Books
PERFORMING REPRESENTATION: Women Members in the Indian
Parliament by Shirin M. Rai and Carole Spary. Oxford University Press, 2019.
WOMEN, POWER, AND PROPERTY: The Paradox of Gender Equality
Laws in India by
Rachel E. BrulŽ. Cambridge
University Press, 2020.
WHEN Pamela Paxton included women in defining democracy, she
found that incorrect operationalizations (which often
measured only male suffrage and political rights) affected scholarsÕ
measurement of transition dates to democracy, their descriptions of the
emergence of democracy, and their understanding of the causes of
democratization.1 What happens if we include womenÕs behaviour when defining what representation means? What
happens when we recognize that women are constrained and freed in different
spaces in different ways, because they are embedded within many identities and
structures beyond their gender, and they have interests that pertain to many of
these groups?
2,3,4
These questions bring together a way to read two recent books
on representation in India: Performing Representation by Shirin Rai and Carole Spary (2019), and Women, Power, and Property by
Rachel BrulŽ (2020). At first glance they take very
different approaches to studying women representatives in India, but in fact
provide a way of redefining representation without the male gaze.
BrulŽ studies the effects that womenÕs
representation in gram panchayats has on the
enforcement of gender-equalizing legal reforms for women, while Rai and Spary study womenÕs
representation in Parliament through a framework of Ôpolitics and performanceÕ.
While they appear as different frameworks that study different institutions and
come to different conclusions about womenÕs representation in India, reading
them together offers insights into a new approach to studying representation – one that could
re-theorize what it means when women are included in our observations of
representational behaviour.
Rai and SparyÕs
ambitious tome, Performing Representation, delves into the performances of
women Members of Parliament (MPs). Some of their primary contributions to the
field are in the many dimensions that they cover, as well as the study of
representation through a novel Ôpolitics and performanceÕ framework. A central
question of the book is: ÔDoes the persistent underrepresentation of women in
Parliament affect our reception of the performance of representation and the
claims to being a strong democracy in the broader politics of the country, and
if so howÕ (p. 5)? Unlike gram panchayats, where
quotas ensure that women are represented at higher proportions, there are no
quotas in Parliament. Rai and Spary
study how women perform in such a situation of scarcity.
ÔPerformance and politicsÕ is an institutional approach, but
the analytical magnifying glass is placed in particular on the symbolic, the
discursive, the aesthetics, and claim-making around the ways in which rules and
procedures play out within Parliament. This framework is used alongside
narrative research and ethnographic literature to guide their analyses. In
particular, they study gender and representation at three levels: first, they
consider the pathways that women take to getting selected for election; second,
they interrogate how intersecting social structures (class, caste, religion, education,
and profession) affect womenÕs ability to perform their duties and garner
resources; and third, they interrogate how women are (not) able to negotiate
the pressures of their public and private roles. Their analysis focuses on 23
women in a 10-year period in two Parliaments – the 10th Lok Sabha (1994) and the 14th Lok Sabha (2004), and on both
women and men MPs between 2009-2016.
Drawing from its nuance, description, and complexity, I make
a few observations about what this book teaches us about womenÕs representation
in India. First, the authors show specific ways in which Ôscripts of womanhoodÕ
enter into how women behave in Parliament. In other words, expectations about
how women should and should not behave based on the roles they play in their homes
and communities shape both their own behaviour, and
the way that other MPs interact with them, in Parliament.5 Women do not automatically represent the
interests of ÔwomenÕ or even of particular types of women – for example,
Ôwomen MPs temper overt critiques of Indian patriarchal society with more
conciliatory tones to manage conflict and backlashÕ (p. 165). They must take
care to not be overtly conflictual,6 which is another example of a learned behaviour that is used as evidence for essential difference.
There is no escape – Ôwomen in politics are very much made aware of their
position as women when they enter the political field, whether they like it or
notÕ (p. 166).
Second, the ways in which political institutions work in
concert to amplify or mitigate structural inequality – for elections, the
incentives of political parties – are important to studying how and where
women representatives have space to maneuver.7 Spary and Rai explore the importance of party political support in
recruitment, re-nomination and re-election of incumbent women MPs over
successive parliamentary terms. As one woman MP says, ÔParties keep changing
their viewÉnow even within our party women get unwinnable seats – she
loses, then they say women lose, then they [men] start saying that women should
stay at home; I say we can do both – look after the family and work in
politicsÕ (p. 305). Studying representation within just a single institution
misses important parts of the puzzle of how the presence of women representatives
does or does not translate to different modes of governance.
Finally, Rai and Spary use qualitative codes in studying the performance of
women and men politicians, helping us to go beyond dichotomous studies of
success and failure. For example, their study of how
womenÕs contributions in parliamentary debates are received and interpreted (in
Chapter 5) delineate seven different response-types (promoted, lauded,
acknowledged, prevented, ignored, silenced, or delegitimized). While some of
these response-types may also be used in response to men politiciansÕ
contributions, others may not be and there may be asymmetric effects on how
representatives do the work of representing based on gender. By typologizing response-types, inquiries into the dynamics
and nature of representation can be addressed in future research on
representation.
Rai and Spary
provide us with leverage into seeing that when women are in power, they may be
performing politics in a different way than we are used to categorizing Ôtypes
of representationÕ. This is because women negotiate complex institutional and
social terrains and gender role performances. Performance as a framework adds a
valuable, descriptive and conceptual approach to a field dominated by
quota-inspired natural experiments to interpret effects of womenÕs
representation while often using narrow definitions of what such representation
actually means or looks like. It brings us vital insights into how women
traverse the fraught terrains of being political representatives.
BrulŽÕs book, Women, Power, and Property,
takes a very different perspective from Rai and SparyÕs: she investigates the effects of womenÕs
representation through local-level quotas. Her approach to politics is centred on economics, bargaining, and intrahousehold
negotiations. Her central empirical argument delineates a causal relationship
between womenÕs political representation and their economic power (in
particular, land ownership). Perhaps even more than the causal inferences, BrulŽÕs theory on how womenÕs representation impacts
enforcement of their economic rights and subsequent welfare prompts some of the
most intriguing questions and ways forward for thinking about the study of
representation.
