Prof Romila Thapar delivered the 28th Democracy Dialogues Lecture on 28 th January 2024
Abstract
My purpose in this talk would be to examine the link between history and
particular kinds of nationalism. I hope to show that nationalism can be a
process, bringing together and uniting all the communities that inhabit a
particular territory in support of a change in society or opposing a target
common to all. This earlier form is what I would like to call a unitary,
integrative nationalism that cut across communities and drew them together
in a particular country to support a single purpose. This I would differentiate
from the latter forms in some countries which identified with units of society
or communities according to certain common features, such as a particular
religion or language, or caste or ethnicity. I would call it segregated
nationalism, where each community is segregated and treated as having a
distinctly different identity and its own separate goal. History is brought in when
the community that gives an identity to its nationalism insists on tracing its
origins to a historical past. This pattern of integrated and segregated
nationalisms would seem to apply to India of the twentieth century. There was
the all-inclusive national movement whose participants were from every
community; its objectives were to maintain the unity of the Indian people and
overthrow colonial rule. The other nationalism, segregated nationalism, was
seeded in the 1920s and assumed the existence of two nations – the Hindu and
the Muslim – which, it was argued, go back to earlier times. Integrated
nationalism succeeded in 1947 in bringing about independence, but its
foundations needed strengthening, for we are now witnessing the strong presence
of religious nationalism in the attempt to inaugurate a Hindu Rashtra in India.
About the Speaker:
Internationally renowned scholar of Ancient History,
Prof Thapar was elected General President of the Indian History
Congress in 1983 and a Fellow of the British Academy in 1999. In 2008, she was
awarded the prestigious Kluge Prize of the US Library of Congress which
complements the Nobel, in honouring lifetime achievement in disciplines not
covered by the latter.
Prof Thapar has been a visiting professor at Cornell
University, the University of Pennysylvania, and the College de
France in Paris and holds honorary doctorates from the University of
Chicago, the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales in
Paris, the University of Oxford, the University of Edinburgh (2004),
the University of Calcutta and from the University of Hyderabad
Here is a select list of Prof Thapar’s publications
Ashoka and the Decline of the Mauryas, 1961 ( Oxford University
Press) ; A History of India : Volume 1, 1966 ( Penguin) ; The Past and
Prejudice, NBT ( 1975) ; Ancient Indian Social History : Some Interpretations,
1978 ( Orient Blackswan) ; From Lineages to State 1985 : Social Formations of
the Mid-First Millenium B.C. in the Ganges Valley, 1985 ( Oxford University
Press) ; Interpreting Early India, 1992 ( Oxford University Press) ;
Sakuntala : Text, Reading, Historie, 2002 ( Anthem) . Somanatha : The Many
Voices of History, Verso ( 2005) ; The Aryan : Recasting Constructs,
Three Essays ( 2008) ; The Past As Present: Forging Contemporary Identities Through
History, (2014) ;Voices of Dissent: An Essay, (2020); The Future in the
Past: Essay ( 2023)
0 comments:
Post a Comment