Topic
| Urbanization and Governance in China and India: Informal Settlements, Land Disputes, and Citizen Rights |
Speaker
|
Dr. Xuefei Ren
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Global Urban Studies Program, Michigan State University
|
Chairperson
|
Dr. M. Vijayabaskar
Assistant Professor
MIDS
|
Date & Time
|
December 18, 2014 Thursday 3.00 p.m.
|
Venue
| Adiseshiah Auditorium, MIDS |
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
MIDS Monthly Seminar - December 2014
Monday, 15 December 2014
Submission of Essays - Reg
Dear Students of I MA English Literature,
I haven’t forgotten the deadline! J
And, a big thank you to all
of you who’ve submitted your essays online to me.
Others, who haven’t, please
do submit the same by 19 December 2014 to my mail id at rufusonline@gmail.com
For those of you who are yet to get your topics, contact your class
representative Ms. Hela rightaway.
Thank you so much.
God bless.
Rufus
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Saturday, 23 August 2014
'The Colloquium' in Progress
Dr. Joe addressing our students on Theory |
The first part of Dr.Joe's lecture was on traditional criticism,
and the second part was an overview of the theoretical
underpinnings of modern and contemporary literary theory.
Excerpts from his lecture:
Literary History is an irreconcilable binary of theory. M. H.
Abrams who is the Father figure of Liberal Humanism, in his famous work The Mirror and the Lamp, brings out the
four coordinates of criticism corresponding with four theories.
The first coordinate relates to the primacy of the Universe
as the source (or fountainhead) of literature. It was Plato who first talked about the mimetic theory in literature.
The word Mimesis is a Greek word meaning imitation. The world that we look
around is not real. There is an ideal world – a prototype. So, writers imitate this world (the prototype).
Wednesday, 6 August 2014
Guest Lecture Invite...:
for two lectures in a row, by two eminent scholars
on Saturday, 09 August 2014.
on Saturday, 09 August 2014.
Dr. Daniel David speaks on
Myth, Legend and Romance from 9:30 am - 10:45 am.
After a short break for tea and interaction, the second session by
Dr. Sivaraman, on
Contemporary Indian Theatre, will start at 11:00 am and end by 12:30 pm.
All UG, PG, MPhil and PhD Students are welcome...!
Monday, 4 August 2014
"To Write is to Know Who You Are...!"
Mr.Bishwananth Ghosh, Senior Editor, The Hindu, releasing Eclectic Representations |
Mr. Bishwanath Ghosh, Senior Editor with The Hindu, was the
chief guest at the inaugural of the English Literary Forum, today at 11 am. The
occasion saw the release of the seventh issue of Eclectic Representations, the
peer-reviewed International Journal from the PG & Research Department of
English, Madras Christian College. In addition, a book that guides in effective preparation
for UGC-NET-ENGLISH, containing a descriptive overview of literatures in
English, alongside a detailed analysis of the previous years’ question papers
[paper II & III], titled NET... SET… GO: Literatures in English was released by our Bursar.
Excerpts from his address:
Writing is not a glamorous profession. Rather, it is a
lonely profession – wherein you might have a deadline staring at you, prompting
you to be prepared all along! If you’re lucky enough, you’ll get published, and
if you’re still lucky, you’ll also get to be famous!
Release of Seventh Issue of Eclectic Representations and NET Preparatory Book
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Guest Lecture Series - I: An Overview of Literatures in English
Dr. Benet gave the maiden guest lecture of this academic year, today at 11 am, on “Preparing for UGC-NET: A Panoramic View of Literatures in English”.
Excerpts from his lecture:
Our mind has a way of connecting and associating
information. How do we retain pieces of information, and string them together
in order to have them recollected in the long run, forms the basis of preparing
for any competitive examination.
There are two types of Principles in Memory: One is, the remembrance
principle. I ask you and you are quick to respond. The second is the Recognition principle. You look at the
answer in print and then you recognise the answer. It really helps if you can
raise your memory from recognition principle to the remembrance part.
