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the chapters of life

the chapters of life

Monday, 28 October 2013

On how to manufacture a captive national audience - Convention Centre and Us: Nidhin Shobhana

Illustration by the author.

When we visit the official website of Tata Institute of Social Sciences, the image of the grand, glassed convention centre with its confusing installation at the entrance, will surely tempt you. We associate glass structures with new ideas of mobility. These ideas are made possible by specific temporal and spatial developments. It’s often potrayed as the perceptive face of the institute.

Over the years its thick carpet has collected a lot of meaning. The politics of images, embossed on its circular outer wall has attracted a lot of attention among Dalit and Adivasi students on campus.

One day, a close friend of mine, pointed out at the images on the walls and asked ‘Do you find Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar anywhere?’ He added that the images, which apparently highlight the diversities in India, choose a particular depiction, privileges a particular imagination. Imaging India’s diversity with the help of temples, M.K.Gandhi, Nehru, Thrissur Pooram and Kathakali reminds me of INCREDIBLE INDIA advertisements. This investment, possessive indeed, in potraying a particular kind of nonconflictual, harmonious diversity is not new. Sangh Parivar does the same.

The majority of students who enter TISS have long been consumers of this imagined community soaked in potions of uniformity, caste, masculinity and heteronormativity. They have received the required training.

The portrayal aims at warding off dissent. Differences which embody diversities are coloured with pleasant but desperate strokes of integration. The richness of the sight (thanks to affirmative action) made possible by incessant liberatory struggles, across the dimensions of the country, is overshadowed. Every social and spatial site, is then, very neatly, ‘taken care of' to produce a particular kind of response among students. In fact students become an annexe of this imagination. The image of diversity has many extensions. The persona and the poetics of the classroom can be read as an extension of this imagined unitary space called Nation. It forms a part of the Nation continuum.

Body becomes an important site of constructing this sweet portrait. By design, the institute will build a convention centre which facilitates a permanent seating arrangment. The chairs are fixed to the floor and you are fixed to the chairs. Fixed and arrested.

The permanence in the seating arrangement is assisted by an in built system of spatial surveillance. The semi-circle seating arrangment allows layered mutual surveillance. The corners however become sites of subversion. The teacher, especially the one who displays great faith in his charisma and dogma gets really disturbed by the creatures who occupy the corners. He believes in straightening them. He does not shy away from doing that.

The air is manufactured using a centralized system of air conditioning. In fact, A/C air has become a signature of power. It caters the extended image of the Nation; it caters the aspiration of the imagined national community.

Sam Pitroda was impressed by this image manufactured in the convention centre. He called the sight ‘bright, beautiful youthfulness’. The captive force of compulsory attendance was pushed under the carpet, as always.

Why do we need so many students in a classroom? Is it some sort of quality control measure? The national elite should look alike, should smell of the same perfume, should wear the same colour and should speak the same tongue. The norm excludes more than includes. Any deviance would attract straightening missionaries. A decentralized classroom would spoil the image of harmonious, conjugal sameness. It’s a threat.

Dissent, democracy and transformation are taught in such unhappy controlled spaces. We sleep, play games, crack jokes and try to take notes in silence. We do not discuss our internal conflicts, sense of hatred, and sense of betrayal or confront latent anger. Pleasure is a taboo in the classroom. There are a few teachers who long for greater engagements. Some try their best. However, they are crippled by the image; they are limited by the protocol of infrastructure.

They call it foundation courses. Yes, we find the foundations of a captive national audience in us. Constipated, sad, with a heightened sense of self.

And each time an aspirant looks at the image of the convention centre, s/he is tempted to join the ranks of the same captive national audience.

Nidhin was a student of M.A. Habitat Policy and Practice at TISS, Mumbai but dropped out in the third semester.

These are the personal opinions of the author and do not represent the opinions of the fieldnotes editorial team.

13 comments:

  1. Doesn't the editorial team go through the submissions before posting them ? Such an atrocious entry that even Chetan B. would feel proud of himself

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    1. This is my email ID shobhana.nidhin@gmail.com. We could discuss this utterly 'atrocious entry'. I am the one who wrote this.. :)

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  2. ' A decentralized classroom would spoil the image of harmonious, conjugal sameness.' Due you even know what these words mean, or you read from a book and due to this irresistible urge just vomit it out to show your utter lack of mental prowess ?

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    1. I know that my English vocabulary is quite limited. I am a first generation English speaker and writer, you see. But I am very clear on why I use the words I use. :) But the only problem is I would like to know who you are before I engage in a discussion with you. What' s the point in discussing with a faceless virtual creature? ( I know you are more than that!)

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    2. You would like to know who I am, so you can then sit and dissect my name and then proceed to my caste and then proceed to how that colors my thoughts. Basically pretty much an average Ambedkarite thought process (Sad that this generation of Ambedkar followers does not understand Ambedkar's views). Either way, you can ignore this post if you like, but it ll stay as a smear on your smear (unless the lit sec, the moral gaurdian might mitigate your trboules and delete this first). Also, please stop using banal excuses to hide a lack of original thought ( I' m a 1st gen english speaker/writer too, but originality and simplicity are not contradictory).
      Just explain this one statement, without thinking about it, since you claim to be highly confident of your writing : We associate glass structures with new ideas of mobility. These ideas are made possible by specific temporal and spatial developments.

