BurnedOut
Your friendly neighborhood asshole
I have recently shifted cities and my roommate is vexatious in numerous ways - some of them I can tolerate, some of them unbearable.
One of his unbearable ways of life is an imposing demeanor when it comes to intellectualizing. He carries with him the odour of a Marxist but in reality is not one. He is a fierce critic of the caste system in India. I am unsurprised as it is not uncommon for students of my age and a little older to share this logic - we are ultimately of the 21st century's progressive stride. I don't need to necessarily explain what caste system is but if in case you are finding the term baffling, here you go.
His personality is motley, he is definitely a notch higher in his level of thinking, that I can assure but sometimes what I don't understand is his lack of amenability towards perspectives that are opposing his. If you have read Russian history to the bare minimum, you will stumble upon how the soviets managed to keep the communists interested throughout its ill-conceived schemes - dialectics.
The communists were infamous for using dialectics not as a method of a purer inquiry but as a source of rationalization which ironically trumps Hegel's and Marx's comment on human 'alienation'. In simpler words, when something bothers you, just stick to your guns and call the other perspective an imposter or some derivative of your perspective or even better - create a mishmash of both while keeping the dominant narrative as yours similarly to how democracy invalidates its own democratic values.
My roommate is one of such persons. For him, every narrative in India - political or social is marred with the caste system. While it may be true to some degree, India itself is a honest-to-god neoliberal economy and that is enough basis for any sane Indian intellectual to say that caste-system only critics are falling short of evidence to project their arguments for posterity.
As far as I have read about Indian history, economy and the socialist scene, I can say that the role of caste system persists but no longer as the 'grand narrative'. It is rather relegated to the position of a catalyst towards towards biased social functioning than being an active ingredient.
India has witnessed a surge of capitalistic line of thought pervading almost all stratas of society - there is secularization in the bloods of every profit-wanter although it may not be immanent until the amelioration of existing poverty. Even if the social biases are infamous for causing regularly unwanted incidents, these incidents are far from reality that is taking course.
Of course, it is a matter of debate if whether the backward areas should be considered or the progressive ones. I believe that if the dominant idea is strong enough, it will enough the hold of traditional thinking in time. Therefore, I believe that although caste system continues to play a role, it does not play as big as a role of state's raison d'etre or economic liberalization. An Indian villager may disagree with me but provide him with enough opportunities to be a capitalist, he will jump to the boat of secular economic dealings than a caste-system driven economy. This is evident from the growth of Indian economy. A truly enrapturing system of thought will survive the onslaught of progress, for eg. Racism and Nationalism but caste system as a system of thought and political economy is simply too inefficient to persist in the long run.
The fact that it lurks in the Indian society is not the failure of progress but the failure of inequitable development of the society. Take that off the board and you will watch caste system's remnants crumbling in no time. If the metros have managed to turn so secular in such short time in India, why not other areas?
But no, these ideas are not entertained by these propounders of caste-system-is-the-everlasting-sodomy theory won't buy these perspectives. They will call them capitalist or use Marx's dialectics to say, 'Oh, you see how the caste system has hidden itself behind these factors?'. This is being fake Gramsci and nothing else. Cultures always prevails in some manner or the other. They transmutate and not get destroyed in most cases of extremely popular cultures.
When you make the argument of caste system hiding itself behind other institutions - it is bullshit. Empirical analysis is no longer an obstacle in this era. Data collection has become easier and its sampling methods are improving. Evidence refutes this line of thought although does not simply eradicate it from reality.
Is an intellectual who constantly runs propaganda an intellectual anymore? Is not the job of an intellectual or a self-professed intellectual constantly refine his or her own theory? How blurred is the line between a seeker of knowledge or a person with just another hunger for power, a desire to establish hegemony through ideas?
One of his unbearable ways of life is an imposing demeanor when it comes to intellectualizing. He carries with him the odour of a Marxist but in reality is not one. He is a fierce critic of the caste system in India. I am unsurprised as it is not uncommon for students of my age and a little older to share this logic - we are ultimately of the 21st century's progressive stride. I don't need to necessarily explain what caste system is but if in case you are finding the term baffling, here you go.
His personality is motley, he is definitely a notch higher in his level of thinking, that I can assure but sometimes what I don't understand is his lack of amenability towards perspectives that are opposing his. If you have read Russian history to the bare minimum, you will stumble upon how the soviets managed to keep the communists interested throughout its ill-conceived schemes - dialectics.
The communists were infamous for using dialectics not as a method of a purer inquiry but as a source of rationalization which ironically trumps Hegel's and Marx's comment on human 'alienation'. In simpler words, when something bothers you, just stick to your guns and call the other perspective an imposter or some derivative of your perspective or even better - create a mishmash of both while keeping the dominant narrative as yours similarly to how democracy invalidates its own democratic values.
My roommate is one of such persons. For him, every narrative in India - political or social is marred with the caste system. While it may be true to some degree, India itself is a honest-to-god neoliberal economy and that is enough basis for any sane Indian intellectual to say that caste-system only critics are falling short of evidence to project their arguments for posterity.
As far as I have read about Indian history, economy and the socialist scene, I can say that the role of caste system persists but no longer as the 'grand narrative'. It is rather relegated to the position of a catalyst towards towards biased social functioning than being an active ingredient.
India has witnessed a surge of capitalistic line of thought pervading almost all stratas of society - there is secularization in the bloods of every profit-wanter although it may not be immanent until the amelioration of existing poverty. Even if the social biases are infamous for causing regularly unwanted incidents, these incidents are far from reality that is taking course.
Of course, it is a matter of debate if whether the backward areas should be considered or the progressive ones. I believe that if the dominant idea is strong enough, it will enough the hold of traditional thinking in time. Therefore, I believe that although caste system continues to play a role, it does not play as big as a role of state's raison d'etre or economic liberalization. An Indian villager may disagree with me but provide him with enough opportunities to be a capitalist, he will jump to the boat of secular economic dealings than a caste-system driven economy. This is evident from the growth of Indian economy. A truly enrapturing system of thought will survive the onslaught of progress, for eg. Racism and Nationalism but caste system as a system of thought and political economy is simply too inefficient to persist in the long run.
The fact that it lurks in the Indian society is not the failure of progress but the failure of inequitable development of the society. Take that off the board and you will watch caste system's remnants crumbling in no time. If the metros have managed to turn so secular in such short time in India, why not other areas?
But no, these ideas are not entertained by these propounders of caste-system-is-the-everlasting-sodomy theory won't buy these perspectives. They will call them capitalist or use Marx's dialectics to say, 'Oh, you see how the caste system has hidden itself behind these factors?'. This is being fake Gramsci and nothing else. Cultures always prevails in some manner or the other. They transmutate and not get destroyed in most cases of extremely popular cultures.
When you make the argument of caste system hiding itself behind other institutions - it is bullshit. Empirical analysis is no longer an obstacle in this era. Data collection has become easier and its sampling methods are improving. Evidence refutes this line of thought although does not simply eradicate it from reality.
Is an intellectual who constantly runs propaganda an intellectual anymore? Is not the job of an intellectual or a self-professed intellectual constantly refine his or her own theory? How blurred is the line between a seeker of knowledge or a person with just another hunger for power, a desire to establish hegemony through ideas?