History of English Literature and History of Literary
Criticism are both inseparable. Hence it is important to develop a historical
sense of chronological time. Look out for major schools, major writers, major
genres etc in your preparation.
Tuesday, 29 July 2014
'Another Cosmopolitanism' - Ashis Nandy in conversation with NS Madhavan
Ashis Nandy needs no introduction. One of those able few who
have the guts and the spine to go threadbare against the establishment (yep,
you may call him – antiestablishmentarian if you want), and provide alternate
perspectives on cosmopolitanism and traditionalism.
N S Madhavan again is one writer who defies the diktats of the
demagogue and seeks to be daring and outspoken in his views – to ‘leave the
beaten track behind’ and carve a niche for himself by moving away from
tradionalist representations in media and society.
When these two litterateurs indulge themselves in a rendezvous, it indeed is one rendezvous of sorts, and well, the
literati are on cloud nine.
Yes, it was indeed a memorable day at the ‘Let’s Talk’ event
today, which saw two great luminaries walk the talk on “Another Cosmopolitanism”.
the MC paved the way for the talk by justifying the title for the day: "Why should one speak on cosmopolitanism, of hospitality, of
quiet systems: more so in the current context, where we see events of violence
and enemity, of hostility instead of hospitality, of conflict instead of
coexistence".
Ashis Nandy observed that, each community has a preconceived
notion that they are the best and hence they have a kinda blinkers that make
them pass negative comments about the other community. They should also know
that the other community also thinks on the same line about them. At the same
time, people are accustomed to living with differences, and hence the spice of
life.
N S Madhavan lamented the fact that there was a great influx
of migrant labourers into Kochi in recent years from Bengal, Bihar and Assam. The
people of Kochi had condemned them to ;death by ignorance’, which is a
deplorable fact. Hence, these migrants go to the boat jetty, hop onto a boat,
go to the park, and return without
talking to the locals. This is mainly because we have shut them out, although
we cannot do without them. This is an example of ‘silent apartheid’ he
observed.
Both spoke at length about the history of Kochi, about the
secular fabric of the nation, and how the secular fabric is being threatened by
present political developments, which, according to them, are a serious scar on
India’s plurality.
To be contd…
Friday, 18 July 2014
Indian Identity - Critical Summary
“Indian
Identity” – Shashi Tharoor
Introduction
Shashi Tharoor is the author of Nehru: The Invention of India, and former under secretary general
of the United Nations. In this essay, Tharoor argues that in a secular country
like India, everyone of us can be categorized as a minority, when we consider
them in relation to their individual standing in society. As such, the essence
of India lies in its plurality and it is forged in diversity, which has caught
the world’s imagination and of which we Indians should be really proud of.
Kannada Script in Hindi on
Independence Day
When India celebrated the 49th anniversary of its independence
from British rule in 1996, its then prime minister, HD Deve Gowda, stood at the
ramparts of Delhi's Red Fort and delivered the traditional independence day
address to the nation. Eight other prime ministers had done exactly the same
thing 48 times before him, but what was unusual this time was that Deve Gowda,
a southerner from the state of Karnataka, spoke to the country in a language of
which he did not know a word. Tradition and politics required a speech in
Hindi, so he gave one - the words having been written out for him in his native
Kannada script, in which they made no sense.
An Authentication of
Pluralism in India
Reading a Kannada Script in Hindi on the Nation’s Independence Day
is almost inconceivable elsewhere,
but it was a startling affirmation of Indian pluralism. For the simple fact is
that we are all minorities in India. There has never been an archetypal Indian
to stand alongside the archetypal German or Frenchman. A Hindi-speaking Hindu
male from Uttar Pradesh may cherish the illusion he represents the
"majority community". But he does not. As a Hindu, he belongs to the
faith adhered to by four-fifths of the population. But a majority of the
country does not speak Hindi. And, if he were visiting, say, my home state of
Kerala, he may be surprised to realise that a majority there is not even male.