      If you cannot write a reply in a flow within a few moments of reading this, then you have failed (just a personal reflection you can have if you care). If you do instantaneously write, I will enthusiastically reply.

      A nobody.

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    3. Dear Nobody,

      You don't stand the risk of your name being dissected to caste level to understand how it colors your thoughts, since there are no real thoughts or arguments of yours listed in your comment here in the first place. You commit the fallacy of arguments directed at the person (or his language so to speak) who has stated an idea, rather than the idea itself, which is a base form of refuting an argument and goes on to show your void of a single original thought, which begets questions on your own mental prowess.

      In a rational, intellectual environment such as this I would assume and expect a certain amount of respect to the art of rhetoric. Play the argument, not the man. This isn't poker.

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    4. Dear Friend of the author coming to his rescue,

      Say even if i have no significant thoughts of my own, or anything to add. Does that warrant a caste dissection of my name ?
      Now, my comment was a personalized attack, yes. There is no 'fallacy of argument' (a new phrase made up by you), as my claim was that the author has no idea of what he wrote about. So if I m saying that the author has used words without knowing what they mean, how is that a fallacy ?

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    5. Okay.:) Mr. Nobody I am ready to provide explanations. For, I believe, in what Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar said in his seminal work 'Annihilation of Caste' - 'A society exists in communication'. And to be highly communicative of ones ideas ( I do not claim originality, mine is an attempt at inter-textual reading.) is essential in developing anti-caste frameworks.
      Harmonious Conjugal sameness - As I clearly mentioned in my article the paintings rather images on the wall and the practice of the convention centre tries to portray 'differences' in our society with strokes of 'pluralism' and 'diversity'. What is lost in this process? Essentially, the conflicts which characterize these diversities are pushed under the carpet. And thus the attempt is to imagine diversities as harmonious and non-conflictual, very similar to the way we imagine are conjugal spaces to be - without conflicts and same ( meaning universally hetero normative). It reminds me of good old family photos, which abstract conjugal spaces. In those photos differences are non-existent. :)

      Now the second sentence - Spatial and temporal developments - Glass structures became a common sense in India with an coming of neo-liberal policies in the last three decades. This change in the political economy can be understood both in terms of time ( temporal) and space (spatial). Thus I use those words. I did not want to spend a lot of time explaining those terms since that was not my focus in the article. And yes, glass structures fashion our ideas of mobility. That's the reason why, the very sight of our government buildings have been changing in the past few decades, even panchayat offices in many parts are using glass. These spatial and temporal changes aid new ideas of mobility . And interestingly in the case of India they happily collude with caste and gender ideologies.

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    6. And it is very interesting to know that you 'know' me. To tell you the truth, I would have dissected your name. However, I wouldn't have done that to put you down. For the children of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar are not fighting against 'you'. WE are fighting for our dignity and self-respect. How could my fight for dignity become a problem for 'you'? You do not associate 'original thought' with contemporary Ambedkarites, isn't it? I make no claims for 'original thought'. But I am happy that with my 'atrocious' writing I could inspire your anger and virtual stone pelting. Thanks, you make me feel special. :)

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  3. Dear Nidhin,

    This is my last reply to your banal article and what I think is the most vague reply to my questions; but I m writing because it amazed me how easily you created the 'you' and 'us' categorization. I too am a Dalit student (and a Phd Scholar at tiss) and your 'dissection' is an insult to all ideas of equality. I will not go into your explanation of the terms 'spatial' and 'mobility', because your reply was proof enough about the term dropping you use in your language, hiding lack of thought by using vague ideas and terms, which you fail to justify later; but the stereotyping on caste lines is highly worth of repudiation. There is no one 'Ambedkarite', but there are mainstream 'Ambedkarite' political parties who have hijacked the cause and there are vocal 'Ambedkarite' students who have incorrect ideas on what equality and divisiveness means (typified in campus elections for example, on how block voting takes place).

    Expect no more replies, but you did a great job of reading somewhat obscure (does not mean they are not worthy or credible) writings and placing it in a familiar environment. Kudos to fake intellectuals and their lack of originality. Jai Bhim.

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  4. You feared my 'dissection' of your 'caste identity'. Then in the last post you say that you are a Dalit student and a Ph.D scholar. What 'dissection' did you fear anyway? You still maintain your anonymity, and you totally ignore my attempts to engage in a dialogue. You call me incapable of articulation and an expert in dropping words. I really doubt your intentions. You smell, sound and taste like those people who prefix the word 'progressive' with their caste titles. I urge you, are you one of them? I have lived with them, faced their brunt and suffered their 'comrade masculinity'. :) You sound like them actually. And this is not the first attack on me. :) Let me tell you, in all good faith, the devil lies in the details. You have left many details, which I'll surely use for my further projects on 'divisiveness' as you call it. I rest my case. i call it a day! .... jai bhim!

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  5. Although the article is well written, I am confused whether the author is protesting against the way FCs are taught, both in terms of content and spatially (Convention Center, fixed seats, etc) or believes that the 'diverse' environment that TISS tends to implicate is a facade?

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    1. Thanks. :) I haven't engaged much with the pedagogy of Foundation courses. However, by talking about space, I am trying to expose the contradictions in claim-making and actual practice. A more detailed and specific critique of the pedagogy is possible. Diversity is not a facade, however, the way its understood as 'harmonious and non-conflictual' is a fallacy. :) In short, I have centrally attempted to critique the convention center spatially..

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