The argument of Women, Power, and Property is that political
power through quotas transforms: Ôsimply reserving the highest elected position
in a given village government for a woman can set in motion seismic waves that
unsettle this entire systemÕ (p. 9). BrulŽ argues
that quotas for women in local-level councils lead to the enforcement of their
property rights, which can also lead to backlash and resistance from family
members and negative externalities like lower rates of daughter births.
However, quotas also transform resistance into support through Ôintegrative bargainsÕ
in societies with moderate socioeconomic inequality, where BrulŽ
theorizes that there is more potential to coordinate around new social norms.
A key element of BrulŽÕs theory
focuses on marriage negotiations – particularly around dowry – as a
critical moment for women to acquire land inheritance from natal family. Here,
women sarpanches – gatekeepers –
may come in as catalysts and facilitate Ôintegrative bargainsÕ between
unmarried daughters and their family members. She argues that in a simultaneous
decision-making model of bargaining, Ôa brother may be willing to cede
significant inheritance rights if his sister simultaneously offers not only to
deny any groom who demands dowry but also to choose a marriage that enables her
to share a duty of caring for elderly parents. The brother
benefits by offsetting the loss in exclusive property rights by minimizing
other monetary obligations (to transfer land for dowry) and social obligations
(shared care for elder parents)Õ (p. 46). BrulŽ
also posits that there is an overall welfare gain for the household –
Ôthe family has avoided selling valuable ancestral land to pay for a daughterÕs
dowry and is able to distribute inheritance rights equally to a daughter and
son, without reducing a sonÕs quantum of inheritanceÕ (p. 46). Her argument
contributes to study of womenÕs representation in three ways. First, its focal
point centres around a
negotiation between family members around the institution of marriage – a
critical point for women. Second, it expands the repertoire of governance
actions of representatives to also being behaviours
inside of what was often considered ÔprivateÕ space of the household (and thus
out of the realm of public politics). Third, it leads us to put our analytical
gaze on the social norms within which representation is deeply embedded.8
BrulŽÕs theory of Ôintegrative bargainsÕ, and
the role that women sarpanches play in them, forms
the backbone of the causal story of the book. It bears food for thought for the
overall study of democratic representation. Conceptually, is the hypothesized
mechanism here – women sarpanches helping
families to compromise and negotiate – equivalent to ÔenforcementÕ, or is
this a wholly new type of political behaviour on the
part of representatives? Do natal families really want to give their daughters
land when the economic tradeoffs are equal for the sons and other members of
the family? And how much agency does the average daughter have in negotiations
– for example, the choice to give up dowry (what of parents who begin to
save up for dowries from the minute they have a girl child)?9 In this social milieu, would the natal
family prefer to distribute inheritance rights equally as long as there are no
economic costs? Further study of non-economic preferences here is perhaps as
important as understanding the economic ones. BrulŽÕs
theory lays out fascinating areas for further research by shining a light on
the very household and community spaces and institutions (such as marriage)
that particularly matter for both women citizens and women representatives.
These studies prompt us to think about what the
representation of women by women means, in two different institutions and
through two different methodologies. In considering these works together, we
come away with fruitful inspiration to interrogate the ÔtraditionalÕ way of
thinking about politics. The books illuminate that when women enter
traditionally male spaces, they behave (and ÔrepresentÕ) differently than men
politicians. This is because women representatives face challenges unique to
their position in Indian society – for example, they must ÔcompromiseÕ
and ÔadjustÕ inside of political institutions order to be taken seriously. They
also encourage others to compromise, and this becomes part of their governance style.
In effect, women ÔdoÕ politics differently – not because they are
essentially different, but because they have very different constraints both
inside and outside of the political institutions that they enter and negotiate.
Scripts of Indian womanhood, and its intersections with the other social
structures they are embedded in, follow women wherever they go. When thinking
about what happens when they enter political institutions, conventional views
of representation have no way of assessing how compromise enters a female
representativeÕs actions.
After reading BrulŽ and Rai and SparyÕs studies, we might
ask: how can we study the politics of representation without a male gaze?
1. When are political institutions forced to see inside
families, and when do they still find ways to turn a blind eye? Feminist
judicial scholar Catharine MacKinnon has written extensively about the fiction
of ÔprivateÕ spaces.10,11 Much of womenÕs
subordination is reinforced through the way that the state chooses to define
what is private, and hence explicitly chooses not to regulate, privileging
group or family norms over individual rights. It is not a coincidence that the
space in which women face the most violence and subjugation has always been
that which the state deems as the ÔintimateÕ and the ÔprivateÕ. BrulŽ shows us, however, that when women are sarpanches, new focal points and spaces could become
ÔpublicÕ. For example, marriage negotiations between family members and between
families – traditionally in the realm of ÔprivateÕ and ÔcommunityÕ, could
come under the stateÕs purview in some circumstances. How can the state make
those circumstances more readily available? What actors are replaced (e.g.,
traditional caste elites) when it does?
As James Scott says in Seeing Like a State, Ôwe must
never assume that local practice conforms with state theory.Õ 12 This is especially true for womenÕs lives
– which the state often chooses not to see by deeming the spaces they
spend the majority of their lives in as ÔprivateÕ. What happens when the state
– through women representatives – observes different focal points
in its citizensÕ lives than it traditionally has (because it has only seen and
mapped the society that it governs through men representativesÕ and bureaucratsÕ
eyes)? This is a ripe area for further research.
