The
readings for this session (find the list at the end of the note) broadly deal
with political struggles related to, and based on caste-identities. The nature
of politics concerns not only the electoral arena, but power relationships
within civil society and academia. The overarching theme that seems to tie
together the readings is an unpacking of liberal nationalist understandings of
India’s history and contemporary, by bringing in the “caste question”.
Introduction: Dalit Studies: New perspectives on the Indian History and
Society
In the introduction to the volume on
Dalit Studies, Rawat and Satyanarayana provide an overview of the ways in which
Indian nationalist elite and academia has (and has not) engaged with the
questions of caste, particularly issues concerning Dalits. They then trace the
changes that have occurred in the nation and academic scholarship post 1990’s.
One of their key arguments is that
historiographic work on India has been so preoccupied with the colonialist-
nationalist binary that little attention has been paid to struggles for human
dignity. So, even though colonialism did provide conceptual and legal resources
for the anti-caste movement leaders, within a nationalist framing, colonialism
was only viewed as extractive. While categories of humiliation and dignity had
been salient in Dalit vernacular writings, they argue that it has entered south
Asian academic discourse only after the 1990’s when there was a substantial
reconfiguration of academy, as a large number of Dalit scholars who retained
activist sensibilities entered academia.
In examining the various paradigms
through which Dalits have been studied, they point to the hegemony of the Harijan perspective, which denies agency
to actors. Taking theorisation of Sanskritisation as one instance, they show
how an understanding of Dalit lives based on emulation of upper-caste customs and
practices “denies agency and autonomous consciousness to Dalits”.
Through the volume, most of whose
contributors come from non-elite spaces, attention is drawn to practices caste
exclusion, and subsequently an attempt made to refocus Indian historiography
and social sciences. Rather than see Dalits as “objects of reform”, the volume
attempts to see Dalits as “intellectuals, leaders and active participants in
the processes of social transformation, highlighting their interventions in
shaping modern India”.
Social Justice and the Question of Categorisation
of Scheduled Caste Reservations: Dandora Debate in Andhra Pradesh
By Sambaiah Gundimeda
SambaiahGundimeda, in
his article on “The Dandora Debate in Andhra Pradesh”, interrogates questions
of social justice by looking at categorizations within Scheduled Caste
category. “Through that interrogation, it aimed to reveal paradoxes in the
system of positive discrimination for the scs in India”. He shows how certain
Dalit castes such as the Malas have been able to acquire greater social
mobility through reservations in education and employment, and thus become
dominant within the Dalit community. In contrast, castes such as Madigas and
Rellis have not had the same opportunities.
Through a detailed
consideration of the debates between Mala Maha Nadu(MMN) and Madiga Reservation
Porata Samiti(MRPS), Gundimeda shows how MMN opposed internal reservations
among Dalits by relying on arguments “similar to those that have been used by
Hindu upper castes to oppose reservations”.
The
Indian nation in its egalitarian conception
By
Gopal Guru
Guru argues that post 1990s there has
been an increase interest among mainstream scholars in Dalit studies. These
scholars, according to Guru have found the vision for Dalit emancipatory
aspirations in three sequential spaces of Indian Nationalism, Electoral
Politics and Globalisation.
Their argument is that in the space of
nationalism a Dalit could let go of his/her identity as an untouchable and
become a citizen or in the electoral politics a Dalit could shed culturally
attributed identity and acquire a secular identity. Globalisation, it is
believed, offers Dalits a unique opportunity to aspire to become consumers of
commodities. Globalisation also brings to Dalits an opportunity to assume a
homogenous identity of being a global consumer. However, imagining Dalits as
global consumers, Guru argues, also contests the intellectual claim that
there’s a particular constitution of Dalits as nationalists.
According to these writers, the scholarships
on Indian nationalism have neglected the contribution of Dalits in India’s
struggle for independence. While Guru sees some merit in this argument, he
contests scholars who believe that nationalism is the only sphere that can help
Dalits gain some importance in the life of the nation. In reality, nationalism
or electoral democracy has not been able to create a positive sense of
citizenship among the Dalits, globalisation has not brought in any structural
transformation in the lives of the Dalits either.
He points to the paradoxical nature of
the nation and argues that while the nation vehemently asserts its geographical
boundaries, it ignores the pernicious boundaries that exist between the main
village and Dalit Vadas. Guru argues that to understand the nation and its
politics we have to understand Ambedkar’s concept of two nations of ‘Puruskrut
Bharta’ (ideal, pure India) that represent the twice-born castes and ‘Bahishkrut
Bharat’ that represents the untouchables. Ambedkar proposed an alternative
called ‘Prabuddha Bharata’ (Enlightened and inclusive Bharat).Guru, argues any
subjective imagination that doesn’t take into account the two nations involves
an acceptance of nationalist rhetoric of equality and unity.
