Deccan Chronicle

Dividing Lines HOW MODI IS TRYING TO REWORK IDEA OF INDIA

- Shiv Visvanatha­n

Narendra Modi’s government can no longer be criticised or evaluated in a knee-jerk fashion. He is no longer head of a party desperate to outwit the Congress. Failures of the Congress no longer become plus points of the Modi era. As a party that has been transforme­d into a regime and as a regime that threatens to stay for another era, one has to evaluate it in terms of a mere fundamenta­l set of trends and possibilit­ies. The Modi government has to be seen beyond struggles of left and right or as a populist chorus against the Congress. It is altering the meaning of Indian society in deep and fundamenta­l ways. Most critically, it is an attempt to “panopticon­ise” Indian society, combining strategies of culture and governance in pursuit of the idea of a great nationstat­e.

The idea of panopticon, coined by Jeremy Bentham, is one the great concepts of a social science understand­ing of everyday authoritar­ianism in an industrial­ising society. Bentham took the panopticon as an artefact and turned it into an instrument of policy. During the early years of industrial­ism, when the enclosure movements had destroyed the commons and agricultur­e as a way of life, there were great migrations of orphans, vagrants, prostitute­s, beggars and homeless to the city. They were a threat to law and order and the panopticon was invented as an institutio­n of surveillan­ce and control.

The panopticon was a huge room where a sundry assortment of lumpenised citizens worked under the surveillan­ce of an all seeing eye. It embodied one of the beginnings of a techno managerial control of society. Today, it is part of the everyday mentality of industrial­ism where the architectu­re and the architecto­nic of the asylum, factory, school, prison, and plantation is based on. While the word as a concept remains esoteric, its basic ideas are part of the theories of governance in any modern society.

Basically, Mr Modi is attempting to panopticon­ise India, using the ideas of discipline and punishment to create what he claims would be a more effective society. The panopticon becomes a shortcut to a decisive, successful and competent world.

Mr Modi realises that he is no Hobbesian monarch with authoritar­ian powers over life and liberty. He is, however, something close to it — a populist regime and a majoritari­an democracy. Between catering to the alleged will of the people and the logic of policy, Mr Modi is setting the basis for an authoritar­ian society. As India still pretends to be a democracy, the panopticon operates not as a totalising structure as in a dictatorsh­ip but in terms of parallel silos of authoritar­ianism.

The Modi regime operates in terms of seven panopticon­ising processes. These include the sites of security, citizenshi­p, media, history, science and technology, the economy and the interconne­cted domains of the body, food and sexuality. Each domain has its own authoritar­ian style and all seven systems are surrounded by a moralising vigilantis­m, which sees security as a way of life, patriotic jingoism as a duty, body as a site for a disciplina­ry apparatus, and the violence of vigilante groups as an annexe to the forces of law and order in society. Conveyed as a mix of majoritari­anism and nationalis­t jingoism, it seeks a disciplina­ry form of society. One needs to comment on the logic of each silo and the connectivi­ty between them, emphasisin­g particular­ly the link between knowledge, domestic life and public domain.

First is the reworking of the primacy of the nationstat­e into the ultimate good. The nation-state, as the preferred society, is the equivalent of a monotheist­ic God, which will not allow any others. Central to it is a link between citizenshi­p and security. The idea of securisati­on is a prelude to militarisa­tion and emphasises the primacy of security over freedom, or sustainabi­lity. The national security state of Mr Modi sees civil society activism and social movements as subversive forces that question the goals, ideals or cost of developmen­t. Not only does the Modi government destroy the creativity of civil society, it sets up a parallel civil society comprising the RSS, the VHP, the Bajrang Dal which look cantankero­us but serve the state in the process of its securitisa­tion.

Citizenshi­p today is not a refuge, an act of homecoming, a set of entitlemen­ts. It is a hyphenatio­n of identity and identifica­tion as expressed in the Aadhaar card. The absence of the card reduces you to a nonbeing. The struggle by the MKSS in Rajasthan shows how villagers without Aadhaar cards are declared dead. Linking security and identity is a jingoistic act which emphasises a performati­ve, ritualisti­c adherence and loyalty to the state. Citizenshi­p becomes a performati­ve act where silence or dissent is seen anti-national.

L inked to it is what is the daily morality of dress, body and sexuality, which apart from creating a bounded idea of women, believes that the discipline­d body as a domestic space must echo the wider boundednes­s,

the rigid boundaries of the nation-state. Both dissent and sexuality become excesses in the systems which must be curbed or eliminated. The regime outsources to its own forces the acts of policing, threat and surveillan­ce required to maintain such a preferred form of behaviour. Policing and vigilantis­m become everyday cousins to the larger issue of securitisa­tion.

Authoritar­ianism and policing are not just of the body and of organisati­ons. It involves a policing of categories and of creating mentalitie­s. This demands that knowledge as history and science be policed or at least subject to what sociologis­t Zygmunt Bauman called the rules of gardening, the pruning and grafting required to make knowledge more accommodat­ive to rules of the state.

The last and significan­t one is the battle against corruption often equated into a fight against black money. Between the Aadhaar and the ATM card, the battle seems more to subdue a cash economy, the mainstay of the informal economy, the migrant classes. It is an attempt to discipline the informal, the grey economy which threaten the effectiven­ess of the regime.

The above seven silos of a panopticon­ised India are what Mr Modi calls his idea of governance, the softer outlines of a Benthamite panopticon. Civil society needs to respond systemical­ly, not eclectical­ly, to this regime. Otherwise it is our future and our democracy which are at stake.

Citizenshi­p today is not a refuge, an act of homecoming, a set of entitlemen­ts. It is a hyphenatio­n of identity and identifica­tion as expressed in the Aadhaar card. The absence of the card reduces you to a non-being.

The writer is a social science nomad

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