In the winter of 1959, Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King, visited India. When they arrived in Mumbai, King told reporters, โTo other countries, I may go as a tourist, but to India, I come as a pilgrim.โ King was fascinated by Gandhi’s nonviolent struggle against the British and had long dreamed of visiting India.
The couple stayed back in India for an entire month. One afternoon, the king and his wife visited a high school where children from the Untouchable castes were being taught. The school principal made an introduction: โYoung people, I would like to present to you a fellow of the untouchable caste from the United States of America.โ
King was appalled at the comparison. He never expected himself to be addressed as untouchable, for he was an alien to the system. When King began to think about the reality of the lives of the 20 million African Americans he was fighting for. He said to himself, โYes, I am an untouchable, and every Negro in the United States of America is untouchable.โ
Caste and Everything That Divides Us
In her bestselling book Caste: The Lies That Divide Us, Isabel Wilkerson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, introduce caste as a guiding framework to analyse racial hierarchy and stigmatisation that holds African Americans at the bottom of the ladder.ย
Caste is divided into seven parts, each addressing the broad contours of caste and the interplay between caste and race in the United States. Her work is lyrically absorbing with its brilliant use of anecdotes, allegories, and metaphors about โan old house.โ
Throughout her work, Wilkerson uses words such as โdominant caste,โ โmiddle caste,โ โdisfavoured caste,โ or โlowest casteโ instead of, or in addition to, โwhite,โ โAsian or Latino,โ and โAfrican Americanโ to refer to the American caste system.ย
Caste as Defined by Isabel Wilkerson
Wilkerson defines caste as the โarchitecture of human hierarchy, the subconscious code of instructionsโ for sustaining social order. A caste system โis an artificial construction, a fixed and embedded ranking of human value that sets the presumed supremacy of one group against the presumed inferiority of the other,โ she writes.
In her thesis, Wilkerson notes that the caste hierarchy is โnot about feelings or moralityโ, but power, resources, authority and respect โ which groups have it and which do not, who gets to acquire and control them, and who does not.
To understand caste and its implicit use of unconscious ranking of human characteristics โused to justify brutalities against entire groups within our species,โ Wilkerson draws stark parallels between the โtragically accelerated, chilling, and officially vanquishing caste systemโ of Hitlerโs Germany that exterminated millions of Jews, lasting 12 years; the โlingering, millennia-long caste system of Indiaโ that continues to stigmatize Dalits โ the former untouchables โ even to this day; and the โshape-shifting, unspoken, race-based caste pyramid in the US,โ that has been dehumanising the African American community for centuries.
Wilkerson’s Ideation of Caste in the United States
Wilkerson, in her work, analyses the interplay between race and caste in the United States. For this purpose, she explores the writings of Ashley Montagu, Gunnar Myrdal, Allison Davis, and W.E.B. Du Bois, among others.
In his path-breaking work, Deep South (1941), Allison Davis, an African American social anthropologist, examines the parallels between African Americans under the Jim Crow South in the United States and Dalits in India. In his 1944 comprehensive report on race in America titled An American Dilemma, Social economist Gunnar Myrdal concludes that โthe most accurate term for American society is not a race, but caste.โย

Drawing from their works, Wilkerson contends that โcaste and race coexist in the same cultureโ, and they serve to reinforce one another. In the American caste system, the signal of rank in the form of oneโs colour and appearance is known as race. In the language of race, caste is the underlying grammar that defines it.
Race is what one sees โ the physical traits with arbitrary meanings โ and caste is the โpowerful infrastructureโ that holds each group in its place.
Inย Caste, Wilkerson identifies eight โpillars of casteโ โ divine will, heritability, endogamy, occupational hierarchy, dehumanisation and stigma, terror as enforcement and cruelty as means of control, and inheritance of superiority and inferiority โ that underlie the working of caste across societies. She illustrates these features using examples from India, Nazi Germany, and the United States.
Tentacles of Caste
In the โtentacles of caste,โ Wilkerson describes various ways caste permeates a society infected by it. She addresses the โunconscious biasโ embedded deep within oneโs culture and its function of perpetuating caste. And the role of lower castes as โscapegoatsโ of the caste system. Wilkerson notes, โAs scapegoats, they are seen as the reason for societal ills.โ
She adds that the โcaste system thrives on dissension and inequality, envy and false rivalriesโ that result from scarcity in societies. In another chapter, Wilkerson discusses the inherent โnarcissismโ that sustains the caste system.