Conversely, the state may also be completely resistant to
making such observations, even when thrust directly before it. As Rai and Spary show, familial
support matters deeply for women MPsÕ recruitment and career trajectories in
Parliament, but party institutions and Parliament do not change their tactics
to ÔseeÕ this and support it. Women MPs often do not want to be the
spokespeople for ÔwomenÕs issuesÕ. Though the family could become a new focal
point because of women MPsÕ entry into the institution of Parliament, various
institutional rules, procedures, and norms of operating prevent that from
happening. Understanding when the state ÔseesÕ a new aspect of citizensÕ lives,
versus when it continues to designate it as ÔprivateÕ space is central to our
understanding of how the state operates and governs and an important avenue for
further studies on womenÕs representation.
2. We need new typologies to characterize and describe Ôthe
work that politicians doÕ when women are also politicians. Much of what
politicians do happens in society, and outside of political institutions. Women
representatives may engage with the citizenry – not just other women, but
also men – differently than men representatives do. For example, a social
script that many women are expected to follow is one of persuading and
encouraging compromise in complex emotional and social negotiations between
family members. This is a particularly valuable skill to have as a mediator in
disputes and negotiations between citizens - many of which are between family
members. While men sarpanches may also get involved
in different types of disputes, women sarpanches
involve themselves – their role in negotiation facilitation –
differently.
The counterfactual to the woman sarpanch
intervening in marriage negotiations in BrulŽÕs
book is the man sarpanch either intervening in
a different way, or not intervening at all. Regardless of how widespread and
effective the negotiation actually is, the fact that women representatives may
get involved in this way in citizensÕ lives is a different manner through which
politics happens on the ground. Thus, women representatives may negotiate and
act differently not only inside, but also outside of the political institutions
that they become part of. How do we characterize all the new, Ônon-traditionalÕ
(perhaps non-male is a better descriptor) forms of Ôpolitical workÕ that women sarpanches may be doing? What new forms of representation
and state responses may come out of asking this question?
3. How do we look beyond hegemonic male models of leadership?
Theories of womenÕs representation need to more explicitly use the logic of
gendered constraints to describe what kinds of agency women choose to exert and
where, based on both institutional parameters13 and the scripts their societies and
households expect them to play. Women have agency, but what, how, and when they
choose to strategize, and how they exercise agency are different from what we
have seen or theorized about before within political institutions. Women are
most frequently inside of their homes, and sometimes in smaller community
spaces. Historically, we have not seen the ÔwaysÕ of representing that women
perform in political institutions because it has not empirically existed. Since
this is a very recent phenomenon, I believe we are still using old theories
about what men representatives do to study what women representatives are
doing. What if instead, we theorized based on the scripts that women follow in
their households and communities and the constraints that the new spaces they
are entering (e.g., Parliament, gram panchayat)
impose? Women perform within rigid constraints in gendered political
institutions, and how they perform is different based on institutional history
and rules/procedures.
For example, Rai and Spary illustrate how women have to perform according to
their gender roles to be recognized, accepted, and heard in Parliamentary
spaces. Their analysis interprets that women are more likely to perform ÔserviceÕ
than ÔleadershipÕ. However, ÔserviceÕ is often also seen in the performance of
male politicians and the organizations that support them. The RSS, of course,
stands for Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh, and the concept of ÔsevaÕ
and the man ÔsevakÕ has a long political
history in India.14 So how is the performance of ÔsevaÕ of the women Parliamentarians in Rai
and Spary different from that of men
parliamentarians? It is likely different in different spaces (e.g., in front of
fellow Parliament members in sessions, versus in front of citizens), and in its
particular performance (e.g., distributing services to the poor,15,16 versus taking care of families and family
membersÕ sensitivities17 – both
different forms of service). It may also be different based on the other social
structures that women are embedded in – for example, caste.18 Investigating the history of gendered
roles and scripts of elected officials in different Indian communities would
help us understand how women representatives expand the repertoire of political
behaviour in various spaces.
A feminist, historical understanding of representation is an
important first step for theorizing and testing hypotheses about the effects of
women entering and staying inside of political institutions, and in studying
institutional rules, norms, and procedures. While we know a lot about how
womenÕs reservations and descriptive representation correlates with various
outcomes in particular contexts, we know much less about how womenÕs presence
has the potential to change how the state sees and governs, what spaces it
governs within, and what political institutional procedures and norms may be
helping or hindering the expanded repertoire of political behaviour
and representation that results when women representatives enter the picture.
Delving into the assumptions, mechanisms and performances that BrulŽ, and Rai and Spary highlight in their absorbing works inspires us to
approach studying representation from a fresh lens: one which casts aside a
scholarly male gaze and expands the boundaries of what democratic representation
actually is.
Surili Sheth
PhD Candidate, Political Science
University of California, Berkeley
GENDERING MINORITIES: Muslim Women and the Politics of
Modernity by Sherin B.S. Orient Blackswan, New
Delhi, 2021.
Gendering Minorities: Muslim Women and the Politics of
Modernity by Sherin BS is a critical intervention on the intersection of
gender politics and minority politics, with a particular focus on debates in
Kerala. The book analyses the entanglements of multiple identities such as minority,
religious and gender in situating the agency of Muslim womenÕs position in
Kerala.
Primarily, Sherin BS questions the
metanarratives surrounding the Muslim womenÕs question in Kerala, which is
abstractly centred on the binary of oppression and
resistance. Here, Muslim women are categorized as victims who need saving from
the patriarchal male culture of the minority Muslim community. This has become
a hegemonic discourse across the whole range of the political spectrum,
exemplified in the pan-Indian discussions on the Shah Bano
case and further reflected in the mainstream feminist discourse in Kerala.
Second, Sherin BS problematizes the
appropriation of gender discourse by the Hindu nationalists and other Islamophobic forces to systemically vilify the Muslim
community. Sherin BSÕs approach opens a new pathway
to identify and think through these entanglements of power, subjectivity, and
freedom in contemporary feminist discourse in Kerala through a post-foundationalist framework. Sherin
BSÕs task is not to abandon the foundation of feminism but to identify the
changing foundations and contingencies of feminist politics to extricate the
complex and ever-evolving subjectivity of minority Muslim women.
