Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

EPW NEEDS TO REINVENT FOR ANOTHER FUTURE

- RAJESH MAHAPATRA

The Economic and Political Weekly (EPW) is not only an extraordin­ary journal but also a truly remarkable institutio­n. Launched in 1966, it enjoys a unique reputation of being among the most well-known academic journals from India that enjoy internatio­nal recognitio­n. Tracking through its astounding intellectu­al journey over the past five decades is like going straight into the “deep state” of India’s interconne­cted world of academia, politics, ideologies, journalism and grassroots activism. It is not a story that can be told in a single breath.

Understand­ably, therefore, when the editor of the journal had to quit earlier this month amidst a cloud of controvers­y, it sent shockwaves across the intellectu­al community. What made it worse was that the distinguis­hed members of the Sameeksha Trust which actually publishes EPW also ended up covering them- selves in mud. According to the bare bones version of the story, the editor was asked by the board to take down an article, published online, that was critical of a prominent business house.

This unpreceden­ted demand/ request/instructio­n from the board was apparently intended to pre-empt a potentiall­y expensive and debilitati­ng legal suit from the said business house. (In its 50-year history, the EPW had to withdraw an article only once. It was found to be plagiarise­d)

What also makes this seeming retreat from editorial conscience and courage equally galling is that the decision was brought on by an implosion within the EPW. A self-inflicted wound, in other words, caused by the fact that the just resigned editor was equally guilty of shifting the EPW increasing­ly towards the less-thanvirtuo­us world of covering financial scandal and sleaze rather than sus- taining the journal for its much-appreciate­d forte of encouragin­g sturdy scholarshi­p and committed reportage. It also emerges, from a letter the staff at the EPW has written to the managing trustee, that the said editor repeatedly undermined the editorial review process at the journal, including pushing his own articles without any oversight.

This is, however, not the place to detail or weigh in on the many charges and counter claims over what and who has let down and brought this remarkable institutio­n to such a sorry pass. There is a now already a fair amount of documentat­ion on the subject that needs no repeating.

Instead, what requires reiteratio­n is that the EPW and the Sameeksha Trust need to urgently douse the flames and get its house in order at the earliest. The fate of many budding scholars, future thinkers and the efforts to understand our current challenges greatly depend on how the journal restores its credibilit­y and its rightful place as Asia’s most signifi- cant intellectu­al voice.

To restore and correct the wrongs of the recent months, however, begs another question: was the EPW’s implosion brought on by acts of commission or omission, or is it a crisis caused by something more profound? It is important to ask if ther EPW’s spectacula­r success from the late 1960s to well into the first decade of the new millennium is also the source of some of its current problems.

In other words, should there be a rethink on what it means to intellectu­ally straddle the centre-left spectrum in India and world politics today? Is the EPW – which fearlessly built much of its standing on a critique of the establishm­ent and an advocacy for the cause of the marginalis­ed – losing sight of who is and what comprises its conceptual enemies of today?

The dramatic restructur­ing of our political and economic realities through the extraordin­ary power of digital technologi­es calls for a careful rethink of the simple right-left political economy context. As a colleague put it, the next editor of the EPW as also the trustees will do well to heed Italian writer Tomasi Di Lampedusa’s clarity in his much-celebrated novel The Leopard: “If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.” Rajesh Mahapatra is Chief Content Officer Hindustan Times Follow the author on Twitter @rajeshmaha­patra

IT’S IMPERATIVE THAT THE JOURNAL SETS ITS HOUSE IN ORDER AND PRESERVES ITS RIGHTFUL PLACE AS ASIA’S MOST SIGNIFICAN­T INTELLECTU­AL VOICE.

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