The Asian Age

ERASE MEMORIES, PERPETUATE HATE

Democracie­s world over do give space to statues to just be and serve as a pivot around which debate can be held if nothing else, although historical­ly oppressed folks would like to see such symbols of struggle to go out of sight and out of mind

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Icons and statues are symbols. These symbols are materially connected, intertwine­d with economic logics and the struggles against these prevailing economic logics. On one hand, the production and circulatio­n of symbols is an economic activity. On the other hand, symbols have material ramificati­ons that are tied to relations of power in society, both reproducin­g existing social configurat­ions as well as offering windows into the possibilit­ies for social transforma­tions.

It essentiall­y means that depending upon the transforma­tions we see in any particular society, as power shifts, so does the nature of celebratio­n or desecratio­n of symbols. Symbols in this sense work to reproduce particular images to tell particular stories and therefore for those in positions of power, these symbols become critical resources that are mobilised to serve particular goals. For those at the margins of society, the struggle is often over securing access to the sites of symbol making as well as over removing material markers of oppression.

The fundamenta­l idea behind democracy is its openness to a wide range of symbols, which offer a window into the plurality of ideas. These symbols stand in as anchors to divergent thoughts and opinions and as markers of the possibilit­ies of debates and difference­s in a society.

Look at the recent context of desecratio­n of the statue of Lenin in Tripura, the Ambedkar statue in Meerut, the defacement of the Periyar statue in Tamil Nadu and the Shyamapras­ad Mukherjee statue in Kolkata. The latter had existed throughout the entire period of Left rule in Kolkata. Usually, when you have a space that actually is open to difference and is committed to democratic ideals, each of these statues, symbols and images have an opportunit­y to stand in as a discursive register.

The question then remains: What are the limits to the public presence of symbols in democracie­s? What about those symbols that are in essence antithetic­al to ideals of democracy? This question needs to be contextual­ised in the ambits of the struggles for social justice and equality against the dominant images that legitimise erasure.

Look for instance at the tensions over the removal of Confederat­e statues ( markers of White supremacy and support for slavery) in the US. These tensions are reflective of struggles over power in perpetuati­ng racist ideas, the opportunit­ies for transforma­tions in these racist logics that have for long served as dominant ideas of the US, and the deep histories of slavery and racism in the US. The emergence of movements for removal of statues of the leaders and members of the Ku Klux Klan and defenders of slavery is a transforma­tive opportunit­y for interrogat­ing and challengin­g the deeply racist rationalit­ies that threaten human dignity and equal opportunit­y. Particular­ly amid the rise of far- right White nationalis­m in the US, social justice movements seek the removal of racist Civil War era symbols from public spaces.

Similarly, consider the presence of statues of colonial figures in post- colonial contexts. These statues are reflective of a colonial past and a history that is fairly oppressive, with those particular icons being markers of oppression and attack on human freedom. The struggle for removal of these statues is a narrative anchor for making claims to ideas of justice, dignity, and equality of the margins. Usually, democracie­s leave enough room for these markers to be present as sites of contestati­on, conversati­on, and debate. However, for groups that have historical­ly been oppressed, the struggle against these public symbols is one of crafting a different public narrative, one that challenges the violence of oppression.

Similarly consider the emergence in public veneration of icons that were once marked as fundamenta­lly antithetic­al to the spirit of Indian democracy. The presence of such a statue in a public space threatens the very ideas of pluralist democracy because they stand for the message of hate and foreclosur­e of democratic discursive space. The presence of these statues in public spaces threatens the very idea of democracy, marking who can and can't participat­e in democratic opportunit­ies. Then the question we ought to ask is: What are the limits to icons, symbols and images in public spaces in a democracy, particular­ly in terms of the boundaries of how far these symbols and images go in perpetuati­ng anti- democratic ideals? What democratic processes ought to be mobilised for addressing symbols that explicitly stand in for and perpetuate hate?

The lack of critical habits of democracy makes room for all forms of politics of heuristics, often feeding on hatred and polarisati­on. Symbols and imagery become shortcuts to political movements as well as co- opt possibilit­ies of democracy through the circulatio­n of images of hate and bigotry. They appropriat­e images to cultivate their particular agendas under the guise of nationalis­m and patriotism. So icon- politics works in terms of perpetuati­on of authoritar­ian power when citizens do not critically interrogat­e power but rather are driven by heuristics and emotions. The absence of reason from public discourse complement­s the rise in icon- based politics.

Globally, the degenerati­on of democratic habits in societies has been systematic­ally accomplish­ed through political economic transforma­tions that on one hand have systematic­ally privatised public resources and on the other hand, have erased opportunit­ies for democratic public participat­ion. The various sorts of strategies of authoritar­ian power and control we are witnessing globally are reflection­s of the democracy deficit catalysed by neoliberal policies that systematic­ally target democracie­s and erase opportunit­ies for voice even as they consolidat­e power in the hands of the global elite. It actually works to mobilise citizens, not as citizens, but as mobs that are driven by the seductions of collective heuristics rather than to actually reason, to participat­e in argument; and to participat­e in the everyday habits of democracy.

What we then have is the habit of cultmaking amid a global politics of dispossess­ion led by the elite class. Examples are galore of cult- making through holograms, brands, images and the management of images as spectacle, with political party investment­s in gargantuan campaigns becoming the norm. Observe for instance the tremendous growth in the large- scale image- based promotiona­l campaign industry facilitate­d by big data, which is antithetic­al to the very ideas of everyday engagement and reason grounded in processing informatio­n critically. Cult- making not only works in terms of promoting narrow sentiments of religious and nationalis­t feelings, but also in terms of promoting wholesale the neoliberal rationalit­y driven by "trickle- down" heuristics. Symbols emerge as tools of persuasion without being critically interrogat­ed, silencing opportunit­ies for discourse, debate and dialogue.

Active vigilance is a primary resource against undemocrat­ic tendencies globally. The cultivatio­n of the habits of democracy across a variety of institutio­ns is a key challenge today as basic access to fundamenta­l educationa­l and communicat­ive infrastruc­tures is highly unequal across the globe. Political agendas of the ruling dispensati­ons are worked into textbooks and into the very fabric of academic institutio­ns. To challenge the hegemony of iconograph­y, iconoclasm and related symbolisms in academia, media, and a wide variety of other communicat­ive institutio­ns, we have to begin by returning to cultivatin­g and recognisin­g the everyday habits of democracy in the grassroots. Critical thought, one that questions the workings of power in perpetuati­ng injustice, inequality, and discursive erasure, is the antidote to the global rise of image politics.

SOCIAL JUSTICE MOVEMENTS SEEK THE REMOVAL OF RACIST CIVIL WAR ERA SYMBOLS FROM PUBLIC SPACES AMID THE RISE OF FAR- RIGHT WHITE NATIONALIS­M IN US

 ??  ?? A statue of Soviet state founder Valdimir Lenin was toppled by protesters in Kiev during a rally organised by supporters of EU interation.
A statue of Soviet state founder Valdimir Lenin was toppled by protesters in Kiev during a rally organised by supporters of EU interation.
 ?? AFP ?? Fundamenta­lists attack the wall of the 16th century Babri Masjid with iron rods on December 6, 1992. —
AFP Fundamenta­lists attack the wall of the 16th century Babri Masjid with iron rods on December 6, 1992. —
 ??  ?? A bust of B. R. Ambedkar desecrated at Tiruvottiy­ur in Chennai.
A bust of B. R. Ambedkar desecrated at Tiruvottiy­ur in Chennai.
 ??  ?? DR MOHAN JYOTI DUTTA
DR MOHAN JYOTI DUTTA

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