The first chapter is a historical reconstruction of Muslim
women politics in Kerala by mapping the history of Muslim womenÕs political and
spiritual participation. The singular emergence of Muslim women agency is
traced from the premodern Indian ocean
world to 20th-century Islamic reform movements. The author mainly explores the
evolution, continuity and discontinuities of matrilineal traditions and
practices of Muslims in Kerala and further argues that Muslim womenÕs agency is
a central constitutive feature of the Muslim communityÕs political existence in
Kerala. Sherin BS analyses two key figures: Arakkal Beevi, ruler of the Arakkal Kingdom, a Muslim dynasty in Kannur, and Beema Beevi, a saint-preacher who
hails from Trivandrum in order to show how the historical role of Muslim women
as rulers and spiritual leaders has been crucial in the formation of Islam in
Kerala.
The second chapter explores Muslim womenÕs agency in the
context of Islamic reform movements in Kerala by rethinking the politics of
gender, modernity, and religion in Kerala. The reformist efforts of Hindu upper
caste males are widely considered the driving force of KeralaÕs so-called
progressive cultural space. The socio-political engagements of anti-caste, non-Brahmanic leaders like Ayyankali
and Sree Narayana Guru have
also received recognition within mainstream discourse after the emergence of
subaltern movements. However, the Muslim reformist movements were sidelined in
the historiography of the reform movements of Kerala. Muslim identity itself is
marked as backward and regressive in mainstream narratives, and it has been
reproduced through the images of uncivilized, patriarchal Muslims in popular
movies and literature, despite their social mobility and renaissance through
education and transformative encouragement and acceleration of womenÕs
participation in various fields of society and politics (p. 91). As Sherin BS rightly points out, the uniqueness of Muslim
reformist movements is completely ignored in the existing narrative of the
Kerala renaissance.
Through this systemic ignorance, the ÔburdenÕ of patriarchy
– which is universal to all reform movements – is misconstrued as
the exclusive problem of Muslim others to make space for the progressive claims
of modern Kerala. The otherization of the Muslim
community in Kerala happens through a selective invocation of gender discourse.
For instance, the early Muslim women reformist intervention of Haleema Beevi is deliberately
excluded from the mainstream reformist rhetoric in Kerala. This is served to
construct a patriarchal minority community that is less progressive, less
gender sensitive and less secular compared to an ever-evolving progressive
Kerala society. But the books show that Muslim women activists were involved
and reconfigured gender relations within the Muslim community in the light of
Islamic theological and political language over the last hundred years. Sherin BS summarizes: ÔIn their engagement with modernity,
Muslim women attempted to accommodate the newly defined cultural space,
redefining and internalising modernity integrated
with the spiritual strength of Islam, which is usually construed as the
antithesis of modernity.Õ (p. 127)
The final chapter is based on the contemporary debates on
gender and Islam in Kerala. Sherin BS critically
reviews the Malayalam novel Barsa (2007) by
Khadija Mumtaz. The novel has received wide
recognition in the Kerala public sphere as a critical feminist literary text to
popularize gender issues within Muslim communities. Sherin
BS observes that the reception of the novel is coupled with the post 9/11
context of Islamophobia and discourse on Islamic
fundamentalism in Kerala (p. 166). Mumtaz develops a
critical insider perspective to address gender issues within the Muslim
community. However, Sherin BS argues that MumtazÕs critical reflection homogenizes Muslim womenÕs
lives in a singular narrative of oppressed Muslim women and fails to engage
with the operations of Hindu nationalism and Islamophobia
in producing the gendered narratives of Muslims and Islam. The third chapter
concludes with a detailed analysis of other literary and political narratives
in the academic spheres of Kerala.
Sherin BSÕs broader aim is to reimagine the
Muslim womenÕs question from a minority inclusive framework rather than
exclusive gender discourse. One of the possible drawbacks is its focus on the
minority status of Muslim women and its clubbing with the religious identity of
Muslim women subject. Her analysis oscillates between the tensions of minority
studies and Muslim women studies. However, the religious questions of Muslim
women demand an autonomous interrogation considering the recent shifts in
Muslim women studies across the globe. Nevertheless, Sherin
BSÕs reading is a rare attempt in contemporary scholarship to trace the
construction of Muslim women in the history and politics of Kerala.
Ummul Fayiza
PhD candidate, School of Law
University of Warwick, UK
WAITING FOR SWARAJ: Inner Lives of Indian Revolutionaries by Aparna Vaidik. Cambridge University Press, UK, 2021.
AFTER a long silence that followed the works of David Laushey and Manini Chatterjee on Bengal revolutionaries, a clutch of serious
historical studies has begun to appear in recent years: on the Ghadr Party, on the Hindustan Socialist Republican Party,
and, above, all, on Bhagat Singh. They explore new
territory: women comrades of revolutionaries, the literature they wrote and
inspired, popular lore and representations in different media – to
mention just a few themes.
VaidikÕs monograph makes several important
departures within this stream, and I will begin with two very major ones.
Despite the lure of Bhagat SinghÕs image, she chose
to focus on Chandrasekhar Azad: a somewhat forgotten and shadowy comrade of
Singh who began his political career with the Congress, then joined the
Hindustan Republican Party and eventually migrated into the HSRA and became
their chief logistical organizer. Long overshadowed by SinghÕs charismatic
image, Azad, however, seems to have gathered some recent valorization during
the 2017 celebrations of Independence which I should mention. Central
government televised portrayals tucked away the socialist and atheist Singh
somewhere in the middle of a long line of revolutionaries. But Azad is placed
at the head, with the janeyu prominently
displayed.
Vaidik forms a bridge between the less-known
HSA and the HSRA. She also encompasses several other political formations in
North India, as she tracks AzadÕs colourful career.
In between, he had also joined a monastic order in order to procure its funds
for the revolutionary cause: an ambition which he gave up in disgust when the
chief monk refused to die soon, leaving Azad as his successor. VaidikÕs narrative allows us many such fascinating and
unexpected glimpses into revolutionary lives. It is also populated with an
impressively large cast of characters who surrounded Singh and Azad, in all
their mutual interactions and relationships.
