In A Suitable Boy,
Vikram Seth writes with affection of a placid India's first general election in
1951, and the egalitarian spirit it momentarily bestowed on an electorate
deeply riven by class and caste: "the great washed and unwashed public,
sceptical and gullible", but all "endowed with universal adult
suffrage". India's 16th general election this month, held against a
background of economic jolts and titanic corruption scandals, and tainted by
the nastiest campaign yet, announces a new turbulent phase for the country –
arguably, the most sinister since its independence from British rule in 1947.
Back then, it would have been inconceivable that a figure such as Narendra
Modi, the Hindu nationalist chief minister of Gujarat accused, along with his
closest aides, of complicity in crimes ranging from an anti-Muslim pogrom in
his state in 2002 to extrajudicial killings, and barred from entering the US,
may occupy India's highest political office.
Showing posts with label Pankaj Mishra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pankaj Mishra. Show all posts
Sunday, 18 May 2014
Thursday, 9 May 2013
The sun is at last setting on Britain's imperial myth
by Pankaj Mishra, The Guardian
Scuttling away from India in 1947, after plunging the jewel
in the crown into a catastrophic partition, "the British", the
novelist Paul Scott famously wrote, "came to the end of themselves as they
were". The legacy of British rule, and the manner of their departures –
civil wars and impoverished nation states locked expensively into antagonism,
whether in the Middle East, Africa or the Malay Peninsula – was clearer by the
time Scott completed his Raj Quartet in the early 1970s. No more, he believed,
could the British allow themselves any soothing illusions about the basis and
consequences of their power.
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