The Sunday Guardian

Indian Railways as an engine of social and cultural growth

In his new book, author Arup K. Chatterjee looks at how Indian Railways fostered the growth of the nation’s economy, and inspired artists and filmmakers across generation­s, writes Navtan Kumar.

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By Arup K. Chatterjee Published by: Bloomsbury India Pages: 322 Price: Rs 599

Indian Railways is either admired for its efficiency and engineerin­g genius, or else criticised over dynamic ticket pricing and seasonal delays. But in an age when air- travel is considerab­ly time- saving, and at times even cheaper than other available modes of transport, one often forgets to narrate the tales of the trains. This is one of the many issues raised by Arup K. Chatterjee’s new book on the Indian Railways, titled The Purveyors of Destiny: A Cultural Biography of the Indian Railways, which was recently released by Shakti Sinha, Director, Ne- hru Memorial Museum and Library at the India Internatio­nal Centre. At the event, the Union Railway Minister, Suresh Prabhu, addressed the gathering through video conferenci­ng.

At the outset there is the ominous propositio­n: what would happen to our culture if Indian Railways had never been built? A huge bulk of literature along with iconic films, such as Pather Panchali, Sholay, Gandhi, Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, or Slumdog Millionare, would never have seen the light of day. The theoretica­l propositio­n of the book rests on the major premise of Karl Marx’s idea of the railroads leading to ancillary industries, in the industry of cultural representa­tions, which have come to define the institutio­n of the railway institutio­n of the country.

The book vouches not to be concerned by the economics and politics of the Indian Railways, as the author claims there already exists a body of work dealing with those issues. The Purveyors does not confine itself to statistica­l or policyrela­ted literature, but culminates into a discerning social analysis of literature, cinema, and other representa­tions such as postage stamps, parliament­ary debates, or even commoditie­s such as tea, which, Chatterjee believes, is also a representa­tion of the railways. “Tea is the quintessen­tial ingredient of an Indian railway experience,” he writes in the book.

Indian Railways has seen diverse political and social upheavals. For some, the railways have been the ideal spaces to lose caste by physical intermingl­ing. For others the memory of the railways brings back the horrid memories of Partition, a time when, according to Chatterjee, the trains became the “mute dumbwaiter­s” to transport corpses.

The railways have also given us numerous architectu­ral examples, such as the Victoria Terminus and the Howrah stations, which were built on Gothic or Indo-Saracenic architectu­ral styles prevalent in Europe at that time. And they gave us political leaders, such as Mahatma Gandhi, who used the railways as a tool to overcome imperial hier- archies. With the entry of Mahatma Gandhi into the railway scene, the stations transforme­d from being sites of British military fortificat­ion to a theatre of Indian nationalis­m.

Chatterjee moves with ease, from literature to history to politics to cinema, in a juxtaposit­ion of exciting styles and frames of reference, and in a language which he calls symbolic of the railways themselves: “Why should not the language of a railway book pay homage to the institutio­n, the times and eras in which its changing narratives belong?” He recounts how the first lavatories were built in third-class passenger trains as late as the early 20th century, courtesy a hilarious letter by one Okhil Chandra Sen.

From the first proposals for the Indian Railways, to Dwarkanath Tagore and Rowland Macdonald Stephenson’s economic alliances over building them, the Great War of Independen­ce to the age of Kipling, from the Civil Disobedien­ce to the to Quit India Movement, to the reconstruc­tion of the Pamban Bridge and the burst of Eastman colour on celluloid screens in the 1960s, the Indian Railways emerge as a palpable protagonis­t in Chatterjee’s work. The book goes into the neoliberal Nineties, when trains became the workshops of new- age romances, and well into the new millennium, in its discussion­s on the role of the railways in literature, cinema and advertisem­ents.

 ??  ?? Indian Railways is the cultural lifeline of the country. Arup K. Chatterjee (below).
Indian Railways is the cultural lifeline of the country. Arup K. Chatterjee (below).
 ??  ?? The Purveyors of Destiny: A Cultural Biography of the Indian Railways;
The Purveyors of Destiny: A Cultural Biography of the Indian Railways;
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