Hinduism: No Guarantee of
Majorityhood: Reasons
According to Tharoor, when the stock Hindu male mingles with the
polyglot, multicoloured crowds thronging any of India's major railway stations,
he will realise how much of a minority he really is. Even his Hinduism is no
guarantee of his majorityhood, because caste divisions automatically put him in
a minority. (If he is a Brahmin, for instance, 90% of his fellow Indians are
not.)
Advertising One’s Ethnicity
and Origin
If caste and language complicate the notion of Indian identity,
ethnicity makes it worse. Most of the time, an Indian's name immediately
reveals where he is from or what her mother-tongue is: when we introduce
ourselves, we are advertising our origins. Despite some intermarriage at the
elite levels in our cities, Indians are still largely endogamous, and a Bengali
is easily distinguished from a Punjabi. The difference this reflects is often
more apparent than the elements of commonality. A Karnataka Brahmin shares his
Hindu faith with a Bihari Kurmi, but they share little identity with each other
in respect of their dress, customs, appearance, taste, language or even, these
days, their political objectives. At the same time, a Tamil Hindu would feel he
has much more in common with a Tamil Christian or a Tamil Muslim than with,
say, a Jat from the state of Haryana with whom he formally shares the Hindu
religion.
India in 1947: A New
Creation
What makes India, then, a nation? As the country celebrates the
60th anniversary of its independence today, we may well ask: What is an
Indian's identity?
The prime exponent of modern Indian nationalism, Jawaharlal Nehru,
would never have spoken of "creating Indians", because he believed
that India and Indians had existed for millennia before he articulated their
political aspirations in the 20th century. None the less, the India that was
born in 1947 was in a very real sense a new creation: a state that made fellow
citizens of the Ladakhi and the Laccadivian, divided Punjabi from Punjabi and
asked a Keralite peasant to feel allegiance to a Kashmiri Pandit ruling in
Delhi, all for the first time.
Indian Nationalism: the
Nationalism of an Idea
Under Mahatma Gandhi and Prime Minister Nehru, Indian nationalism
was not based on any of the conventional indices of national identity. Not
language, since India's constitution now recognises 22 official languages, and
as many as 35 languages spoken by more than a million people each. Not
ethnicity, since the "Indian" accommodates a diversity of racial
types in which many Indians (Punjabis and Bengalis, in particular) have more
ethnically in common with foreigners than with their other compatriots. Not
religion, since India is a secular pluralist state that is home to every
religion known to mankind, with the possible exception of Shintoism. Not
geography, since the natural geography of the subcontinent - framed by the
mountains and the sea - was hacked by the partition of 1947. And not even
territory, since, by law, anyone with one grandparent born in pre-partition
India - outside the territorial boundaries of today's state - is eligible for
citizenship. Indian nationalism has therefore always been the nationalism of an
idea.
India: Sustained by a
Pluralist Democracy
It is the idea of an ever-ever land - emerging from an ancient
civilisation, united by a shared history, sustained by pluralist democracy.
India's democracy imposes no narrow conformities on its citizens. The whole
point of Indian pluralism is you can be many things and one thing: you can be a
good Muslim, a good Keralite and a good Indian all at once. The Indian idea is
the opposite of what Freudians call "the narcissism of minor
differences"; in India we celebrate the commonality of major differences.
If America is a melting-pot, then to me India is a thali, a selection of
sumptuous dishes in different bowls. Each tastes different, and does not
necessarily mix with the next, but they belong together on the same plate, and
they complement each other in making the meal a satisfying repast.
India: One Land Embracing
Many
So the idea of India is of one land embracing many. It is the idea
that a nation may endure differences of caste, creed, colour, conviction,
culture, cuisine, costume and custom, and still rally around a consensus. And
that consensus is around the simple idea that in a democracy you don't really
need to agree - except on the ground rules of how you will disagree.
