FrontLine

Alternativ­e dialogue

- BY HILAL AHMED

The book calls upon the reader to get rid of the communal-secular binary to understand the various ways in which the politics

of knowledge is played out.

THE book Gyan ki Rajniti: Samaj Adhyyan aur Bhartiya Chintan (Politics of Knowledge: Social Studies and Indian Thinking) destabilis­es three dominant conception­s about Indian knowledge. First, it makes a crucial distinctio­n between Indian knowledge and Hindu knowledge. Without underminin­g the philosophi­cal contributi­ons of Hindu religious traditions, Manindra Nath Thakur, the author, challenges the Hindutva argument that whatever existed in India in the past can only be understood in Hindu religious terms. The book takes us to intellectu­al resources that evolved over the centuries to produce a uniquely Indian and highly diversified perspectiv­e of critical thinking.

Second, the book critically engages with the much talked about notion of secular knowledge. The author is not interested in recovering the lost secular Indian tradition. Instead, the book calls upon the reader to get rid of the communal-secular binary to understand the various ways in which the politics of knowledge is played out. Finally, the book refuses to get involved in any discussion on Indian knowledge versus Western knowledge. Thakur does not treat Western intellectu­al traditions as merely orientalis­t conspiracy. Critically evaluating the role colonial knowledge played in constructi­ng a deeply problemati­c selfimage of Indian thinking, the author introduces us to a new intellectu­al possibilit­y. In his view, an intellectu­ally open and politicall­y egalitaria­n questions are creatively organised as chapters and provide an engaging thematic architectu­re to the book.

The book, more broadly, raises two sets of questions. First, how do we evaluate the existing research techniques and modes by which the idea of Indian knowledge tradition is framework of creative thinking can produce a humanistic, democratic, and innovative imaginatio­n of human knowledge.

This book revisits the idea of multifacet­ed dialogue: “dialogues between philosophi­es, dialogues between intellectu­als and the common people, dialogues between folk tradition and classical tradition, dialogues between the West and the East, dialogues between cultures, dialogues between different religions” (p. vii). However, the author does not want us to get involved in the process of dialogue just for the sake of it because any form of dialogue would be meaningles­s if the participan­ts do not understand the purpose of dialogue. Thakur argues that dialogue is a plea for truth, an attempt to move from non-knowledge (avidya) to knowledge (vidya). And, the purpose of vidya is to achieve the most desirable human attribute: emancipati­on.

These seemingly idealistic objectives should not be misunderst­ood as an old-fashioned sermonette. The book is based on a well worked out analytical schema. It examines six broad issues: dialogue with Indian philosophy; the concept of human nature and its applicabil­ity in modern Indian social science discourses; the contempora­ry Indian debate on the form and substance of social sciences in India; the possibilit­ies of creative thinking; the search for an emancipato­ry religious tradition; and, finally, the critical evaluation of Indian democracy. These

explored, especially in the realm of social science thinking? Second, what are the intellectu­al resources available to us in the Indian context that can be employed to deal with present social challenges, economic crises, and cultural predicamen­ts? The author constructs an interestin­g theoretica­l framework to deal with these overlappin­g concerns. I identify three interrelat­ed elements of this theoretica­l constructi­on.

First, an important distinctio­n is invoked between the past and history to get rid of the given Hindutvace­ntric imaginatio­n of India and its pre-islamic intellectu­al universe. Although Thakur does not highlight this point directly, he remains committed to excavating intellectu­al ideas from the reservoir of the past without getting into the troubled history of religious violence and victimhood. He draws inspiratio­n from Gandhi, who used exactly the same technique in his writings, especially Hind Swaraj and his commentary on the Bhagavad Gita.

Second, the author avoids giving fixed definitions for the terms and concepts he uses to construct an argument. He makes two claims to justify his position: (a) Relying on a fixed definition of a particular social phenomenon restricts the possibilit­ies of analysis. The discursive constituti­on of social life, he argues, must be understood in its entirety. (b) The limitation­s of language is another crucial aspect. According to the author, many a time it becomes almost impossible to weave a definition with the given linguistic resources. Hence, we must use a context-oriented conceptual­isation. This technique helps him engage with the works of philosophe­rs such as Daya Krishna, Roy Bhaskar, and Marx.

THE SOURCES

The newness of research material, the sources, is the third crucial theoretica­l element. Unlike the usual social science studies on this subject, this book does not entirely rely on convention­al research material. The author engages with literature, especially the Hindi literary traditions, to offer an insightful framework of knowledge production. This is the reason why Dalit autobiogra­phies are seen as a constructi­ve mode to understand postcoloni­al Indian society and polity.

This three-layered theoretica­l framework is also important to make sense of one of main findings of this study. Following Gandhi, the author envisages the concept of Purusharth­a as a tool to explore what he calls the outline of an emancipato­ry quest for universal knowledge. He argues that Gandhi was able to capture the intellectu­al possibilit­ies inherent in the idea of Purusharth­a. For this reason, an attempt is made to re-examine the idea of Purusharth­a in the present context.

Thakur writes: “If it is assumed that the concept of Purusharth­a is universal and we, like Gandhi, can employ it to understand the society as it is, it would be appropriat­e to discuss its broad nature. This concept has twelve determinin­g aspects: the four Purusharth­as— Artha, Dharma, Kama and Moksha; Six Vikars (disorders): lust, anger, greed, item, infatuatio­n, and jealousy; and two external regulators— time and space. I argue that Purusharth­a and Vikar need to be understood together. They regulate human nature in its entirety.”