Vaidik chose Azad as the central figure in
order to clear up a somewhat distorted image of the HSRA as a gathering of
committed socialists alone – an image created by SinghÕs later turn to
Marxism. By turning the focus on the non-socialist and determinedly brahmanical Azad, she is able to bring out the political
diversities among the comrades. She could, perhaps, also have added something
about their religious and caste thinking. She does mention the Arya Samaj linkages of several
figures but what that meant for them is not quite clear. She also mentions that
Azad never abandoned his brahman
identity: but what else did this involve apart from the ever visible janeyu? Indeed, since the times were beginning to swell
with vicious communal antagonism, one wonders if they had thoughts about inter
community relationships. The influence of BankimchandraÕs
Anandamath was, as she points out,
enormous in creating an example of armed patriotic ascetics. But Anadamath also contained the first communal hate
speeches which were extremely powerful: how did the revolutionaries respond to
that? Anandamath, moreover, portrayed the persistence
of love and even occasions when desire did find an outlet – punishment,
however, was deferred till the mission was accomplished. How did the stern
celibacy of revolutionaries resonate with those passages?
The last of the HSRA group to be apprehended by the police,
Azad was a master of infinite disguises – VaidikÕs
term for him is bahurupiya or a professional
entertainer who can assume multiple personas. We have heard a lot about how Bhagat Singh eluded the state as he went around as a Sahib.
It seems AzadÕs range was even broader. In fact, the book begins with a very
interesting account of his travels as he assumed dizzyingly pluralized
personalities: from a sanyasi to a
mechanic. One would have liked to know a bit more about methods of police
surveillance which eventually tracked him down.
Despite VaidikÕs disclaimer that Bhagat Singh is not the chief protagonist of her narrative,
he does often share centre stage with Azad. Moreover, both lives are intricately
interwoven with many others: Sachindranath Sanyal, Ramprasad Bismil, Ashfaqulla Khan, to
mention just a few. In fact, Vaidik could have emphasized the unique presence of a
Muslim among these revolutionaries which practically never happened in other armed
groups. A Bengali Muslim later wrote how he was spurned by the terrorist
organization which he had wanted to join. The pledge in the name of Kali, and
the elaborate Hindu initiation ceremony stood in the way: perhaps also
strengthened somewhat by communal distrust. In this context, I find it somewhat
surprising that the initiation ritual is missing in VaidikÕs
work, as are the words of the pledge they took.
The second critical departure lies in VaidikÕs
emphasis on the quotidian life of revolutionaries. She makes a very important
point. We remember this group as young men who are hungry for action: throwing
the bomb, raiding homes and trains, shooting the Sahib and the final embrace of
martyrdom. Vaidik, however, reminds us that the
moments of actual action were few and far between, and they were also brief.
Most of their time as revolutionary conspirators was spent in waiting –
preparing and disciplining themselves endlessly for
action. Those activities occupied the bulk of their political life which, in
any case, was remarkably short-lived: cut down by arrests, prison or the
gallows. In fact, Azad was the only one of his group who could evade arrest for
a long time after SaundersÕ killing.
The revolutionary-everyday was a time for bodybuilding
through an exacting regime of exercises, supervised by Azad. But it was also a
time for intense reading – as Vaidik shows, the
HRA and the HSRA members were surprisingly voracious readers of world
revolutionary literature. Vaidik provides us with an
exhaustive catalogue of what they read, and it really surprised me to find so
many of the pre-Bolshevik Russian Narodnik and
anarchist classics among them. Bengal revolutionaries, in contrast, read more
of the Irish literature. A question, however, remains. Did they read them all
in their complete English translations, or did they use abbreviated versions,
or even brief summaries of these works in other books. ChernyshevskyÕs
What is To Be Done – a very
important resource for Bhagat Singh, as Vaidik shows – in particular is a large and
multilayered tome and it is surprising that Bhagat
Singh could have procured an unabridged translation. It would have added to
this important aspect of their intellectual life if we had more information
about what they made of their rather eclectic readings that came out of
conflicting political perspectives: Narodniks
themselves had multiple strands, even apart from the Bolsheviks and Anarchists.
What accounts for the different preferences of the HSRA members, for clearly
Singh and Azad belonged to quite different political stocks? Did they read the
books selectively?
A significant point that emerges from the book is the breadth
of their political thinking – in contrast to BengalÕs Anushilan
and Jugantar who, in this phase, were preoccupied
with methods of assassination alone. In this regard their manifesto is really
remarkable because it visualized independent India quite precisely as a loose
federated republic instead of a tightly centralized unitary state. Vaidik could have explained the preference more fully.
Vaidik reveals that there was more to the
revolutionary-everyday than plotting the killing and the dying. It is
delightful to read about their jokes and quarrels, their love for the cinema
and for Chaplin, their ability to compose songs and to sing, their impatience
with the meager diet in dens where Azad ensured that the hard-earned funds
would be kept aside for those destined to be sent for action first. Suddenly we
recall that these were young men with a sense of humour,
a capacity for great mutual affection, occasional bouts of greed for milk and
sweets. Their banter is especially captivating and the stories they made up
about how each would be caught and die according to his favourite
foible are hilarious rather than black gallows humour.
One would have expected a bit more about their political discussions and
arguments but, perhaps, the sources – memoirs, biographies and
recollections – do not allow for that. One also misses a fuller
discussion of the mutual perceptions of Gandhians and
revolutionaries about each other.
In fact, VaidikÕs narrative
actually lends itself to an interesting contrast and comparison between Gandhian and revolutionary ideas. Both shared a similar
preoccupation with dietary regimes, about sacrifice, about asceticism and
renunciation of desire, about the detailed art of self-discipline. Like them,
Gandhi, too, believed that the ascetic patriotic body should also be virile:
strength lies in perpetually cultivating and repressing male potency.
