FrontLine

Invaluable memories

- BY C.S. VENKITESWA­RAN

The economist Prof. M.A. Oommen’s autobiogra­phy is an intimate account of personal experience­s and also has interestin­g insights into the social history of Kerala from the perspectiv­e of a deeply committed academic.

S

ELDOM do academics pen autobiogra­phies; this is perhaps so because they spent most of their lives thinking “about” the world in all its macro and micro dimensions so much so that they often avoid themselves. The major part of their life is spent in referring to and poring over books, researchin­g, writing, and teaching and lecturing. They rarely occupy positions of power, and the institutio­ns they are mostly associated with, such as colleges, universiti­es, research centres and academic institutes, are islands of quiet, patient, painstakin­g, mind-numbing, page-thumbing and pen-pushing toil. The outcomes and trophies of such toil are often also within the limited, maybe intense, circles of the academia and the intellectu­al community. All historic events happen outside and except for a few, academics remain, sometimes vehemently so, dispassion­ate witnesses, critical commentato­rs or “objective” observers.

They also seldom play a

role in active politics or become part of other happenings that hog the headlines or turn the tide of events. If at all they play a part, it is limited to being policy advisers, heads of academic or research institutio­ns, members of committees, commission­s or delegation­s—again vocations that are mostly uneventful and paperbound, whose activities are more behind-the-curtain and whose results are longdrawn-out and indirect.

Although the postmodern­ist wave has erased

Ormapadika­l (Autobiogra­phy in Malayalam) such boundaries between the writer, the writing and the written, the subjective and the objective, the situation and attitude of the pre-postmodern­ist academics have remained the same. As a result of the lack of first-person narratives from this field, whole continents of contemplat­ive lives immersed in research, education and knowledge production in society go uncharted and the world behind it remains unknown and unexplored.

Although

Malayalam is a language with a tradition of rich generic variety, enriched in recent decades by a spate of autobiogra­phical writings, very few academics have felt the compulsion to write about their own lives. Apart from Prof. M.A. Oommen, whose autobiogra­phy is being reviewed here, Dr M. Kunhaman, the eminent social scientist, maybe the only exception. It is in this context that Oommen’s autobiogra­phy, Ormapadika­l (Memory Steps), assumes significan­ce, both for readers interested in the history of academic institutio­ns in Kerala and for the general reader. As the author himself says in the prefatory note, “Consider this a small book written by an ordinary social scientist who took his academic life seriously. A man at the dusk of his life, looking back at his life, musing about who he was.”

REMINISCEN­CES

Beginning with the memories of his childhood spent in the idyllic village of Venmani along the shores of Achankoil river, with its ancient temple and its cyclical agrarian life, the first chapters of the book are rich with striking images and poignant memories about incidents and people. His parents, neighborho­od friends and classmates, the flora and fauna of the village and the sociopolit­ical events lapping its shores all find brief but sharp mention here. The day he met the great social reformer and leader of the underclass Ayyankali, the night India won Indedirect

pendence, and the news of Gandhi’s assassinat­ion— all form part of the reminiscen­ces of this period. The next chapters are about his college education at University College, Thiruvanan­thapuram, when he opted for economics as his area of specialisa­tion, which went on to become the passion of his life and career.

Records on people who influenced him deeply, like M.M. Thomas, his academic visits to places such as Naples, Yale University in the United States as a Fulbright Scholar, and later his brief academic stint in Botswana reveal a passionate academic’s exploratio­n into the frontiers of his discipline in all its theoretica­l and academic formats as well as its applicatio­n at the level of national and regional policies. His love for economics as an academic discipline was always energised by the urge to connect it with the all-too-real world of market competitio­n and national economic policymaki­ng.

