India: Past, Present, and Future
Overview
June 28, 2022, 4:00 pmEncore Presentation
(Includes Live Professor Q & A!)
It is quite likely that no country presents such sharp contrasts, and is so recalcitrant to social theories, as India. The country boasts a large number of billionaires and yet has the worldโs largest number of people living lives of abject poverty.ย It has been home to the worldโs most glittering empires, among them the Guptas (300-500 CE) and the Mughals (1526-c.1800), and yet as a nation-state India has struggled to leave its imprint on the global stage.ย India birthed four of the worldโs principal religionsโHinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhismโand has been home to Christians since the 1stย century CE — just as it has the worldโs third largest population of Muslims and a singular history of unparalleled hospitality towards Jews. But Indiaโs reputation as a country of religious tolerance is increasingly being tarnished by religious conflict.
The staggering religious, linguistic, ethnic, and cultural diversity of India appears to be under assault.ย Nevertheless, this would not be the first time that India would appear to be buckling under the fissures that are as much external as internal.ย Almost uniquely among countries in Asia and Africa that decolonized, India has — since independence in 1947 — largely retained the features of a democratic state. In this talk, Professor Vinay Lal will offer a panoramic view of the Indian past, identifying some of the most saliant features of Indian civilization, and then suggest some of the challenges that face the country.ย The future of India, it will be argued, can be seen as a tussle between a capacious view of India as a great civilizationโwarts and allโand a more restrictive and often xenophobic view of India as a nation-state. How this will be resolved holds meaning not just for India, but for the world at large.
Recommended Reading:
The Idea of India, by Sunil Khilnani
Of Cricket, Guinness and Gandhi:ย Essays on Indian History and Culture, by Vinay Lal
The Romance of the State and the Fate of Dissent in the Tropics, by Ashis Nandy
Now It’s Come to Distances,ย by Soumyabrata Choudhury
Discussion Questions:
- Is India an unusual example of an industrializing democracy which is at the same time an ancient civilization navigating its way carefully between modernity and tradition?
- Why is it that among the dozens of countries which were colonized, India is nearly distinct in not having succumbed to military dictatorship, authoritarian rule, or totalitarianism?
- Has religion played a greater role in the shaping of India than it has in other countries, especially the countries that comprise the modern West?
- In what respects is India as a democracy similar to, and also different from, the United States or other democracies in the West?
- In what ways is democracy in peril in India today? Is that distinct, or is what is happening in India part of a worldwide drift towards the rule of the “strong man?”
- Why is it that China has largely managed to eliminate povertyโcertainly extreme povertyโbut that India has been much less successful in doing so?
- What have been some of India’s greatest contributions to world civilization?