Vaidik, however, points out an interesting
contrast with Gandhians: the easy camaraderie among
revolutionaries and the lack of hierarchy and a command structure. That, too,
is very different from the Chittagong revolutionaries for example where members
had to abide by the orders of Surya Sen all the time
even when these irked them.
One wonders what actually lay behind the absolute sexual self
abnegation of these healthy young men who enjoyed – even when they rarely
had them – some other pleasures of life. Did their dread of family life
and marriage come from an anterior fear of heterosexuality that drove them into
the celibacy pledge, rather than the notion that abstinence provides moral and
physical energy? Vaidik has pointed out the
possibility of homoerotic vibes.
There is a relative neglect of their relationship with their
families which they left behind to face the undoubted wrath of the British.
What did they feel about the parents and siblings they had abandoned, many of
whom would have depended on them in old age?
Let me close this with one of the most striking aspects of
the monograph: the eroticism which framed the image of revolutionary death. If
they did control their impatience for the day of action, it seems they could
barely control their longing for death. They hungered for the kiss of the
noose, they called the gallows their chosen and beloved wife, they imagined how
death would come to them, they thought of death as marriage. Apart from the
aura of patriotic martyrdom which surely drove them to this path, what else was
involved in this dream of death – for young men who had barely known life
as yet? Or was it precisely because life and its manifold beauties and
possibilities were still unfamiliar that they could embrace the certainty of
death so ardently?
The book is a pleasure to read, combining, as it does, rare
analytical acumen and important insights with a very wide range of readings on
global revolutionaries. Written in a captivating manner, it recreates
revolutionary manhood in its diverse plurality, in its profoundly human
qualities, with its fun, foibles and problems – instead of merely
freezing the characters in gestures of deathless heroism and martyrdom. All this, however, without subtracting an iota from their limitless
courage and idealism.
Tanika Sarkar
Professor of History
Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi
THE DREAM OF REVOLUTION: A Biography of Jayaprakash
Narayan by Bimal Prasad and Sujata Prasad. Penguin Random House, Gurugram, 2021.
Jayaprakash Narayan (JP) saw many dreams but had
his share of nightmare visitations too. His dreams were going rather well in
the early years of his political life but at the end the nightmares came
crashing through.
JPÕs best, perhaps also his happiest, days were when he was
Jawaharlal NehruÕs close companion and trusted ally in the 1930 and early
1940s. He was a dependable enfant terrible, and a great backup source
for the restless socialist wing in the pre-Independence Congress party. Nehru
and he had similar dreams, but JPÕs failing in those days, and later too, was
that he believed in them in his waking hours as well. Time and again, there
were rude knocks on the door, but JP did not heed them.
While his first disagreements with the Congress began with Sardar Patel, Rajagopalachari, and Rajendra Prasad in pre-independence times, Nehru
disappointed him as well in Independent India. Reluctantly, but firmly, he
often criticised Nehru for not being vigilant enough
on human rights and for letting authorities physically attack working class
strikes. CongressÕs record after 1948 did little to cheer JP and he even
complained how in Uttar Pradesh the party was turning ÔfascistÕ as it was
unmindful of workersÕ rights to protest and strike.
The Partition years were difficult for JP to accept, but he
did not fault Nehru for that. What he could not ignore was when radical
measures, as he saw them, were cast aside by Congress under Nehru, for the sake
of political expediency. Though this left him bitter, he still nursed an
emotional and ideological affinity with Nehru. If one were to go by the letters
they wrote to each other, this feeling was profoundly mutual. Their
disagreements never became acrimonious and his daughter inherited this goodwill
till she blew it with the Emergency.
For a full-bodied awareness of all this, and much more, we
are lucky to have a sensitive, detailed, and critically appreciative biography
of Jayaprakash Narayan by Bimal
Prasad and Sujata Prasad. This father-daughter effort
is, of course, a tribute to JP, but this volume is also a daughterÕs tribute to
her late father, Professor Bimal Prasad, and what a
fine tribute it is to both.
It was JPÕs ideological restlessness that led him to
continuously scan the political horizon for a safe and friendly harbour to dock. The two ports he instantly, and
instinctively, stayed away from were the ones that were outright communal or
bourgeois right wing and, of the two, his distaste for the former was greater.
He opposed all forms of communalism and like Nehru, he
saw majority communalism as a greater threat. That one begets the other was not
entirely lost on him. This is why he openly condemned the Muslim League too for
fostering exclusiveness and non-involvement with the upsurges that were
enveloping British ruled India.
Later when the Ranchi riots broke out in 1967, JP was livid
with rage at the way massacres were carried out. Unsparing in his criticism he
angrily remarked, ÔThere must be something terribly wrong with our upbringing,
with the religious beliefs that have been inculcated in us, the education that
is being imparted, the group attitudes that are being developed by assiduous propaganda
to make it possible for human beings to change suddenly into bloodthirsty
monsters.Õ
The authors of this volume adroitly highlight JPÕs rare gift
to see subtleties of shade where others saw just black and white. It is this
that set him apart from most intellectuals around him and also made him a
perennial political misfit. For example, his criticism of the two nation theory
took a turn quite unlike the usual argument that spoke of goodwill and
historical conviviality. Instead, JP raised a theoretical issue when he
questioned the convergence between nation and state in the minds of many
commentators.
Accordingly, JP drew attention to the fact that Britain was
one state but had several nations like the Scots, Irish and Welsh in it just as
French, German and Swiss coexist in Switzerland. Why then, JP asked, canÕt
Hindu and Muslim nations live amicably in a single nation state? The idea of
Ôtwo nationsÕ was not debunked, as is often the case. The complication JPÕs
problematic raised was: ÔWhy should this multiplicity (or diversity) matter
when it comes to making a unified nation-state?Õ Yes, there may be more than
one nation in IndiaÕs nation-state, so what? Once this issue was placed
upfront, the tenor of the debate underwent a drastic change.
