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Subaltern
Studies
by
Dilip Simeon
An
Indian school of historiography whose inspiration lay in the Maoist
movement of the 1970's, and whose raison d'etre
has been the critique of the perceived elitist bias of Indian
nationalist discourse in history writing. Since 1983, when the first
volume appeared, Subaltern Studies have produced ten volumes of
collected research articles, which comprise the main corpus. After
the appearance of SS 6, a collective has managed editorial work.
Individual members of the collective have also written texts which
exemplify the "subaltern" viewpoint.
The school was founded by Ranajit
Guha, a Marxist intellectual from Bengal. Once a member of the
Communist Party of India, Guha was influenced by the radicalism of the
Chinese Cultural Revolution in the late 1960's to align himself with
Indian Maoism, which characterized independent India as a semi-feudal
and semi-colonial state. Arguably, the project's impetus derived from
an effort to establish the truth of this proposition - "the price of
blindness about the structure of the colonial regime as a dominance
without hegemony has been, for us, a total want of insight into the
character of the successor regime too as a dominance without hegemony"
(Guha, SS 6, 1989, p 307) However, Subaltern Studies has changed a
great deal since then. Ranajit Guha is acknowledged by the collective
to be its intellectual driving force and edited the first six volumes.
He is also the author of Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in
Colonial India, recognised as a seminal work in the genre of radical
Indian historiography.
Subaltern
Studies began with an attempt to apply the approach known as "history
from below" in the Indian context. The term subaltern
was inspired by the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci, and is used to
indicate powerlessness in a society wherein class differentiation,
urbanization and industrialization had proceeded very slowly. Gramsci
is the source of the subalternist respect for "culture" and the
"fragment" in history writing. Subaltern Studies was also
influenced by the critical Marxism of the English historian E.P.
Thompson, who attempted to move beyond economistic definitions of
class interest, as well as by Foucauldian critiques of
power/knowledge systems. Its (earlier) Maoist orientation and
polemical concern with the nationalism of Indian colonial elites made
for a slant toward the investigation of peasant rebellion under
colonial rule as well as peasant recalcitrance vis-à-vis
Gandhian nationalism and the Indian National Congress.
Initially
overtly political in its stance, Subaltern Studies was popular among
young Indian historians and scholars of modern India abroad as a
radical alternative to an uncritical academic celebration of
Independence. The Indian national movement was seen as a failed
hegemonic project (Sen, SS 5, 1987; Guha, SS 6 & 7; 1989 &
1993). Following Guha's investigation of elementary forms of
insurgent peasant consciousness, the school attracted the hostility
of the Indian Marxist establishment for being "idealist" (see
Chakravarty, SS 4, 1985) - a sign that it had departed from
economic reductionism. In a society where cultural symbols play an
important role in everyday life as well as in political mobilisation,
this was a fruitful departure, necessary for comprehending phenomena
such as charismatic leadership and communal conflict. (see for
example, the contributions of Amin, Pandey and Hardiman in SS 2,
1983, and SS 3, 1984, as well as their books) It has since expanded
"beyond the discipline of history" to engage "with more
contemporary problems and theoretical formations" (SS 9, 1998,
Preface). These include the politics of identity and literary
deconstruction. The shift in the 1990's was marked by the interest
shown in the project by literature scholars and critics such as
Edward Said and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. The analysis of discourse
has since become a major preoccupation for subalternist research.
It
would be wrong to adduce a uniformity of vision in the output of
Subaltern Studies over the years. The explicit, if unorthodox Marxian
bent of its "history from below" phase has been superseded by a
recent preoccupation with community, rural innocence and cultural
authenticity. The epistemological approval of the Leninist
"outsider" as the bearer of "higher" revolutionary
consciousness (Choudhury, SS 5, 1987) sits in unresolved tension with
the oft-expressed critique of elitism and statism in historiography
(Pandey, SS 8, 1994), and the belief in the immanence of culturally
mediated forms of universal community (Partha Chatterjee, SS 6,
1989). A thematic that persists however, is the opposition of two
"domains" - that of the elite, meaning the colonial state and
its allies, and their forms of politics, knowledge and power; versus
the subaltern. The latter has been variously interpreted as the
peasantry, community, locality and traditional domesticity and
distinguished by its resistance to colonisation. The difficulty
caused by the problem of mass complicity has been dealt with by
valorising the recalcitrance of "fragments".
