Saturday, January 14, 2023

Professor Harbans Mukhia at Democracy Dialogues on 15 January 2023

 



Democracy Dialogues Lecture Series (Online )
Organised by New Socialist Initiative

22th Lecture

Topic: Democracy’s Structural Slippages and the Indian Experiment

                          Speaker: Professor Harbans Mukhia

Date and Time:  15 January 2023  at 6 PM (IST).

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Professor Harbans Mukhia, Professor ( Retd.) of Medieval History at the Centre for Historical Studies, JNU ; an eminent authority on  Medieval India ; author and editor of many books will be delivering the 22nd Democracy Dialogues lecture on Sunday, 15th January 2023 at 6 PM (IST). The focus of his lecture will be Democracy’s Structural Slippages and the Indian Experiment

Topic:  Democracy’s Structural Slippages and the Indian Experiment

Conceptualised as the devolution of sovereign power from monarchy or oligarchy to the common people, the devolution was institutionalised through periodic elections with universal adult franchise that would make governments accountable to the electorate, the people. Perfect imaginary for the implementation of the concept, for equality was its basic premise with the individual at its heart. It thus subsumed earlier experiments in equality which had masses of people as the premise.

However, the imaginary contains several slippages. First, its progress itself through halting stages created massive inequalities in the exercise of power. Second, most important, at its final, universal stage, its equivalence with the electoral process leaves huge spaces for almost universal ‘minority rule’ legitimized through elections and therefore unequal distribution of power. At any rate, the difference between majority and minority is merely mechanical and therefore open to debate.

 In India, on one hand, the Constitution introduced the most modern version of democracy through universal adult franchise and multi-party elections; on the other, it was operationalised through the mobilisation of essentially pre-modern identities of caste, community, region etc. which is now at the prime of the exercise of political power – demolishing the very legitimacy of the concept.

Can one imagine a more effectively egalitarian ideology?

The Speaker

Harbans Mukhia, 83, formerly Professor of Medieval History and Rector, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. In early years, his interest focused on medieval Indian historiography, leading to Doctoral thesis, later published, Historians and Historiography during the Reign of Akbar , Vikas, New Delhi, 1976.

Teaching a course on Feudalism at JNU in the 70s and 80s led to research on its theoretical and empirical premises in a comparative perspective. ‘Was there Feudalism in Indian History?’ originally Presidential Address, Medieval Section, Indian History Congress, 1979, also published in The Journal of Peasant Studies, 1981, became the centre of an international debate from 1985 to 93, published as the journal’s special issue and then as a book, Feudalism and Non-European Societies , Frank Cass, London, 1985 (co-edited with T J Byres). It was once again revised, edited by him and published as The Feudalism Debate , Manohar,New Delhi, in 2000.

Founder Editor- The Medieval History Journal , published by SAGE from New Delhi, London, Los Angeles, Washington DC, and Singapore. 

 

Other Major Publications:

French Studies in History , Orient Longman, New Delhi ( in two volumes) 1988-90 Co-edited with Maurice Aymard

Perspectives on Medieval History  Vikas, New Delhi, 1993

Religion, Religiosity and Communalism , co-edited with Praful Bidwai and Achin Vanaik , Manohar, New Delhi.  1993

The Mughals of India, Blackwell Publishers, Oxford, in 2004

Exploring India’s Medieval Centuries: Essays in History, Society, Culture and Technology , Aakar Books, New Delhi, 2010

History of Technology, vol. II,Medieval India, INSA, New Delhi 2012

Understanding India: Indology and Beyond ,co-edited with Jaroslav Vacek, Prague, 2012  



Wednesday, January 4, 2023

(Democracy Dialogue lecture Video) The Two-Nation Theory, Partition and the Consequences By Professor Ishtiaq Ahmed

 



The 21th lecture in the Democracy Dialogues series  was delivered by Prof. Istiaq Ahmed on 27 November 2022 where he  spoke on "The Tow-Nation Theory, Partition and the Consequences "




Topic : The Two-Nation Theory, Partition and the Consequences

1.    The Two-Nation Theory as an Idea and an Argument: The talk will contextualize the origins of the Two-Nation Theory in the background of pre-colonial and British colonial rule and analyse it in relation to competing ideas of a One-Nation Theory as well as the vaguer ideas of multiple nationalities deriving from language, ethnicity and religion. This section will also deal with British policy regarding such competing ideas of group identity and nation and nationalism. This will cover the period 1857 – 1932. However, most attention will be given to the 1928 Motilal Nehru Report (which a section of Muslims including one faction of the Muslim League was willing to accept) and Jinnah’s 14 points.

 2.      The Two-Nation Theory and the demand for Partition: The Government of India Act 1935, the election speeches and manifestos, election results and the Muslim League’s deployment of communalism as political strategy to demand partition on behalf of Muslims. The stands of the Indian National Congress, the Muslim League, the Communist Party of India, the Hindu Mahasabha, the Jamiat Ulema e Hind and other Islamist, regional and working-class parties of Muslims and the Sikhs of Punjab.

 3.      British policy on the future of India: from unwillingness to grant India freedom to retaining influence and control through defence treaty to finally deciding in favour of partition. The Cabinet Mission Plan, Wavell’s schemes to transfer power as an award, The British military’s transformation from opposition to support for partition; 3 June Partition Plan, the partitions of Bengal and Punjab, the 18 July 1947 Indian Independence Act.

 4.      The Partition as a flawed exercise in the transfer of power which claimed at least one million Hindu, Muslim and Sikh lives, caused the biggest migration in history (14 – 15 million) and bequeathed bitter disputes over the sharing of colonial assets, territory and claims to princely states. In this regard, the

 5.      The Partition as a referent for nation-building: while agreeing finally to the partition of India on a religious basis India held steadfastly to nation-building on a secular, liberal-democratic, inclusive and pluralist basis. The Indian constitution came to represent such a view of nation and nation-building. On the other hand, since Pakistan had been won in the name of Islam its nation-building was based on distinguishing Muslims from non-Muslims and generating different formulae of differential rights. More importantly, it brought to light the deep divisions among Muslims based on sect, sub-sect and ethno-linguistic criteria.

 6.      The Partition and settling of disputes between India and Pakistan: The two-nation theory continued to define and determine relations between India and Pakistan resulting in wars, terrorism and zero-sum games in international forums.

 7.      The Partition as a historical, political, ideological and intellectual phenomenon: An Evaluation


About the Speaker :

Prof Ishtiaq Ahmed Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Stockholm University; Honorary Senior Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. Published several books with special focus on the politics of South Asia discussed in context of regional and international relations

Latest publications, Jinnah: His Successes, Failures and Role in History,  New Delhi: Penguin Viking, 2020 won the English Non-Fiction Book Award for 2021 at the Valley of Words Literary Festival, Dehradu, India; Jinnah: His Successes, Failures and Role in History, Vanguard Books, Lahore 2021;

Pakistan: The Garrison State, Origins, Evolution, Consequences (1947-2011), Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2013;

The Punjab Bloodied, Partitioned and Cleansed, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2012- It won the Best Non-Fiction Book Prize at the 2013 Karachi Literature Festival and the 2013 UBL-Jang Groups Best Non-Fiction Book Prize at Lahore and the Best Book on Punjab Award from Punjabi Parchar at the Vaisakhi Mela in Lahore, 2016

He is working on a new book, The Partitions of India, Punjab and Bengal: Who What and Why

He is the Editor-in-Chief of the “Liberal Arts & Social Sciences International Journal (LASSIJ)” and also regularly writes columns in several Pakistani newspapers.