It was this ability to view several established opposites as
subtleties that probably explains why JP found it difficult to drop ideological
anchor and settle down. His student years in America opened his mind to high
political theory which he read as avidly as he did Steinbeck and P.G.
Wodehouse. He came back to India a socialist but soon disassociated himself
from Soviet style communism. JP astutely recognized that the idea of the
Ôdictatorship of the proletariatÕ was a bogus one and that this doctrine was never
there in any of MarxÕs works. JP could have well added that in the Communist
Manifesto, Karl Marx had clearly said that communists should never form
a party; a warning that Leninist Marxists simply ignored.
Later, when he was drawn to Mahatma Gandhi, non-violence for
him was not an inviolable dogma. At one point he even felt that should there
ever be a Gandhian state, the ÔStalins
of GandhismÕ would make a mess of it just as LeninÕs
successors had mangled the Soviet Union. Again, by viewing social facts as a
subtle engagement of passions JP could justify why a bayonet wielding soldier
deserved humane treatment in a prisoner of war camp.
The Gandhian streak in JP lingered
for long inspite of his equivocations on
non-violence. What appealed to him most was the sense of self sacrifice for the
larger good which he felt was so quintessentially what the Mahatma preached. To
that end JP organized a voluntary band of young activists who would combine
philanthropy with social uplift to energize redistribution of wealth but
without cataclysmic outcomes. It was never violence versus non-violence, or
socialism versus capitalism, in their pure and absolute terms that attracted
JP. For him it was important to work along the cracks and interstices of these
ideological blocks and thus render them meaningful to everyday people.
This is why when Naxalism was
growing in India in the 1960s, JP found himself
reluctantly supportive of their spirit of rebellion as there was so much
injustice in the countryside. However, he was critical of the CPI when it asked
its followers to come to a protest meeting for land redistribution armed with
sticks and spears as he felt this was an unwarranted justification of violence.
His involvement with the Bhoodan Movement clearly
indicated where he stood on violence versus non-violence, but that did not
blind him to the injustices that the poor routinely faced.
This probably explains why JP stayed for as long as he did in
the Congress though he had leading figures in it level serious charges against
him. At one point in 1932, JP was even called the ÔCongress brainÕ. JPÕs
political involvement became even more tricky as his
advocacy of partyless politics was expressed time and
again while he himself was an integral part of a party. Later in the closing
decades of the 1950s, JP passionately embraced Gandhian
values and even advocated village republics and self-sufficient agro-industrial
communities. Sadly, these high sounding views stayed as vague and impractical
as they were when originally formulated by Gandhiji
in Hind Swaraj.
There was then space for Marx and for Gandhi, just as there
was space for the idealist in Nehru but also for the feisty Ram Manohar Lohia. The Congress
Socialist Party had a diverse membership base. At one extreme there was Swami Sampurnanand, who was inspired by Vedantic
ideals, and then there was Minoo Masani,
an avowed Fabian. JP had no hesitation in straddling both these dimensions, as
long as there was unanimity on the ideals of socialism.
It was not just Soviet style communism that JP found
abhorrent, but he also disagreed with the easy equation of calling acts such as
that of bank nationalization socialist. More importantly, for JP socialism
could claim a legitimate place only after it had first ushered in democracy. His
insistence on this principle comprehensively separated him from the communists
of his time. People may accuse JP of being untidy in many of his political
positions, but not on this one.
Though JP did fall out in the post-Independence years with
Nehru and Lohia, for different reasons, of course, he
never deprived them of his affection. He left the Congress fold to establish
the Praja Socialist Party (PSP) in 1952 to underline
the importance of achieving socialism without violence and Bolshevik
conspiracies. Later, when he found the socialists were getting no traction,
particularly with reference to labour and land
struggles, he quit the PSP. He now readied himself to dive into Gandhian politics and this is what led him to Vinoba Bhave and the Gramdan-Bhoodan movement.
Predictably, he soon found fault with this approach too as it
was far too subservient to goodwill and less inclined to apply pressure. In his
heart, he had not forsaken the Congress altogether either. Initially, JP was on
Indira GandhiÕs side and even congratulated her when she became the prime
minister. He was all praise for her in the way she handled the Bangladesh
crisis. In his letters to her, he addressed her as ÔInduÕ.
Soon, however, ÔInduÕ became ÔIndiraÕ and then Ôprime
ministerÕ in step with his mounting criticisms against Indira GandhiÕs
policies. His disenchantment with her began with bank nationalization and then
climaxed sensationally with the Emergency of 1975. When JP was incarcerated
post-Emergency in 1976, he wrote that the treatment meted out to him then was
much worse than the way the British treated him in Lahore Fort jail
JPÕs dream years were in the 1930s and early 1940s when he
was seen as Jawaharlal NehruÕs chosen one and likely successor. His escape from
Hazaribagh Jail in 1942 was a sensation and it made
him an immensely romantic figure. Gradually, his differences with Nehru
resulted in JP drifting towards a more socialist position, hence his PSP
affiliation. That was not the end of it, there were
other disappointments on the way. After his born again Gandhian
attachment to Bhoodan movement waned, he was tempted
to abandon politics altogether.
The decade of the seventies was when JP scripted both his
dramatic rise and fall. In 1974, he found himself as the leading mascot of the
Bihar agitation to dissolve the Assembly. He rather cherished this position for
he felt that he could finally realize his dream of Ôtotal revolutionÕ. But he
was really deluding himself. It did not take long for this vision to become a
dreadful disappointment as it broke into several pieces along predetermined
party lines. Even Morarji Desai, as prime minister,
ticked off JP when the latter queried about inner party decision making. It was
JP, after all, who had given credibility to and buoyed the Janata
Party and now he was being rudely sidelined. The dream of Ôtotal revolutionÕ
soon dissolved and became his nightmare.
This biography of Jayaprakash
Narayan by late Professor Bimal Prasad and his
daughter, Sujata Prasad, is a labour
of love to the dreamer who had to meet a tragic end for he dreamt too hard.
