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726 Wrestling and Grappling: India<br />

champions in order to enhance the prestige of the event. <strong>The</strong> rationale for<br />

organizing a dangal is nam kamana (making a name for oneself), thus making<br />

the events inherently competitive rather than just formal contexts<br />

within which athletes compete.<br />

What is most significant about dangals is the pomp and circumstance<br />

of the event as a whole, as it revolves around a series of progressively important<br />

bouts. Significantly, dangals are characterized by a degree of structured<br />

improvisation and ad hoc negotiation, in the sense that the questions<br />

of who will compete with whom and what the length of a contest will be<br />

are often worked out in public with a high degree of panache and affected<br />

style. Similarly, the dangal is very much a stage where wrestlers perform,<br />

and not simply an arena where moves are executed with athletic precision.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is certainly no standardization with regard to how to structure dangal<br />

competition—no stipulated panel of judges, no weight-class criteria, no<br />

time limit as such, no sharply delineated boundary. All of this means that<br />

dangals can be very volatile and contentious, for although there are clearly<br />

delineated rules, and skill, strength, and stamina define, in some sense, the<br />

aesthetics of competitive performance, a dangal always seems to verge on<br />

the edge of chaos, and there is usually some degree of unstructured confrontation<br />

between competing groups. Thus in an important way dangal<br />

competition strains against the rule-bound protocol of competitive freestyle<br />

wrestling in India. Moreover, the pahalwan who is on stage at a dangal is<br />

called on to embody an ideal of physical development (tremendous mass,<br />

density, and radiance) that is somewhat at odds with the paired-down,<br />

lean, flexible musculature of the international wrestler.<br />

This, however, is a very recent development, as is most clearly illustrated<br />

by the case of Gama who, embodying the ideals of a pahalwan, beat<br />

Stanley Zybyzko in what was, in effect, a <strong>World</strong> Championship “dangal”<br />

staged in London by the John Bull Society in 1908. Subsequently, in 1928,<br />

Gama defended his title as world champion in a dangal staged in India by<br />

the maharaja of Patiala. When Gama was world champion from 1908 until<br />

1950 it was still possible to be a world champion, and to be that as an<br />

Indian wrestler. Now, at best, one can be a heavyweight freestyle gold<br />

medal winner, and only then as a wrestler from India competing in the<br />

Olympics or the Asian Games.<br />

Joseph S. Alter<br />

See also India; Religion and Spiritual Development: India; Written Texts:<br />

India<br />

References<br />

Alter, Joseph S. 1993. “<strong>The</strong> Body of One Color: Indian Wrestling, the<br />

Indian State and Utopian Somatics.” Cultural Anthropology 8, no. 1:<br />

49–72.<br />

———. 1994. “<strong>The</strong> Celibate Wrestler: Sexual Chaos, Embodied Balance and

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