Caste in the Racial Structure
The dominant caste acts as โthe sun around which all other castes revolveโ, and these castes are ranked in โdescending order by their physical proximityโ to the dominant caste. โCaste behaviour,โ Wilkerson writes, โis a response to oneโs assigned place in the hierarchy.โ The culture enables one to take instructions from dominant castes โ follow them, revere them, and not argue with them when they are wrong.
Although Wilkersonโs work elaborates on race in the caste hierarchy, she doesnโt explicate class privilege in terms of oneโs inheritance of intergenerational trauma and post-memory among African Americans.
Wilkerson utilises Indiaโs most enduring caste framework, comprising fourย varnasย โ Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra โ and Dalits, formerly known as untouchables. However,ย jatis, the subset ofย varna,ย represent the sustained harsh reality of Indian society. Theseย jatisย are not rigid. And someย jatis,ย as shown by several Indian socialย anthropologists, have climbed the ladder, while others have slipped down. Theย postcolonial scholarshipย on caste has further shown us that British colonialism has imposed a certain rigidity in structuring caste as it exists today.ย
What captures most ofย Wilkersonโs attention is the textualised division of caste in its purest form, a hierarchy of division and normalised stigma โย varna. Through this caste framework, she opens up a debate on what constitutes caste in our society. Wilkerson writes, โcaste is the powerful institution that holds each group in its placeโ. We see caste everywhere when we apply this understanding to our day-to-day lives.
Reflection on Caste
In my childhood, I attended a boarding school in Kadapatti โ a temple town associated with the caste crusaderย Basavaย in southern India. On Sundays and other holidays, we, as children, would stand behind the windows of an unknown neighbourhood, peep through the tinted glasses, and stare at the Television, watching dramatic Kannada movies, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), and the Cricket World Cup.
As young as nine, we knew our positions, roles, and functions as we huddled through those tinted glasses. Looking back, I understand that the mere notion of โpeeping through the tinted glassesโ and โowning a Televisionโ shows us the caste structure โ and the roles and behaviours it elicits.
Where There Is No Caste: Utopia
Caste, in its truest sense, isย oneโs inability to accept others as oneself.ย And this form of caste exists everywhere. This inability enables the rich to look at the people without food and shelter in tatters with particularย disgust.ย
In a rural Indian household, women are taught from a young age that their role is restricted to the four-walled kitchen. In international society, developed countries look down upon the Third World. And the transgender community still faces perpetual stigma in South Asian societies. Wilkersonโs appropriation of caste into Western societies โ the tendency to define caste in Western terms โ might blur the harsh realities of caste in India.
A new legitimised caste structure has emerged in the modern capitalist system. A factory has a particular structure with foremen, supervisors, the board of directors, and executive heads โ each playing their roles within an institutionalised hierarchy with a scalar chain of command.
In hisย Annihilation of Casteย (1935), Ambedkar (whom Wilkerson calls the Martin Luther King, Jr. of India) wrote, โcaste does not bring about the division of labour; it brings about the division of labourers.โ The caste roles enable blue-collar employees to be treated in a particular manner, as opposed to white-collar employees. It enables theย watchmanย of an organisation to behave in a particular manner and salute those who come through those gates. These caste behaviours are inevitably defined and structured in relation to oneโs socio-economic and political power.
Critiquing Caste
Wilkerson does not, however, delve deep into the modern manifestations of caste in our society. But, she commences a debate on the term โcasteโ and its varied existence in human society, with Nazi Germany, America, and the Indian variant of caste as merely some of theย manyย forms. As Wilkerson notes, โCaste, like grammar, becomes an invisible guide not only to how we speak but how we process information.โ Caste is against humanity. It divides humans based on theirย arbitrarily presumed worth.
It does not just assume that all humans are not born equal, but caste provides the basis for our behaviour and rules of engagement and encourages stigmatisation of the other. Wilkersonโsย Casteย enables us toย rethinkย our complacency towards the perpetuating caste in our societies in its various forms.ย
In Wilkersonโs thesis, the caste framework helps one to understand โracismโ and the โracial stigmaโ against African Americans in the United States. She concludes her essential essay on caste by helping us recognise it and then enabling us to dismantle it. It is possible, Wilkerson writes, to create a โworld without caste [that] would set everyone freeโ, for it requires both individual bravery and enormous collective will of dominant castes.

Thank you for the very interesting post. Gave me a new perspective on this. In Europe we talk about class and I think it can be fitted in as a caste system.
Glad you liked it! Happy Reading :โ)