Dog Fighting: Performing Masculinity in Rural South Punjab, Pakistan

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Dog fighting, along with other nonhuman-animal-fighting activities, is a popular pastime in rural South Punjab, Pakistan. This article explicates dog fighting and discusses its symbolic significance to those who control the game, organize it, and participate in the performance. It is based on year-long ethnographic fieldwork with dog fighters in South Punjab, Pakistan, and examines the activity within the Punjabi cultural context where it is taken as an enthusiastic predilection (shauq) for displaying masculinity (mardāngī) to achieve honor (izzat).

Key Questions

  • How do rural men develop an attachment to their fighting dogs?

  • What motivates the men to engage in dog fighting?

  • How is dog fighting a cultural practice?

  • What type of social gains do dog fighters make when there is no gambling involved?

  • What symbolic meanings can be drawn from this activity from an emic perspective?

Inspirational Texts

Alter, J. S. (1992). The wrestler’s body: Identity and ideology in North India. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Appadurai, A. (1995). Playing with modernity: The decolonization of Indian cricket. In C. A. Breckenridge (Ed.), Consuming modernity: Public culture in a South Asian world (pp. 23-48). Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.