Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of Tables and Charts
- List of Abbreviations
- Section I Introduction
- Section II Engaging with Subaltern Studies in India
- Section III Subaltern Reproduction through Idea, Knowledge and Power
- 5 A Subaltern Perspective on the Discourse of New Political Economy of India
- 6 Modern Science and Indigenous Techniques: Subalternity of Knowledge Production in India
- 7 The Construction of the Subaltern through Education: Historical Failure of Mass Education in India
- Section IV Routes of Subjugation and Emancipation: Identity and Assertion, Mobilization and Power, Knowledge and Production
- Section V Aspects of Social and Cultural Changes
- Contributors
5 - A Subaltern Perspective on the Discourse of New Political Economy of India
from Section III - Subaltern Reproduction through Idea, Knowledge and Power
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of Tables and Charts
- List of Abbreviations
- Section I Introduction
- Section II Engaging with Subaltern Studies in India
- Section III Subaltern Reproduction through Idea, Knowledge and Power
- 5 A Subaltern Perspective on the Discourse of New Political Economy of India
- 6 Modern Science and Indigenous Techniques: Subalternity of Knowledge Production in India
- 7 The Construction of the Subaltern through Education: Historical Failure of Mass Education in India
- Section IV Routes of Subjugation and Emancipation: Identity and Assertion, Mobilization and Power, Knowledge and Production
- Section V Aspects of Social and Cultural Changes
- Contributors
Summary
I
While in the decades of the 1980s and 1990s, Dalits and Backward Classes in India were asserting social and political empowerment with an urge to get their shares in the development pie of a declared welfare state, the traditionally dominant upper caste/class national elite fashioned a political discourse and an agenda for new political economy, which were not only inherently biased against the interests of the newly assertive social groups, but were capable of eroding the ideological legitimacy of their politics and movement and defeating their larger objectives. Firstly, through the vocabulary of political discourse, an element of apprehension, uncertainty and instability was infused in the national psyche to claim that any change in regime, i.e., replacement of the traditionally dominant upper-caste/class ruling elite by leaders of the new social groups, would unleash an era of political and economic uncertainty, social conflict and immoral politics. Secondly, the new policy regime – free market economy, non-state actors (greater participation of non-governmental organizations or NGOs) and review of the constitution – were premised on the understanding that there had been something wrong with the policy and institutions and not with the policymakers; power structure and not the power wielders.
This discourse would serve the interest of the traditionally dominant upper-caste/class national elite in two ways: one, it would put down curtains on the (failures) past regimes, which in spite of lofty preaching and umpteen promises failed to improve the life chances of Dalits and Backward Classes in general.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Subalternity, Exclusion and Social Change in India , pp. 105 - 117Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2014