Sunday, March 14, 2010

India: A Wounded Civilization by V.S.Naipaul

India: A Wounded Civilization is Naipaul's second book in his widely acclaimed Indian trilogy, the other two being, An Area of Darkness and India: A Million Mutinies Now. This book can make any Indian feel devastated through his incisive, unsympathetic and unpretentious portrayal of India, just what it is and why, just by sheer honesty in analysis. This book is not meant for Indians and NRIs who are foolishly sentimental, romantically heady about their esoteric country of million rituals, several religions, customs and its very many fall-outs, and it's perpetual suffering and for those who announce every now and then in an American hippie like proclamation, "I *love* India". And who come to India once in every year or two for cute elephant or manual rickshaw rides. He calls filth, dirt , degraded human life and squalor just what it is. He investigates the facts that despite the Britishers departure several years ago, India has not overcome the confusion, poverty and misery. He says:
The turbulence in India this time hasn't come from foreign invasion or conquest; it has been generated from within. India cannot respond in her old way, by a further retreat into archaism. Her borrowed institutions have worked like borrowed institutions, but archaic India can provide no substitutes for press, parliaments and courts. The crisis of India is not only political or economic. The larger crisis is of wounded old civilization that has at last become aware of its inadequacies and is without the intellectual means to move ahead.
Through simplistic work of R.K. Narayan and Vijay Tendulkar, Naipaul points out how theater and literature of their time did more disservice by portraying placidity in themes and characters, like everything was going alright and "India will go on" with pride in its feudalistic garb and temperament. He points out:
India had depressed Tendulkar especially. He had seen things there that he had never believed existed. But he didn't speak more precisely: it was as though he still felt humiliated by what he had seen. He said only, 'The human relationships. They're so horrible because they are accepted by the victims.' New words, new concerns: and still even for writer like Tendulkar, the discovery of India could be like discovery of a foreign country. He said he had travelled about Bihar by boat, down the Ganges. And it was of serenity that came to him on this river, sacred to Hindus, that he spoke, rather than of the horrors on the bank.
He tries to explore the idea of Indian 'having his being' which is always in the background of other people and the chaos and blankness that is brought about by props of family, clan, caste, sub-castes, languages. He, through the work of Dr. Sudhir Kakar, a psychotherapist, points out that Indians have underdeveloped ego which is an outcome of complex social structure, a derivative of rules, regulations, rituals, taboos. He goes on to say that how religion and religious practices, magical aspirations and animistic though simplistic mode of thinking- institutionalizes a structure, albeit weak in the wake of need for individual observation and judgment and how it leads to purely instinctive life. Per Kakar:
At a time of change, the underdeveloped ego can be a dangerous luxury. Cities grow; people travel out of their ancestral districts; the ties of clan and family are loosened. The need for sharper perception increases; and perception has to become 'an individual rather than a social function'.
Such changes are bound to overthrow individuals from their comfort zone and more so if you are nestled in between security of unexplained rituals, unfounded social expectations. Reminds me of an example, a real while ago, a friend made a sweeping announcement that she would like to immediately move back to India and settle there. But that was not it, she went on to explain her reasoning, 'in US you have to do all the menial work, clean your own rest room, wash your own dishes and clothes. Back in India I can have all the hired help in the form of servants to do all that I don't want to do'. I was amused but mostly disturbed. And figured that sense of tyranny and abuse cannot be dispelled which runs so deep in her assumed superiority. Before I digress too far, want to wrap it up by the portrayal that ensues in this book by opening sentences of the book, India is for me a difficult country. It isn't my home; and yet I cannot reject it or be indifferent to it; I cannot travel for the sights. I am at once too close and too for.

3 comments:

Niranjan said...

I had read about Naipaul's non-fiction but never got around to reading the books. Glad for this review!

I feel Indian authors tend to come under too much flak from within India for any deprecatory writing about the country - the easiest accusation being that of pandering to western stereotypes about the third world. Perhaps one of our biggest problems is a refusal to acknowledge that there is a problem. Having 2 in the top 5 richest gang is something to be proud of. Having a quarter of the population earning less than 12 Rs/day is not - a strange case of believing what we like, and liking what we believe.

Pallavi said...

Niranjan: You must absolutely read Naipaul's travel writing at some point. Other non-fiction that I read partly was *Between Father and Son*, which made me go for this book.

True about the Indian authors and journalists coming under flak from within. Very recently, M.F.Husain getting harassed to a point to abandon the country, next will be Wendy Doniger. We cannot have intelligent critical review of work on emotionally held 'pious figures' like Gandhi (which he talks a great deal in this book), Nehru, Vinoda Bhave.

Not acknowledging real problems is India's classic trait. Just about recently we have accepted that women are more than cattle, so we will see how long we take to accept that poverty is not 'bhagwan ka roop' so I am hopeful..;)

peterparker - Servant of BHAGWAN PARASHURAMA said...

the problem with india is that it has turned away from its root. Indians are happy doing SLAVERY of other nations. And people are quite content that they are earning by working as labors. Now howsoever people might try to refute it, but the essence of india is essence of BRAHMANS. All BRAHMANS MUST GET UNITED WITH BRAHMANTVA And sorry, SANSKRIT VARNA is not CASTE and there were no oppression as everyone including foreigners have told us. for that, one must at least make an attempt to read authentic gita and various samhitas of our sages, who had clearly mentioned that all jiva receive/obtain the result of the fruits of their actions. It is just that indians have termed it as good or bad. Attachemnts are geting increases, as society is being ruled by impotents/hijdas and randis-> these singing and dancing are all unmanly culture. Females have been empowered only to roam nude and have sex. TURK/MUGHAL rule is not at all considered a FOREIGN RULE, may be beacuae marxists are the products of those turks/mughal people whose mother may have been F##ed in HAREMS. Nehru was one such CROSS BREED/VARNA SANKAR. I would also write to add that the one whose FORTE was not law making was given the chance to draft constitution of india, but it would again force controversy and would push dalit class to conversions, which is of no use. Gandhi's stupid philosophy have been promoted in media and academic, whose real intention was to make hindus impotents. And first of all, LABELLING OURSELVES AS HINDUS IS THE BIGGEST SHAME, AS THIS TERM IS AN ISLAMIC TERM WHICH LITERALLY MEANS OF LOW BORN,UNCULTURED AND EVEN UNCLEAN. INDIANS ARE LIVING IN ATTACHMENTS/MOHA WHICH LORD KRISHN AS DESCRIBED AS SIN. It means to kill the ADHARMI even if it is your FATHER. Adharma is not what is like taking bribery. It is part of ADHARMA. EVEN DEMOCRACY IS ADHARMA. Anything which is out of vedas is ADHARMA. These quack spiritual gurus don't teach SPIRITUALITY, they PREACH SEX,MATERIALISM AND LUST. If you think that my comments have hurted or will hurt the sentiments of the people, then don't post this. JAI BHAGWAAN PARASHURAM