Though the story this biography relates is sympathetic to JP, it is far from
being hagiographic. The many errors of judgement that
JP made, his naivete with regard to the Bhoodan movement, and indeed his unrealistic expectations
of the Janata Party are presented unadorned. It is
also a touching and painstaking effort by a daughter to bring her fatherÕs
efforts to fruition. Professor Bimal Prasad had
envisioned the book, had done the ground work for it but, sadly, did not live
long enough to finish the project. It is to Sujata
PrasadÕs credit that she brought to a fine conclusion what her father had
started. With this book, JP lives again!
Dipankar Gupta
Retired Professor, School of
Social Sciences, JNU, Delhi
Footnotes:
1. Pamela Paxton, ÔWomenÕs Suffrage in the Measurement of Democracy: Problems of OperationalizationÕ, Studies in Comparative International Development 35(3), 2000, pp. 92-111.
2. Maxine Molyneux, ÔMobilisation Without EmancipationÕ, WomenÕs Interests, States, 1985.
3. Susan Franceschet and Jennifer M. Piscopo, ÔGender Quotas and WomenÕs Substantive Representation: Lessons from ArgentinaÕ, Politics & Gender 4(3), 2008.
4. Beth Rein Gold and Kerry L. Haynie, ÔRepresenting WomenÕs Interests and Intersections of Gender, Race, and Ethnicity in US State LegislaturesÕ, in Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon and Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson (eds.), Representation. Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 183-204.
5. ÔParliamentsÕ, as Rai and Spary paraphrase, Ôlike other institutions, are gendered – in their rules as well as in the performance of these rules; in the norms they support, aesthetics they present, in their leadership, and the everyday dramaturgyÕ (Rai and Johnson, 2014, p. 299).
6. Conciliation, compromise, and adjusting is a key script of many performances of womanhood [some refs]. As Goetz (1995, 12) summarizes, Ôto be a woman in an organization where most of oneÕs professional colleagues and hierarchical superiors are men, comes with a sense of ÒtrespassingÓ, of not exactly belonging, because of oneÕs difference from the male normÕ – and this results in particular behaviours of women who professionally enter such spaces, and of their male colleagues. Anne Marie Goetz, ÔWomen Development Workers: Implementing Rural Credit Programmes in BangladeshÕ.
7. This observation is in line with other work on representation – e.g., Jensenius (parties clump marginalized people together due to electoral incentives, which has adverse effects on certain marginalized groups), Purohit (bureaucrats matter for politiciansÕ work and in particular ways for women sarpanches).
8. The crux of BrulŽÕs book, which I have not focused on here due to space constraints, is empirical: To test her gatekeeper theory, BrulŽ uses linear regression models and data from the Rural Economic and Demographic Survey (REDS) dataset from 2006/9 covering rural households across 17 Indian states. She complements her quantitative analysis with an impressive 500 individual interviews across Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Maharashtra, and Delhi. Her empirical findings are that across India, where there are reservations, women are more likely to inherit property and less likely to get a dowry. She also finds evidence of higher levels of intrahousehold violence, intrahousehold conflict between parents and children, and lower rates of married daughters living close to their natal households, for women who gain property after marriage. A striking finding is that exposure to quotas lowers the proportion of daughters that mothers bear by 5-20 percentage points, which BrulŽ conceptualizes as backlash to womenÕs representation, and hence a ÔparadoxÕ of gender-equalizing reform. Overall, BrulŽ presents a helpfully complex picture: female representation in gram panchayats both leads to the enforcement of gender-equalizing economic reforms but also has unexpected negative externalities.
9. At what point would they sell off ancestral land (would it be just before marriage, or would it be many years before?), or to choose a husband whose household is closer or further from her natal household (do young women get to exercise such voice in the marriage market if they negotiate? How prevalent do we expect this level and type of negotiation and choice to be?) As BrulŽ references from Chowdhry (1997), ÔThe only ideal and izzatwala (honourable) pattern of inheritance is acknowledged to be by males from males. This means basically that daughters and sisters who are potential introducers of fresh blood and new descent lines through their husbands are to be kept from exercising their inheritance rights. With the result that the most virulent objection to the breach of caste/community taboos in marriage comes from the powerful landowning castes of the villageÓ (quoted on p. 1025, BrulŽ 2020).
10. Catharine A. MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law. Harvard University Press, 1987.
11. Catharine A. MacKinnon, ÔSex Equality Under the Constitution of India: Problems, Prospects, and Ôpersonal lawsÕ, International Journal of Constitutional Law 4(2), 2006, pp. 181-202.
12. James C. Scott, Seeing Like a State. Yale University Press, 2008.
13. These are key, as Alyssa HeinzeÕs (forthcoming) ethnography of women sarpanches in Maharashtrian gram panchayats shows.
14. R. Srivatsan. ÔConcept of ÒSevaÓ and the ÒSevak in the Freedom MovementÕ, Economic and Political Weekly 41(5), 2006, pp. 427-38. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4417766.
15. Tariq Thachil, ÔEmbedded Mobilization: Nonstate Service Provision as Electoral Strategy in IndiaÕ, World Politics 63(3), Cambridge University Press, 2011, pp. 434-69, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23018777.
16. Soundarya Chidambaram, ÔThe ÒRightÓ Kind of Welfare in South IndiaÕs Urban Slums: Seva vs. Patronage and the Success of Hindu Nationalist OrganizationsÕ, Asian Survey 52(2), University of California Press, 2012, pp. 298-320. https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2012.52.2.298.
17. Swati Dyahadroy, ÔExploring Gender, Hindutva and SevaÕ, Economic and Political Weekly 44(17), 2009, pp. 65-73. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40279187.
18.
Manuela Ciotti, ÔResurrecting Seva
(Social Service): Dalit and Low-Caste Women Party Activists as Producers and
Consumers of Political Culture and Practice in Urban North IndiaÕ, The
Journal of Asian Studies 71(1), [Cambridge University Press, Association
for Asian Studies], 2012, pp. 149-70, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41350057.