The
subalternist stance of giving voice to the repressed elements of
South Asian history has engendered valuable research. A prominent
example is Shahid Amin's meticulous and thought-provoking
investigation of the prolonged aftermath of the (in)famous Chauri
Chaura riot of 1922, which resulted in the death of 22 policemen, the
suspension of the first non-cooperation movement, and the subsequent
punishment by hanging of nineteen accused rioters. (SS 5, 1987, and
OUP, 1995). This unravelling of "an event which all Indians, when
commemorating the nation, are obliged to remember - only in order to
forget", relentlessly juxtaposes event to nationalist metaphor and
existential reality to ideological representation. It will remain an
outstanding text in the subalternist corpus. Pandey's intricate
account of cow-protection movements in eastern India in late 19th
century exposes the interplay of symbolism, class-interest and public
space. This path-breaking essay in the pre-history of communal
politics (SS 2, 1983), along with his writings on the "construction"
of communalism in colonial India (SS 6, 1989, OUP, 1990) has
contributed significantly to a raging historical debate. Guha's own
Chandra's Death (SS
5, 1987) skilfully uses a legal narrative from mid-nineteenth century
Bengal to analyse the workings of patriarchal culture and indigenous
justice with great sensitivity to the existential predicament of
‘low-caste' women. In a brilliant passage, Guha qualifies a
description of conventional systems of asylum thus, "this other
dominance did not rely on the ideology of Brahmanical Hinduism or the
caste system for its articulation. It knew how to bend the relatively
liberal ideas of Vaishnavism and its loose institutional structure
for its own ends, demonstrating thereby that for each element in a
religion which responds to the sigh of the oppressed there is another
to act as an opiate" (SS 5, p. 159).
Subaltern
Studies' concern with issues of ideological hegemony elicits a
questioning of the school's own theoretical tensions. The
juxtaposition of statist versus subalternist history; or the
tyrannical march of Western-inspired universals versus the
resistance/ occlusion of heroic subalterns expresses a view of a
society divided into discrete social zones - with a concomitant
oversight regarding the osmosis between these "domains". The idea
that contemporary history encompasses a grand struggle between the
narratives of Capital and Community; that the latter is the truly
subversive element in modern society - "community, which ideally
should have been banished from the kingdom of capital, continues to
lead a subterranean, potentially subversive life within it because it
refuses to go away" - (Partha Chatterjee, OUP, 1997, p. 236),
raises the question of why ‘class' has been demoted from the
estate of subalternity, even though it too refuses to go away. In an
era wherein the assertion of community is rapidly transiting from the
realm of peasant insurgency to that of mass-produced identity, might
not "community" actually function as the necessary metaphysic of
Capital rather than its unassimilable Other?
The
tensions extend beyond theory to that of discursive choice and
indeed, silence. The political success of the movement for Pakistan
for example, the transformation in this case, of "communalism"
into "nationalism" has not been investigated despite Guha's
pointers (SS 6, 1992, p. 304, and SS 7, 1994, p 99-100), and despite
the urgent need for reflection on the Indian communists' transitory
but significant support in the 1940's for the two-nation theory and
Partition. Nor has the subsequent history of Pakistan and the
emergence of Bangladesh been addressed - a rich field for those
interested in the ever-shifting paradigms of nationhood and identity
in South Asia. Has subalternist thinking confined itself
ideologically within the fragmentary remainder of 1947? Similarly,
the category of labour and the history of the working class is absent
from the main corpus of research after Chakrabarty's publications
on the jute-mill workers of Calcutta (SS 2, 1983; SS 3, 1984 and OUP,
1989). Nor would it appear from this fleeting passage of workers
through the subalternist corpus, that the national movement and
nationalism had any impact on them. Despite insightful commentaries
by Partha Chatterjee on Gandhian ideology (SS 3, 1984, and Zed/OUP,
1986) and Amin's work on Chauri Chaura, the widespread popular
appeal of Gandhi and his ahimsa
remains an under-examined theme. The scholar who tires of negativity
and is looking for answers on the role of charisma might find
emotional sustenance as well as food for thought in an essay by
Dennis Dalton, entitled "Gandhi During Partition" (C.H. Philips &
M.D. Wainright, ed., The Partition of India,
Allen and Unwin, 1970). Dalton is neither a historian nor a
subalternist.
