I don바카라t call myself a 바카라fan바카라 of Ramachandra Guha because reputable dictionaries trace the origin of the word to 바카라fanatic.바카라 Based both on reading his work and some personal interaction, I know that Ram despises fanaticism. The same dictionaries though, also describe a fan as an 바카라.바카라 In such elaborations, I find my own estimation of Ram Guha. I have found no better book to introduce post-independence India to my undergraduate students than his India After Gandhi. A Corner of a Foreign Field rates among my favorite books on cricket. As I write about Kumaon바카라s history, I often refer back to Guha바카라s Unquiet Woods. I make sure I read as much of his writing on current affairs that I can. Even though, in recent times, I have disagreed with Guha, I remain an admirer, but not 바카라fan바카라 offering 바카라uncritical devotion.바카라
바카라Inside every thinking Indian there is a Gandhian and a Marxist struggling for supremacy.바카라 So began representing the unique range of interests and expertise, as well as the thoroughly engaging prose characteristic of the scholar and public intellectual that is Ramachandra Guha. Guha has negotiated a remarkable and distinctive path between these contending positions in academics and in public debates. That alone is no small achievement. It is a sign of the different polarizations of our own moment that Guha gets lumped together with leftists and labelled part of the 바카라break India into pieces brigade바카라 by right-wing internet trolls. It also displays the ignorance of such intolerant criticism because Guha is as far away as possible from taking such as position. Indeed, a criticism one could make is that his commitment to the national state and its institutions, and modernity more generally, sometimes undermine his commitment to imagining a more just, equitable India.
Guha바카라s commitment to Indian nationalism and the Indian nation-state is evident is in his disdain for the left and Marxist criticism undermining the legitimacy of the Indian state. His long and ultimately tiresome debate with in the 1990s on the Narmada dam (and later, her celebration of the Naxalite movement), was one example of this. His lack of any serious engagement with the Kashmir issue is another. These are different from his affectionate, and sometimes scathing, accounts of in the early 1980s where he also distances himself from the intellectual Marxist tradition. Guha has never distanced himself from Gandhi in the same way. It only takes a cursory reading of his output, though, to recognize Guha바카라s discomfort with Gandhi바카라s critique of modernity, Gandhian celebrations of indigenous traditions, and romanticized representations of the Indian past.
Guha바카라s way of negotiating the struggle he mentions has been to embrace Nehruvian liberalism that paid homage to Gandhi even as it celebrated socialist modernity. In times like the present, there are good reasons to be nostalgic about Nehru whether it be his respect for building institutions, or his creating a political culture respectful of diversity in India. Neither seems too important to the present political consensus. I too hanker for times when we had a more liberal political discourse, with leaders who sought to teach the young about , rather than only .
In recent times though, Guha바카라s celebration of liberal values has been insensitive to the political realities and the historical context of our times. The most controversial recently was of an article by . Even as he reiterates his opposition to Hindutva, seeing it as far more dangerous than Muslim communalism, Guha makes it clear that both Hindutva and virtually any form of explicitly Muslim politics, are equally suspect in his estimation. Guha exemplifies this unsustainable equivalence between the majoritarian ideology currently controlling the Indian state and its main targets, Indian Muslims, through a ludicrous comparison between the sartorial choices of Muslims in wearing a burqa or skull-cap and the aggressive displays of trishuls by supporters of Hindtuva. For Guha, visibly Muslim sartorial choices are markers of 바카라the most reactionary, antediluvian aspects of the faith,바카라 as are trishuls (in ways that, inexplicably, turbans or sarees are somehow not). For this, he has been rightly criticized both by of Muslim patriarchy and by . He also ignores the way in which Islamophobia in the West or in India has targeted the same markers of identity.
My point though is not to pick on a particularly poor example, but to highlight the larger ideological premise behind this argument. Guha argues that his objection to displays of Muslim sartoriality is 바카라a mark not of intolerance, but of liberalism and emancipation.바카라 He goes on to say that, regardless of their own personal faith, or lack thereof, liberals must consistently and continually uphold the values of freedom and equality. They must promote the interests of the individual against that of the community, and seek to base public policies on reason and rationality rather than on scripture. In this struggle, liberals must have the courage to take on both Hindu and Muslim communalists.
Guha sees the real battle in contemporary India as between 바카라obscurantism, dogmatism, revivalism, and traditionalism on one side and modern liberalism on the other.바카라 This 바카라classical바카라 liberalism also marked Nehruvian modernity and underpins so much of what Guha has written. Such liberalism has no place for 바카라antediluvian바카라 political identities, whether based on religion or caste and chooses to paint them all, even-handedly, as reactionary and obscurantist.
But when and where did this modern liberalism with its supposed commitment to universal freedom and equality actually exist in history? Certainly not in Europe with its . And, not in Nehru바카라s India either, actually. Despite Nehru바카라s personal liberalism, it was not that issues of religious or caste identity were irrelevant to his time. Nehru바카라s differences with not just Patel, but with Purshottamdas Tandon, K. M. Munshi, or Rajendra Prasad show considerable support for what we might term 바카라soft-Hindutva바카라 within the Congress party. Nehru had to maneuver, even threaten to resign, to keep these agenda in check. Caste was, if anything, an even more significant issue. As Rajni Kothari pointed out in the 1960s, this was managed through the 바카라.바카라 Local and provincial leaders deployed parochial networks of caste-based power, bringing in the votes, thus insulating Nehru from the ground realities of realpolitik and enabling him to speak the language of modern, western, liberalism transcending 바카라parochialisms바카라 of caste or religion. The system did not survive Nehru for too long. Indira Gandhi바카라s recourse to populism signed the final death warrant of the Congress system. The end of Congress hegemony after the Emergency unleashed forces that have transformed not just the political but also India바카라s social and cultural landscape beyond recognition. Mandir and Mandal are its current political expressions. Guha not only knows this, but has outlined some of it explicitly in his India After Gandhi. That is why it is surprising to see him turn back to the language of Nehruvian modernity in his dismissal of all forms of identity politics.
Far from being 바카라antediluvian,바카라 religion and caste have been an intrinsic part of the history and the social and cultural reality of India. Celebrating an era where these were managed for the benefit of an elite 바카라 however liberal or apparently benevolent 바카라 is hardly the best way to 바카라continually uphold the values of freedom and equality바카라 in the context of today바카라s India. In fact, what Guha terms antediluvian is, ironically enough, the product of a modern democracy that has transcended the bounds of Nehruvian management, though also the product of democracy in an illiberal, hierarchical, society. Democracy is what has compelled westernized intellectuals (whether liberal or Marxist) to engage with the realities of religion and caste that remain central to the preoccupations of 바카라the people바카라 바카라 an entity we have debated amongst ourselves in a language and vocabulary far removed from their reality and experiences. To understand, whether to combat or celebrate such politics, it is imperative to locate identity politics within the matrix of power rather than dismiss it entirely via recourse to classical liberal theory. We have to ask whether wearing a skull-cap or carrying a trishul, whether highlighting ones Brahmanism or Dalitness, reinforces the status quo of existing power relations or seeks to challenge it? That, rather than resorting to classical liberal homilies to 바카라promote the interests of the individual against that of the community,바카라 or 바카라base public policies on reason and rationality rather than on scripture바카라 has to be the way to engage with the politics of our times. In other words, the politics of identity is necessarily tied to questions of power, and cannot be understood outside of its context. But such a focus on power might bring us too close to the sort of leftist politics that Guha has already discarded.
(The writer teaches Indian history at Northern Arizona University, US.)