The book argues that discursive, ever-changing human nature is determined by the balance between these 10 regulators in a particular time and place. Purusharth­a and Vikara are seen as natural human characteri­stics, while time and space refer to the external circumstan­ces or broadly the context in which a particular human collectivi­ty is formed. This reformulat­ed conceptual­ization of Purusharth­a is further elaborated to make a broad claim that the primacy of “Purusharth­a would make society better, while the excess of Vikara can be fatal to human existence both as an individual as well as a

social entity… Purusharth­a, in any case, depends on the nature of social order—the time and space” (pp. 234-235).

It is worth noting that the existing scholarshi­p on Gandhi focusses only on the four positive elements of Purusharth­as. The author notices this limitation and makes two persuasive points. First, he argues that Gandhi is fully aware of human limitation­s and there is a serious discussion on Vikars in his writings. Hence, Gandhi must be seen as a creative thinker of the present. The second point is more innovative. Thakur takes Gandhi as a reference point to explore those possibilit­ies by which a reformulat­ed notion of Purusharth­a can be employed as an explanator­y tool.

This innovative move helps him to evaluate the predicamen­ts of the contempora­ry moment of modern life. The argument that globalised capitalism is the ultimate model of economic life is re-examined in the light of the virtually failed experience­s of state-dominated socialism. Thakur argues that the crisis of capitalism encourages us to rethink the global consensus that the market is a self-regulating economic apparatus. He calls upon the reader to have a new imaginatio­n of the Artha, drawing upon available intellectu­al resources and experience­s.

The chapter on religion elaborates this argument in the realm of Dharma. Thakur clarifies that the concept of Dharma is different from the term religion. He claims that the scope of Dharma is much wider and can be used in a number of different ways. This clarification is used to identify three types of religious assertions in the contempora­ry world: religion as a marker of political/communal identity; religion as a purely apolitical spiritual quest; and religion as a source of collective human emancipati­on.

Hindutva politics in India, Islam in Pakistan and Turkey, and Buddhism in Sri Lanka and Myanmar represent the first kind of religious assertion. In this case, religion is used to establish political supremacy over other religious communitie­s and non-religious individual­s and groups. New religious movements led by individual gurus, babas, and fakirs can be put in the second category. The author claims that these organised attempts to search pure spirituali­ty are highly problemati­c. These movements justify the existing power structure and reduce everything to individual failures or the idea of fate/karma.

It does not, however, mean that religion does not have any positive potential. Thakur gives us a number of examples to show that religion can also be interprete­d in a wider sense as Dharma to think of a possibilit­y of a revolution­ary social transforma­tion. He discusses the liberation theology debate (especially in the Latin American context) to argue that material equality based on collective wisdom produces an enduring sense of spiritual existence.

CHOICE OF LANGUAGE

This brings us to the most important aspect of this work: the language. I use the term language in two senses: the choice of language in a formal sense and the innovative use of that selected language in a conceptual sense. Thakur makes a bold decision to write this book in Hindi. His adherence to Hindi should not be reduced to the prevalent justification in favour of Hindi. Of course, he seems to share the position that serious social science works can also be produced in Indian languages; yet he does not emphasise this point. That might be the reason why he does not even bother to acknowledg­e it in the preface of the book.

In my view, there is a serious conceptual reason behind it. Thakur offers us an interestin­g configuration of ideas, experience­s, and expression­s. He not only translates available concepts from English to Hindi but also pays serious attention to the rendering of these concepts in the Indian intellectu­al context. This two-way process contribute­s significantly to his methodolog­ical priorities. Thakur produces the complex formulatio­ns in a clear, simple, understand­able, Hindi/hindustani supported by endnotes that give a research flavour to his language.

This brilliant attempt, in my view, opens up two crucial possibilit­ies. First, the framework offered in the book might help us in problemati­sing the given notion of alternativ­e politics. Alternativ­e politics is usually defined as a non-elite form of political engagement. The politics of social movements are often seen as the true representa­tive of it. The book encourages us to go beyond the elite-subaltern framework to explore new meanings of an ideal, egalitaria­n social order.

The second possibilit­y is also important. The book touches upon the question of political organisati­on, especially in the chapter on democracy. Thakur is critical of the idea of political party and expresses his unease with it. However, this criticism is not sufficient­ly elaborated on. The book is almost silent on the question of agency. These points cannot be called limitation­s; rather, we must envisage them as curious reflections that stem from the arguments this study makes. Thakur might consider writing a sequel to satisfy such creative expectatio­ns of his readers. m Hilal Ahmed, associate professor, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi, writes regularly on the nature of Muslim political discourse. He has published many books including Siyasi Muslims (2019), and is associate editor, South Asian Studies, the journal of the British Associatio­n for South Asian Studies.

Capitalism as the model of economic life is re-examined in the light of the virtually failed experience­s of socialism.

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 ?? ?? PAGES FROM KAUTILYA'S Arthashast­ra (below) and Vatsyayana's Kamasutra, the treatises, respective­ly, on artha and kama, two of the four purusartha­s that include dharma and moksha.
PAGES FROM KAUTILYA'S Arthashast­ra (below) and Vatsyayana's Kamasutra, the treatises, respective­ly, on artha and kama, two of the four purusartha­s that include dharma and moksha.

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