Conclusion
According to Shashi Tharoor, the true identity of India lies in
its plurality and in its celebration of diversity. The sight in May 2004 of a
Roman Catholic political leader (Sonia Gandhi) making way for a Sikh (Manmohan
Singh) to be sworn in as prime minister by a Muslim (President Abdul Kalam) -
in a country 81% Hindu - caught the world's imagination. India's founding
fathers wrote a constitution for their dreams; we have given passports to their
ideals. That one simple moment of political change put to rest many of the
arguments over Indian identity. India was never truer to itself than when
celebrating its own diversity.
Wednesday, 16 July 2014
"The Eloquent Sounds of Silence" - Critical Summary
The Eloquent Sounds of Silence - Pico Iyer
Introduction
God’s one and only voice is silence,
says Melville. Pico Iyer brings out the importance of silence in his essay “The
Eloquent Sounds of Silence” by singing paeans to silence. According to Pico
Iyer, when people go on retreat, to a high place and feel the warmth and joy of
being lifted up in a cool and secure place far away from the madding crowd,
they start to recite the standard litany: that silence is sunshine, silence is
rapture, silence is golden, etc. But silence is not so easily won. Moreover, before
rushing off to the hills, it is essential to remember that fool's gold (i.e the
easily obtained iron pyrite) is much more common and that gold can be obtained only
by a great amount of hard work, since it has to be dug out with great care and
effort, from other substances. Such
is the case with silence.
Silence is the Consecration of the Universe
According to Herman Melville, all
profound things and emotions of things are preceded and attended by Silence,
and hence silence is the general consecration of the universe. Just
before his death, he came forth with his final utterance -- the luminous tale
of Billy Budd - and showed that silence is only as worthy as what we can bring
back from it.
Silence
is Spiritual
We have to strive a lot to earn
silence, and then, to work for it: to make it not an absence but a presence in
our lives. Silence is something more than just a pause; it is that enchanted
place where space is cleared and time is stayed and the horizon itself expands.
In silence, we often say, we can hear ourselves think; but what is truer to say
is that in silence we can hear ourselves not think, and so sink below ourselves
into a place far deeper than mere thought allows. In silence, we might better
say, we can hear someone else think.
It is no coincidence that places of
worship are places of silence: if idleness is the devil's playground, silence
may be the angels'. It is no surprise that silence is an anagram of license.
And it is only right that Quakers all but worship silence, for it is the place
where everyone finds his God, however he may express it. Silence is an
ecumenical state, beyond the doctrines and divisions created by the mind. If
everyone has a spiritual story to tell of his life, everyone has a spiritual
silence to preserve.
Thursday, 10 April 2014
Wednesday, 9 April 2014
Postcolonial Studies wrt Indigenous Studies: An Appraisal
Dr. Armstrong,
Professor & Head, Dept of English, University of Madras, delivered a
thought-provoking lecture on Contemporary State of
Postcolonial Studies with reference to Indigenous Studies to our I & II MA
students, today at 11 am.
Overview of Professor’s Lecture:
Dr. Armstrong |
Dr. Armstrong began by outlining the domain of
Postcolonial Studies, which focuses on the
reading and writing of literature written in previously or currently colonized countries, and seeks to critically investigate what
happens when there is a clash between two cultures. This clash is where one of
them ideologically fashions itself as superior and assumes dominance and
control over the other, Hence, the field of
postcolonial studies has itself been hotly contested ever since its rise in the
1970s.
Although the term “postcolonial” avoided some
of the terminological problems of its predecessors, namely Commonwealth
literatures, World Literatures, New Literatures, etc, it sought to create problems
of its own especially when related to Indigenous studies. Moreover, Dr. Armstrong,
rhetorically asked, if the space for Indigenous studies in the broad field of
Postcolonial studies was much less when compared to other areas like diaspora,
comparative literature, hybridity, post
colonial gender studies etc?