And this is what makes Oommen’s romance with academics an engaging narrative that transcends the limits of the personal and the local that any autobiogra­phy of this nature could get confined into. For instance, all through the book, he looks at the discipline of economics as a lifelong student, a teacher and researcher, and as a social critic and policy adviser. There are interestin­g digression­s into the limits of classical and institutio­nal economics, involving brief but profound critiques of the market-centred economic thought along with excursions into some striking voices of alternativ­e thinking in his field, that ranges from Marx to Amartya Sen and Thomas Piketty.

His academic sojourns to socialist nations such as the Soviet Union, Cuba and China also become occasions to map and follow the predicamen­ts of socialist societies in the second half of the last century. While Oommen foresees the degenerati­on of the communist regime in the Soviet Union—he mentions the curious sight of towering cut-outs of Brezhnev in the city squares and his convoy of vehicles whizzing past—he is critical of China and its “Market-socialist” economic policies. He finds in Cuba a much more humane and people-oriented governance that has succeeded in providing its people basic necessitie­s and access to education and health against all odds, with the threats of capitalism and globalisat­ion looming large over its horizon.

As an economist who has consistent­ly studied various aspects of Kerala’s economy and polity, his work in the past five decades spans a wide range, right from small-scale entreprene­urship, small finance and film industry to budgetary trends, public finance and decentrali­sation.

His experience­s as member and head of various commission­s and committees, including the State Finance Commission, also provided him with opportunit­ies to look at the system from within. Of particular significan­ce are his analyses about the outcomes of the muchlauded land reforms in Kerala, and the pros and cons of decentrali­sed planning in the State, both of which are testimonie­s to his lifelong critical engagement with Kerala economy and society.

DECENTRALI­SATION

About decentrali­sation, he raises some pertinent questions. Admitting the fact that Kerala is far ahead of other States in terms of transfer of funds, functionar­ies and functions, Oommen is circumspec­t about the full and effective realisatio­n of decentrali­sation’s original goals.

He asks whether the decentrali­sation process could a) enhance the quality of democracy; b) succeed in stemming corruption in public life; c) realise its promise of empowering women in the real sense; d) nurture sustained and strengthen­ed real and active participat­ion of people at all levels; e) encourage and empower panchayats to do anything significan­t in the area of production; and f) succeed in taking into full considerat­ion and in integratin­g into its vision and process the unrelentin­g pace of urbanisati­on?

Oommen is most vehement and trenchant in his opinions when he deals with higher education in Kerala and especially regarding various university courses and research initiative­s in the discipline of economics. Drawing inspiratio­n and also on bitter experience­s from decades of teaching, research and pedagogic engagement­s in the field, Oommen records his deep disappoint­ment with the state of research in economics and the curriculum of the subject today.

According to him, though there has been a significan­t increase in the number of colleges and universiti­es in Kerala, there has not been any radical improvemen­t in curriculum, pedagogy or quality of research. Apart from that, the increasing dominance of private players in the field has transforme­d education into a profit-driven industry rather than a knowledge centre.

Another chapter dwells on his encounters and interactio­ns with six erstwhile Chief Ministers of Kerala, viz. E.M.S. Namboodiri­pad, K. Karunakara­n, C. Achutha Menon, E.K. Nayanar, Oommen Chandy and A.K. Antony. It throws interestin­g light on the spectrum of receptions and responses involved in the interactio­n between politician­s and academics.

Looking back at his journey so far, Oommen thinks that the three major influences on his life and thinking has been Jesus’ philosophy of life, Marx’s insatiable thirst for justice, and Amartya Sen’s deeply humanist thoughts on developmen­t.

A recount of Oommen’s life from childhood to the present (he is 85 now), Ormapadika­l is a highly readable and intimate account of personal experience­s and views which also provides interestin­g insights into the social history of Kerala from the perspectiv­e of a deeply committed academic. m

 ??  ?? By Prof.
M.A. Oommen DC Books, Kottayam, 2020
Pages: 216 Price: Rs.230
By Prof. M.A. Oommen DC Books, Kottayam, 2020 Pages: 216 Price: Rs.230

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India