In 1992, autobiographical writings by these people were collected in Poisoned Bread and an anthology co-edited by Eleanor Zelliot. A modernist novel is titled for one of these people who prizes a hockey stick and the “fashun” of Tommies from the British barracks. Latin American testimonios inspired the writings of women from this group like Bama and the author of The Prisons We Broke. An uncle and nephew from this group ride the morning express in the prologue of a novel in which they work as tailors for Dina and are later sterilized. One of these people named Bakha titles a 1935 novel by Mulk Raj Anand. A Communist member of this group who works at Paradise Pickles & Preserves is beaten to death after he is blamed for the murder of Sophie Mol by Baby Kochamma. For 10 points, Ammu transgresses the “Love Laws” with a member of what caste named Velutha in The God of Small Things? ■END■
ANSWER: Dalits [or Dalita; accept Untouchables; accept Scheduled Castes or SCs; accept Chamar or Jatav; accept An Anthology of Dalit Literature; prompt on outcastes; prompt on Malayali, Keralite, Marāṭhī, Indian people, sweepers, or latrine cleaners by asking “of what class?”] (Baby Kamble wrote The Prisons We Broke. The fourth sentence is from A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry. Anand’s novel is Untouchable. Arundhati Roy wrote The God of Small Things.)
<World Literature>
= Average correct buzz position