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FOREWORD

India is as heterogeneous as it is populous. A country that speaks over 30 different languages, with 29 different states and yet to the outside world we continue to exist as a unified entity with a Hindi-speaking homogeneity. This is not the case. To the uninitiated, India is a boiling pot of social, political, and colonial angst. While a large number of these struggles are documented and continue to be studied, one vein that is seldom touched upon is the very sensory distance between the dominant Hindi-speaking demographic in the north, and the non-hindi speaking states in the south. It is important to note however that this does not imply a natural divide between the geographic north and south of the country, but rather a cultural distinction between two independent races of people with different historical routes to their Indianness.

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Indigenous to the subcontinent with possible connections to descendants from West Asia, Dravidians are an ethnic and linguistic group native to South Asia. Despite a momentous Indo-Aryan migration that forever changed the dynamic of the subcontinent, the south for the majority of history

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