While there are two types of Post colonialism –
Oppositional Colonialism and Complicit Colonialism, the latter cannot be
applied to indigenous texts. Only complicit
colonialism provides a minimal space for the indigenous peoples interest.
Tuesday, 11 March 2014
"Truth in Drama"
Truth in Drama | Dr. Radmila Nastic on Pinter
#guestlecture
#MCC
Dr. Radmila Nastic, Professor of Philology and Arts, Serbia,
gave a talk on “Truth in Drama” to our students, today, from 10.45 am to 1.30
pm.
Excerpts from her talk -
Nobel laureate Harold Pinter is one of the greatest modern
dramatists, who “cleaned the gutters of the English language, so that it ever
afterwards flowed more easily and more cleanly”.
His Nobel Prize acceptance
speech titled, “Art, Truth & Politics” was in a way, a manifesto for his
literary career. He says -
There are no hard distinctions between what is true
and what is false.
A thing is not necessarily either true or false; it can be
both true and false.
I believe that these assertions still make sense and do
still apply to the exploration of reality through art.
So as a writer I stand
by them but as a citizen I cannot. As a citizen I must ask: What is true? What
is false?
Truth in drama is forever elusive.
You never quite find it but
the search for it is compulsive.
The search is clearly what drives the
endeavour.
The search is your task.
More often than not you stumble upon the
truth in the dark, colliding with it or just glimpsing an image or a shape
which seems to correspond to the truth, often without realising that you have
done so.
But the real truth is that there never is any such thing as one truth
to be found in dramatic art. There are many.
These truths challenge each other,
recoil from each other, reflect each other, ignore each other, tease each
other, are blind to each other.
Sometimes you feel you have the truth of a
moment in your hand, then it slips through your fingers and is lost.
When we look into a mirror we think the image that confronts
us is accurate.
But move a millimetre and the image changes.
We are actually
looking at a never-ending range of reflections.
But sometimes a writer has to
smash the mirror – for it is on the other side of that mirror that the truth
stares at us.
I believe that despite the enormous odds which exist, unflinching,
unswerving, fierce intellectual determination, as citizens, to define the real
truth of our lives and our societies is a crucial obligation which devolves
upon us all.
It is in fact mandatory.
If such a determination is not embodied in our political
vision we have no hope of restoring what is so nearly lost to us – the dignity
of man,” observes Pinter.
Then, Dr.Nastic moved on to truth in Shakespeare, by citing from
his four tragedies.
The famous dictum of William Shakespeare, wherein Polonius
tell Laertes,
“Above all to thine own self be true” – can be taken as a leitmotif
for all of William Shakespeare’s plays.
Hamlet has been called the consciousness of the western
world, and one of the world’s advanced drama, a genius of western
consciousness.
Hamlet’s tryst with the ghost reinforces his difficulty in
finding truth. He is someone who is constantly searching for truth in humanity
and in himself, and in so doing, he is trying to be honest with himself.
He has
three choices in front of him. To do nothing, and to suffer silently, or to
commit suicide, or to do something.
He chooses not to be a coward. In Act V
Scene II, we find that he becomes fully aware of the consequences of his own
choice.
Thence he says: “There is special providence in the fall of a sparrow.
If it be now, ‘tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be
not now, yet it will come – the readiness is all. Since no man, of aught he
leaves, knows what is’t to leave betimes, let be.”
Othello is yet another noble character – a noble Moor to be
precise. Iago completely succeeds in poisoning the mind of Othello. Without learning
the truth, he strangulates Desdemona in her bed. Truth comes to him after strangling
her. Just before he stabs himself in the guts, he says thus -
Soft you: a word or two before you go.
I have done the state some service, and they know’t… Of one
that loved not wisely but too well…
To be contd…
PS: The PG & Research Department of English wishes to thank Prof. Cherian Kurien (Retd. Faculty, Dept of English) for giving us the opportunity to meet up with Dr.Nastic. Thank you Sir.
