Lucid yet forceful

A collection of powerful commentaries on important political and social events in contemporary India.

January 04, 2014 03:55 pm | Updated May 19, 2016 11:36 am IST

Homeless on Google Earth by Mukul Kesavan

Homeless on Google Earth by Mukul Kesavan

In India we bank on time and forgetfulness to paper over the great rents in our history. They help but can’t do the job by themselves.

As a consumer of news, you could be forgiven for thinking the Indian elections are ideology-free. Pundits in the press and on the television news channels are always saying that votes are bought, coalitions are constructed out of caste fractions, politicians defect, political parties switch sides with frictionless ease, and the policies contained in party manifestos are irrelevant to the democratic process because they are never seriously discussed. Add up these defects and what India seems to have by way of elections is the mechanism of representative government without the large ideological contestation that is, or ought to be, a democracy’s reason for being. (p. 237)

“The electoral impact of the controversy over the reinstatement of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code might be small, but the political significance of the positions that parties have taken on the decriminalisation of homosexuality is considerable.” These were the opening lines of scholar-journalist and historian Mukul Kesavan’s latest column —“A political prism: What the different parties’ positions on 377 reveal”. In one sentence, clearly and sharply, he has not just encapsulated the recent furore, but also pithily analysed it, forecasting the impact it will have politically. These are powerful words, especially on the eve of general elections in India and after the four State election results were announced. Hence it is not surprising to discover that the web link to this article has been shared, reposted and discussed furiously in social media platforms. In fact, during the last elections, he was often spotted on television channels as a panelist, offering his independent, strong, thought-provoking and well-articulated opinion.

Homeless on Google Earth is a collection of 58 essays, most of which seem to have been written recently. Mukul Kesavan teaches history at Jamia Milia Islamia, New Delhi. In these opinion pieces, he covers a range of topics — his identity in ‘No place like home’, travelling to Kruger National Park with Amitav Ghosh, book launches, literary festivals, Bollywood, technology, gender issues, travelogues, education and political commentaries that cover topics like Israel, Gaza, Ceylon/Sri Lanka, Tibet, Kashmir, Naxalism, the pogroms in India of 1984, 1992 and 2002, elections and terrorism.

The essays in the book are well arranged. They start from the easy-to-read, light and sometimes hilarious essays like ‘Consuming wildness in Kruger’ to the grim, sober and chilling commentaries on police encounters at Jamia Milia Islamia (‘Presumed Innocent’); on Naxalites (‘Operation Green Hunt’); and on communal hatred (‘Vox Pop and Varun Gandhi’ and ‘Accounting for the Dead’). He is a genuine historian who marshals his evidence to bolster his arguments through tautly structured essays. that manifesting his splendid command of the English language. Without undermining the intelligence of his readers, His arguments are lucidly and simply expressed without undermining the intelligence of his readers.

Homeless on Google Earth is about important political and social events in contemporary India, and aspects of society that usually go unnoticed, like women taxi drivers or the peculiar social space in which MSM exists. Originally meant to be read one at a time, the collection can, however, start to seem dull when read at one sitting. Non-followers of Kesavan’s columns and other writings may not know that the essays were written at different times, as there are no dates for them in this book — an unexpected oversight from a historian.

At a time when mainstream papers are slowly going out of business or moving actively and aggressively to online spaces, the vacuum steadily being filled by citizen journalists, online (at times, armchair) activism, voices like Mukul Kesavan are valuable. He does not seem to be swayed by majority sentiments and is acutely aware of his academic discipline, which he brings to bear on the issues dealt with here. One may not agree with his point of view but it is presented forcefully yet courteously and without shrillness. It is important for such voices to be heard more often. They reach out to a range of people and ideological groups. The historian E.J. Hobsbawm once said at a public lecture in Delhi that earlier society changed at a pace that allowed people at least a generation to respond and adapt to it. But recently, change has been so rapid that we have to adjust and adapt in the space of a decade or less. At this speed it becomes imperative to have rational thinkers to actively participate in civil society, as Mukul Kesavan has done in these essays.

Homeless on Google Earth;Mukul Kesavan, Permanent Black, Rs.595.

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