This
lacuna co-exists with a reluctance to tackle the history of the
communist movement, within India or internationally. Given its
founder's abiding interest in the failure of radical historiography
to produce a "principled and comprehensive, (as against eclectic
and fragmentary) critique of the indigenous bourgeoisie's
universalist pretensions"(Guha, SS 6, 1989, p 307), it would have
been intellectually appropriate for him to address the history and
historiographical practice of the movement to which he owed
theoretical inspiration. The subalternist antipathy towards what is
perceived as the representational pretension of the Gandhian
Congress, its habit of translating a constricted, bourgeois
aspiration into a nationalist universal (see Guha, "Discipline and
Mobilize" SS 7, 1993), elicits a query about the political practice
of the "true representatives" of the workers and peasants. Guha
can hardly be faulted for polemical shyness - and this makes
Subaltern Studies' sustained avoidance of "principled and
comprehensive" research on the fractious and tragic meanderings of
Indian communism quite remarkable. The observations on Guha's own
political trajectory (Biographical Sketch, SS 8, 1994) which refer to
his disillusionment with the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956, and
to his association with Maoist students in Delhi University in
1970-71, throw no light on the nature and content of his theoretical
transformation. These are not mere matters of biographical detail.
They are linked to vital historical questions on Bolshevism and its
impact on anti-colonial struggles in the 20th century, and
not just in India. The fact that Subaltern Studies have carried the
occasional essay on non-Indian societies, implies that the project of
exposing elitist bias and ideological camouflage has been (notionally
at least) thrown open to cross-national debate. Yet its sole
addressal of Leninism in seventeen years takes the form of a
theoretical apology (SS 5, 1987) without raising the matter of
political hegemonism and subalternity in the USSR, initiatives "from
below" in the Russian Revolution or the impact of Stalinism on the
international communist movement.
As
a discursive field Subaltern Studies has produced provocative
research on the history of colonial India and of late, into more
recent developments. It has been a forum for fresh scholarship on a
variety of themes, ranging from "low" caste and "tribal"
peasant insurgency, middle class ideologies of nationalism, prison
life, disciplinary structures under colonialism to the politics of
liquor, the significance of myth, and interpretations of "bondage".
It has also contributed important theoretical reflections on
questions of nationalism, colonial science, caste, gender and
identity. This includes an evaluation of the historiographical
antecedents of Hinduttva
or majoritarian nationalism (Partha Chatterjee, SS 8, 1994), a
critique of colonial penology (Arnold, SS 8, 1994), a commentary on
recent developments in Indian feminism (Tharu and Niranjana SS 9,
1996), research on concubinage and female domestic slavery (Indrani
Chatterjee, SS 10, 1999) and an epistemological analysis of colonial
ethnography (K. Ghosh, SS 10). The inquisitive scholar will also find
it worthwhile to read a critique of the school written by an
erstwhile member of the collective. Sarkar's essay "The Decline
of the Subaltern in Subaltern Studies" ( OUP, 1998) challenges what
he considers to be its valorisation of the indigenous, its
"enshrinement of sentimentality", and the shift in its polemical
target from capitalist and colonial exploitation to Enlightenment
rationality. A caveat might also be entered on the status of any
scholarly claim to "represent" the voice, interest or agency of a
preferred Subject - the historian's discipline may indeed never be
free of bias, but surely it must be as committed to the ideal of
truth-as-the-whole, and balance, as to polemic. Be that as it may,
Subaltern Studies has raised the level of debate in Indian
historiography - the corpus may be critiqued, but certainly not
ignored. It has had an impact on the orientation of many scholars,
within and outside the discipline of history, and beyond the
frontiers of India. Whether it will retain its original radical
impetus by engaging boldly with questions posed by its own practice
and the rapidly changing social and political environment in the
post-Soviet global order remains to be seen.
Suggested
Readings
Subaltern
Studies, (ten volumes),
published from1983 till 1999
Ranajit
Guha, Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial
India (OUP, 1983)
David
Hardiman, The Coming of the Devi: Adivasi Assertion in
Western India (OUP, 1987)
Dipesh
Chakravarty, Rethinking Working Class History: Bengal,
1890-1940 (OUP, 1989)
Gyanendra
Pandey, The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North
India (OUP, 1990)
Gyan
Prakash, Genealogies of Labour Servitude in Colonial India
(CUP, 1990)
Shahid
Amin, Event, Metaphor, Memory: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992,
(OUP,1995)
Partha
Chatterjee, Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World - A
Derivative Discourse (Zed/OUP
1986); and The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial and Post
Colonial Histories (OUP, 1997)
Sumit
Sarkar, Writing Social History
(OUP, 1998)
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