Thursday, 6 March 2014
The Nietzscheanization of the Left or Vice Versa - Critical Summary
The
Nietzscheanization of the Left or Vice Versa
Critical Summary
Critical Summary
Introduction
Allan Bloom in
his famous 1987 book The Closing of the
American Mind describes how “higher education has failed democracy and
impoverished the souls of today’s students”. The book has been divided into
three parts, namely: 1.) Students, 2). Nihilism, and, 3). The University.
The present essay “The Nietzscheanization of the Left
or Vice Versa” has been taken from the second part of the book titled,
‘Nihilism.’
Marx – No
more Resonates in the Souls of Young Americans of Today
In this essay, Allan says that the whole world is
divided into two parts, one of which traces its intellectual lineage back to
Locke and the other to Marx. But, the present day young Americans find Karl
Marx boring.
In addition, even in the power centres, where
decisions and ideologies are made and implemented, Marx has been dead for a
long time. Today, Marx’s famous “Manifesto” seems naïve, and out of place, and
his “Das Kapital” does not persuade its readers anymore as it used to, in the
past.
Although the Left still continue to call themselves
Marxist, they no more find their nourishment in Marx. It comes from elsewhere.
Marx does not resonate in souls of young Americans today, as do Sartre, Camus,
Kafka, Dostoyevski, Nietzsche, Heidegger
or Rousseau.
The Term
Ideology Passes from Contempt to Honour - from Marx to Nietzche
To Marx, the term ideology was a mask and a false
system of thought elaborated by the ruling class to justify its rule in the
eyes of the ruled, while hiding its real selfish motives. Hence, in Communist
society there will be no ideology.
Because, only the pure mind, to use Nietzsche's
formulation, has the possibility of knowing the ways things are. Hence,
ideology is a term of contempt; it must be seen through in order to be seen for
what it is.
However, by 1905, Lenin was speaking of Marxism as an
ideology, which means that it too can make no claim to truth.
Hence, in less than half a century Marx's absolute
had been relativized. This was the beginning of the inner rot that has finally
made Marxism unbelievable to anyone who thinks. Marxism itself became ideology.
Today, ideology, in popular speech, is, in the first
place, generally understood to be a good and necessary thing—unless it is
bourgeois ideology.
Men and societies need myths, not science, by which
to live. In short, ideology became identical to values, and that is why it
belongs on the honor roll of terms by which we live.
Real Marxism
becomes Vulgar Marxism
Hence, when one talks to Marxists these days and asks
them to explain philosophers or artists in terms of objective economic
conditions, they smile contemptuously and respond, "That is vulgar Marxism,"
as if to ask, "Where have you been for the last seventy-five years?"
No one likes to be considered vulgar, so people tend
to fall back into embarrassed silence.
So, real Marxism of the past has now become Vulgar
Marxism. Nonvulgar Marxism is Nietzsche, Weber, Freud, Heidegger, as well as
the host of later Leftists who drank at their trough— such as Lukacs, Kojeve,
Benjamin, Merleau-Ponty and Sartre—and hoped to enroll them in the class
struggle.
The Effect of
Nietzsche on Marxism
From this century onwards, the effect of Nietzsche
slowly began to be felt within Marxism.
An example is the significance of revolution.
Revolution and the violence that accompanies are
justified today, and it has taken the place of rebellion, faction, or civil
war, all of which are obviously bad things, while revolution is the best and
greatest event—in the popular imagination of Englishmen, Americans, Frenchmen
and Russians, with the exception of Germans.
Importance on
Nietzschean Term ‘Will’ in Marxism of Today
In the new order, Will has become the key word, to
both the Right and Left. In the past it was thought that will is necessary but
secondary—that the cause came first. But it was Nietzsche who formulated the
new way most provocatively when he said, "A good war makes sacred every
cause."
The causes have no status; they are values. While the
older revolutionaries were ‘will’ing peace, prosperity, harmony and reason,
i.e., the last man. The newer breed ‘wills’ chaos. Self-assertion or will, and
not justice, was the crucial element.