Guru counters the existing notion of
democracy and argues that these scholars sense that the Dalits matter in the
national life due to their participation in the deliberative process of
democracy. If they are not considered or do not consider themselves to be part
of it, then the nation doesn’t exist for them and they don’t exist for the
nation. Dalits should participate because of their capacity to contribute and
contribute in legitimising democracy.
Building further on this, Guru analyses
the politics of ‘Sarvajan’-referring to the equality of all individuals in the
context of politics of Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) in UP in particular and in the
general context of Indian politics and politics of the nation.
He argues that in 2007 the BSP,
hitherto a party of the ‘oppressed majority’ that included, Dalits, Muslims and
other minorities shifted its ideological agenda to ‘Sarvajan’ politics diluting
its ethical commitment to fighting on behalf of the Dalit Bahujan. The Brahmins
supported the BSP to overthrow SP for its anti-brahmin politics. The Brahmins
and caste Hindus accepted the BSP not for their desire for equality or to
remove untouchability. They did so because, parties like BJP realised that
without the support of the Dalits it cannot form government in UP and in this
context the Sarvajan politics is useful to them. Though, the Brahmins and Caste
Hindus will show reverence to the statues of Ambedkar and refer Mayavati as
behenji, they would disrespect Dalits in their daily interactions. Guru further
argues that paradox of Sarvajan model is inherent in the idea of India. The
exclusionary nature of nationalism and Sarvajan politics is rooted in
simultaneous and hypothetical elevation of people and their real reduction to
insignificance. Nationalism constructs the people as an abstract category.
Nationalism demands people’s absolute allegiance to national interests, which
in turn subordinates people’s existential questions. Therefore, the
annihilation of caste and Dalits’ emancipation has to wait for the resolution
of the nationalists concern like fight against colonialism.
In this context, Guru also argues that
Gandhi saw an element in Indian nationalism that might threaten the minority
groups and the ‘lower castes’. Gandhi’s idea of Ram Rajya had a vision of India
which would flatten the caste hierarchies. However, Gandhian hagiography
undermines the more substantive aspect of daily interactions and social
practices that produces a sense of belonging to the nation. Guru notes that the
freedom to engage in social and cultural communication in everyday life plays
an important role in the realisation of the nation as concrete entity. The
writings of history and intellectual practices have failed to interrogate the
persistence of hierarchical practices that endow the world of Bahishkrut
Bharat. According to Ambedkar, Gandhism is a paradox. On the one hand it stands
for freedom from colonialism and on the other hand seeks to maintain social
structures which allows for domination of one class over other. Sarvajan
actively highlights universal identity off all people and denies the caste
hierarchies that continue to subjugate Dalits and lower castes. Interestingly,
Guru notes, that Marxist also do not find Sarvajan politics problematic. He
further argues that it is through the Dalits that Sarvajan model and
hagiography of Indian nationalism becomes rooted in the society. However,
Dalits also play a far greater role than caste Hindus in terms of performing an
ideological function and legitimising it.
In the conclusion, Guru maintains that
Dalit consciousness is required to understand the paradoxical nature of the
nation. However, he warns that there are plenty of examples where those who
offered a promise were successfully co-opted by the nationalist. Offering
solution to it he argues that the Dalit self has to take moral responsibility
in understanding the contradiction. However, besides, moral stamina, one must
have a background characterised by deprivation or underprivilege. This would
create the potential for state intervention. In a liberal framework, however,
he argues it is impossible to create such a moral state.
The
Dalit Recognition of Modernity: Citizens and Castes in the Telegu public space
By
Satyanarayana
The
author discusses the Dalit literary movement in Andhra Pradesh, especially, in
the post Mandal scenario and elite upper caste resistance to it. Satyanarayana
points that the argument of the elite writers and literally critiques is to
uphold the ‘purity’ of the literature and there has been a conscious effort to
downplay the literary work of the Dalits. The argument of the elite bourgeois
writers is that the mass production of literature has reduced the quality of
the literary work in Andhra Pradesh. The elite critiques often argue that any
good literature must be evaluated by ‘proper’ groups and publishing houses with
background in literary work (Satyanarayana terms it as Eurocentric approach).
