‘Seeking Begumpura: The Social Vision of Anticaste Intellectuals’ by Gail Omvedt. (Navayana 2008)
‘Seeking Begumpura: The Social Vision of Anticaste Intellectuals’ by Gail Omvedt. (Navayana 2008)

The liberation theologists of the Hindu past

Published on

Seeking Begumpura, the latest work by the American-born sociologist and longtime Indian citizen Gail Omvedt, marks a watershed in the battle to uncover the hearts and minds of the oppressed and powerless – the 'subalterns' of the Subcontinent's history. Over the past quarter-century, two scholarly traditions have been torchbearers in this task. The first is the Subaltern Studies Group, which includes historians inspired by the Vienna-based historian Ranajit Guha; the second are the 'critical traditionalists', best known through the ideas of the 'political psychologist' Ashis Nandy.

The focus of the former group is on the communitarian peasant or Adivasi who resists the 'disciplining modernity' of the coloniser, as well as the elitism of Indian nationalists. The individual on whom the latter focuses, meanwhile, exults in what can be thought of as an 'anti-modernism' – not only preferring indigenous traditions that have been denigrated by colonial brutalities, but being almost naturally nativist. In both traditions, however, the subaltern figure is not a cultural revolutionary, but seeks instead merely to preserve his or her own cultural traditions.

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