Sympathy for
Terrorists in the Nietzschean takeover of Marxism
In the new revolutionary charm of today,
determination, ‘will’, commitment, caring, concern have become the new virtues.
Hence, there is great sympathy even for terrorists, because "they
care."
Therefore, it is shocking to observe that, young
people, and older people too, who are good democratic liberals, lovers of peace
and gentleness, have become ‘dumb with admiration’ for individuals threatening
or using the most terrible violence for the slightest and tawdriest reasons.
They have a sneaking suspicion that they are face to
face with men of real commitment, which they themselves lack. And commitment,
not truth, is believed to be what counts.
The ‘Mutant
Breed of Marxists’ of Today
Allan Bloom calls the present breed of Marxists as
the mutant breed of Marxists, who have sought to derationalise Marx and turn
Nietzsche into a leftist.
It was Georg Lukacs, the most prominent Marxist
intellectual of this century, who set the ball rolling.
Marx adapted
‘forcefully’ in other Domains
Bourgeois is associated in the popular consciousness,
especially in America, with Marx. The mature Marx had almost nothing to say
about art, music, literature or education, but since the Nietzscheans spoke so
marvelously well about all these things, these terms were quietly appropriated
into Marxism.
To take another example: Freud talked about
interesting things not found anywhere in Marx, and the whole psychology of the
unconscious was completely alien to Marx.
But, Marx moved into the Freudian scene, by
interpreting the cause of neuroses and his treatment of the maladjusted as
bourgeois errors that serve enslavement to the capitalist control of the means
of production.
How the
Bourgeois became a friend of the Left!!!
"The last man" interpretation of the
bourgeois is reinforced by a certain ambiguity in the meaning of the word
"bourgeois." Bourgeois is associated in the popular consciousness,
especially in America, with Marx.
Most of the great European novelists and poets of the
last two hundred years were men of the Right; and Nietzsche is in that respect
merely their complement. For them the problem was in one way or another
equality, which has no place for genius.
Thus they are the exact opposite of Marx. But somehow
he who says he hates the bourgeoisie can be seen to be a friend of the Left.
Therefore when the Left got the idea of embracing
Nietzsche, it got, along with him, all the authority of the nineteenth- and
twentieth century literary tradition.
From hating
the Vulgar ‘Bourgeoisie’ to hating just Vulgarity
The later Marxists in Germany were repelled by the
vulgarity of the bourgeoisie. One can easily see this in Theodore Adorno. But,
as prosperity increased, the poor began to become embourgeoise. Instead of an
increase in class consciousness and strife, there was a decrease. One could
foresee a time, at least in the developed countries, when everybody would be a
bourgeois. So another prop was knocked out from under Marxism. So, now, the
issue is not really rich and poor but vulgarity. Thus, ironically, Marxists
were coming perilously close to the notion that egalitarian man as such is
bourgeois, and that they must join him or become culture snobs.
Nietzschean
Marxism as Sophisticated Marxism
Thus, in other words, sophisticated Marxism became
cultural criticism of life in the Western democracies, but none of it came from
Marx or a Marxist perspective. It was, and is, Nietzschean, variations on our
way of life as that of "the last man."
Conclusion
So, Nietzsche came to America. His conversion to the
Left was easily accepted here as genuine. Nietzsche's naturalization was
accomplished in many waves: some of us went to Europe to find him; Heidegger
and Nietzsche now come under their own names, treading on the red carpet rolled
out for them by their earlier envoys. Academic psychology, sociology,
comparative literature and anthropology have been dominated by them for a long
time. But their passage from the academy to the marketplace is the real story.
A language developed to explain to knowers how bad we
are has been adopted by us to declare to the world how interesting we are.
Somehow the goods got damaged in transit.