The author argues that these ‘proper’ groups comprises of liberal elite
bourgeois and are bereft of any organic understanding of the problems and
issues faced by marginalised groups. He also argues that the
traditional Marxist writes are caste elites. Quite often, these
Marxist groups represented the proletariat as they felt the proletariat were
unable to represent themselves. For the proletariat to be able to contribute to
the literary world requires them to be educated. And hence they rejected and
neglected Dalit literature which emerged from the daily experiences of Dalit groups. He argues that Dalits were not considered as proper citizens
and hence the argument that Dalit literature lacks quality.
Post 1990, through new spaces of interaction, Dalit intellectuals managed to create new public spheres. Questions of caste and citizenship could be raised here. One of the important issues in the literary
work of the Marxist is their denial of caste as an oppressed group and emphasis
on class. He notes that Dalits and
Madiga poets broke this silence and made caste identities opaque in Telegu
public spheres. The Dalits and caste
collectives have undergone internal transformation and have emerged as
political communities in modern political domain responding to modern
institutional cultures and claiming their space. In the conclusion, he argues that the liberal
nationalists and left intelligentsia promote caste privileges and intend to
thwart alternative modernities and subjectivities.
The politics of caste and the deepening of India’s democracy: The case of the Backward Caste Movement in Bihar.
By Jeffrey Witsoe
The writer argues that the present
caste politics has its roots in colonial India. He argues that the Colonial
state made an alliance with the local dominant caste groups to rule indirectly.
These local dominant caste groups collected tax and were agent of the state.
The newly formed Zamindars were from the dominant castes. He further argues
that the colonial governance supplemented indirect rule with the strategic use
of caste representation (Some castes were categorised as criminal castes,
recruitment in the army was mostly from specific caste groups). The other aspect
of colonial rule in the context of caste is the enumeration of castes in the
census. However, the census not only enumerated it also ranked the castes.
Witsoe argues that the colonial period
is marked by the beginning of two movements which has its bearing on the caste
politics of the present time. The
dominant caste groups or the forward castes reaped benefits during the colonial
rule. The dominant position helped them build association with the colonial
rulers which in turn helped them in accessing English education and public
employment. Lower castes, on the other hand, although less successful in
acquiring influence within the state institutions, sought to raise the caste status of their members and therefore, challenged the established order. Witsoe
argues that caste identities forged through these movements continue to be
the identities that operate within democratic politics.
He argues that to understand the
democratic potentials and limitations of caste empowerment, the key is in
analysing the relationship between post colonial state, local power and caste
identities. Taking the state of Bihar as a case, he argues that abolition of
Zamindari and land distribution empowered some of the backward castes in Bihar. This was followed by a social movement led by Ramanohar Lohia. Lohia was the
first socialist in India who broke away from the traditional concept of class
in socialism and argued that in the Indian context, caste needs to be taken
into account. Following this, Bihar formed the first non-congress government, eventually bringing Lalu Yadav to power. However, the author argues that although Lalu gave confidence and voice to the Backward castes, he ignored the state
institutions and the Backward castes were deprived of material benefits and
social opportunities. Besides, Yadavs benefited more from the rule as compared
to other backward castes and Muslims. This created a paradox within the state. Eventhough Backward castes got a political voice, the upper castes
occupied most of the positions in state institutions and in bureaucracy due to
their historical advantages. On the other hand the neglect of state
institutions including education and health did not help the backwards castes
either and hence Bihar lagged behind other states in all aspects of human
development. He then brings in the politics of Nitish Kumar and argues that
Nitish has been prudent in understanding these limitations and has forged uneasy
alliance with the old guards to use state machinery to empower the backward
castes. In conclusion, Witsoe argues that while backward caste politics has
catalysed meaningful democratisation ,the project of social
justice remains incomplete.
Reading
list:
S. Rawat
Ramnarayan & K. Satyanarayana (eds), Dalit
Studies. Duke UP, 2016:
Introduction : Dalit Studies : New Perspectives on
Indian History and Society pp. 1-31
Chapter 1: Gopal Guru : Indian Nation in its
Egalitarian Conception pp. 53-74
Chapter 6: K. Satyanaryana: The Dalit
Reconfiguration of Modernity: Citizens and Castes in the Telegu Public Space.
pp. 155-180
Chapter 8: Sambaiah Gundimeda: Social Justice and
the Question of Categorisation of Scheduled Caste Reservations: The Dandora
Debate in Andhra Pradesh pp. 202-233
Jeffrey Witsoe, The Politics of Caste
and the Deepening of India’s Democracy: The Case of the Backward Caste Movement
in Bihar In: Social Movements and the State in India :Deepening Democracy, edited
by by Kenneth Bo Nielsen and Alf Gunvald Nielsen. Palgrave: Macmillan.
pp. 53-75
By Subroto and Savitha
By Subroto and Savitha