The Free Press Journal

Obscenity in eye of beholder

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"What may be obscene to some may be artistic to other; one man's vulgarity is another man's lyric," the Kerala High Court said, dismissing a plea seeking action against a Malayalam fortnightl­y magazine for featuring a model breastfeed­ing a baby on its cover page.

"We do not see, despite our best efforts, obscenity in the picture, nor do we find anything objectiona­ble in the caption, for men. We looked at the picture with the same eyes as we look at the paintings of artists like Raja Ravi Varma.

"As the beauty lies in the beholder's eye, so does obscenity, perhaps," a division bench of the High Court comprising Chief Justice Antony Dominic and Dama Seshadri Naidu said in an order.

Though the order was passed in March, it came in the public domain only now. Justice Dominic has since retired. In his petition, a man named Felix M A had submitted that the cover page of the magazine is indecent and offends sensibilit­ies and sought action against it.

What may be obscene to some may be artistic to other; one man's vulgarity is another man's lyric, so to say – Kerala HC

"'Shocking one's morals' is an elusive concept, amorphous and protean. What may be obscene to some may be artistic to other; one man's vulgarity is another man's lyric, so to say. Therefore, we can only be subjective about magazine’s cover depiction," the court said. It said even the sections relied on by the petitioner failed to convince it that the respondent publishers had committed any offence, much less a cardinal one, affecting the society's moral fabric, and offending its sensibilit­ies.

Observing that Indian psyche has been so mature for ages that it could see the "sensuous even in the sacred", the court said, adding the paintings in Ajanta and the temple architectu­re were cases in point.

"Kama Sutra -- the Aphorisms of Love -- composed by Vatsyayana many millennia ago, is the first scientific treatise in the world on eroticism," it said.

Citing acclaimed writer William Dalrymple, the court said the arts of India, both visual and literary, had consistent­ly celebrated the beauty of the human body.

Indeed, the whole tradition of yoga was aimed at perfecting and transformi­ng the body, with a view, among the higher adepts, to making it transcende­nt, omniscient, and even god-like. "The body, in other words, is not some tainted appendage to be whipped into submission, but potentiall­y the vehicle of divinity. In this tradition, the sensuous and the sacred are not opposed. They are one, and the sensuous is seen as an integral part of the sacred," the court said, quoting Dalrymple, a noted writer and art historian.

"We could not express better than what Dalrymple has said in his lyrical prose," the court said, as it threw out the petition.

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