Monday, 24 February 2014
Talk on Postmodernism, Media Studies and Subaltern Studies..:
Dr. Marx delivered a thought-provoking and spell-binding talk today, from 9.50 am to 12.50 pm, on Postmodernism, Media Studies and Subaltern Studies, to an ardent and enthusiastic audience, comprising students from III BA, I MA, II MA, M.Phil & PhD Scholars.
Excerpts from his talk:
To Fanon, silence is dishonesty. Although there are millions of angles and thousands of opinions available to get a perspective of an object or a person, we always prefer to go by the binary, wherein one is prioritised over the other. The first problem of any language is knowability. It is seemingly knowable, but in reality it is not knowable. What then, is real? Reality is relative. In Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, we have a clear case of different versions of truth given to the police by different people.
Saturday, 1 February 2014
Inter Hall Sports Meet - 2014
Our Principal with Shri K. Baskaran |
The Inter-Hall Sports Meet 2014 got off to a rousing start with the customary Commemoration Meet. Dr. Stephen Jebanesan, Head, Department of English gave the commemoration address. The Chief Guest of the Sports Meet was Shri K. Baskaran IAS., District Collector, Kanchipuram, an illustrious alumnus of our College.
Monday, 20 January 2014
Professor J. Vasanthan - A Tribute
I am stunned when I look with respect and awe at a picture of Prof. J. Vasanthan. The fire in his eyes, the grace in his looks, the nobility in his visage, the determination in his firm lips, his royal bearing and his majestic posture compel me into a wild guess of what an enigma of a professor he must have been!
Loved all, loved by all, hated none, and hated by none.
J.Vasanthan, started his teaching career at Madras
Christian College, and later retired as Professor of English with the American
College, Madurai. His passing away recently in Madurai, has created a void which cannot be replaced now or in the future. Such was his style! such was his verve! such was his commitment to his vocation!
JV (as he was fondly called by his students and admirers)
was a versatile personality - a professional cartoonist, writer, actor,
professor all rolled in one. He also had a wonderful sense of humour and an
artful way with words. One could sit with him, at his dinner table, and listen
to him recollecting fond memories of days past in MCC, or talk about Tom and
Jerry, or bring out the aesthetic and the sublime in Shakespeare, or Milton or
Wordsworth, or Keats, with abundant verve and gusto. He was teacher to famous
stalwarts in academics, like Dr. Nirmal Selvamony, Dr. Benet, Dr. Premila, Prof. Daniel
David, to name a few, and eminent politicians like Prakash Karat, etc.
Sunday, 12 January 2014
Chennai Book Fair - 2014
The Chennai Book Fair is getting better and better, by the
year, going by present indications. The YMCA Grounds that played host to the
Fair this year, was a lot more effective in crowd management and parking
management. Unlike last year, when volunteers from BAPSI controlled the parking
lots using their own volunteers, this year saw the traffic constables and SIs doing
a really commendable job in traffic management and parking management. They
facilitated neat parking of cars and bikes.
Friday, 10 January 2014
Celebrating the Eternal Woman...
Dr. Dasan delivered the key note address on “Celebrating
the Eternal Woman: A Note on the Heroism
of the Feminine Psyche” at the National Seminar on Women’s Writing in English,
held at St.Mary’s College, on 10 January 2014.
Excerpts from his address:
This keynote address aims at the figural portrayal of the
female self. While attempting to highlight the contrasting perceptions between
the ‘female self’ as a biological and natural construct and ‘the woman’ as a
social construct, it underscores that ultimately it is the paradoxical
differences in gender sexuality, differences which simultaneously reiterate the
beauty and richness of the biological complementarity ingrained in the very act
of the creation of man and woman, which prevail in terms of true humanity. I am
one of those who subscribe to the view that the social construct of woman,
woman as objectified Other, ‘reified as a sexual and linguistic commodity
fixed, written about and traded among men’ by the metaphysical Self, ought to
be dismantled and deconstructed, and the natural construct of the female self,
attuned to the biological and the eternal feminine, should prevail as a
liberating force.
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