My identizones
I've been asked to wear my multiple
identities as so many sites for appropriate feelings, of pride, of
guilt, of shame, of grievance. “You're a male, adult, cis, hetero,
Hindu, upper-caste, middle-class, married, parental, Bengali, Indian,
resident (not diasporic), linguist; be proud, guilty, ashamed,
aggrieved, in your capacity as a male, adult...”, they urge me.
Around upper-hand identities, the
institutions offer readymade unifications, which rest on entrenched
second-rating of their lower-hand counterparts, allowing for choice
from second-rating practices that range from aggressive to moderate.
Around lower-hand identities, there are solidarity systems that
gather persons into networks to affirm the power of sisterhood and
challenge the second-rating arrangements, with these challenging
practices ranging from militant to gentle.
I could have illustrated this standard
geometry of multiple identities, differentiated into upper-hand and
lower-hand subcategories, by considering an abstract case. But it is
unproblematic to choose oneself as an example in an elementary
exercise.
First, an upper-hand example. As a
Hindu in India, I have an upper-hand identity; I can choose how
aggressive to be in my participation of the second-rating of
non-Hindu compatriots.
Next, a lower-hand example. As a
linguist based in the global South, I operate a lower-hand identity;
I can choose how militant to be in my postures vis-a-vis the handlers
from the global North whose linguists systematically second-rate us;
I am expected to mildly or strongly resist the arrangement under
which they get to control the systems of linguistry and get to assign
franchises to designated individuals and groups in the South. All
second-rating, in any collective-to-collective dyad, thrives on the
fact that those second-rated bristle at the status assigned to them.
That's part of the point.
This is the current pedagogy of
identities and of the way a given individual handles her affiliation
to several identities. Each identity J, at the categorial level,
inhabits a relational space, typically but not always construed in
dyadic terms, where J is mutually defined vis-a-vis adjacent identity
K in a J/K binary. Either J or K has the upper hand in that binary
and second-rates the other. In the cases where the relational space
has three or more occupants, the dynamics can be resolved into binary
dyads. Consider 'poor – middle – rich', for instance; this triad
is most transparently parsed in terms of 'poor-middle' dynamics and
'middle-rich' dynamics; there are wrinkles, but they hardly affect
the overall geometry.
All these dynamic processes may be
narrated – at a given point on the curve, or following a historical
curve or two – in social-scientific and historical terms,
abstracting away from the subjectivities of this or that individual.
One is able to do this in large part because the processes typically
affect all individuals alike. What one calls personal differences can
mostly be attributed to slightly different sets of categorial
affiliations. But one can also run the story at the personal or
biographical level. In such narrations one plays up the 'same'
material in idiosyncratic terms, focusing on events, responses and
interpersonal dynamics, placing aesthetics on a fetish-cherishing
pedestal. Aesthetics (including one's approach to friendship, love,
and their negations) that does for the sanctity of the personal level
exactly what the social cherishing practices (which place religion,
science, politics etc. on overlapping pedestals) do for the
sovereignty of the collective level.
Can I challenge the complicated cage
itself that they tell me is the universal city I must inhabit? Is it
even meaningful, let alone feasible, to defy this pedagogy itself,
the one outlined above, the one that is driving all narratives
available to my prose in any language currently in use? If I want to
mount such a challenge, at what Archimedean point do I stand in order
to perform the operation? How can I even define the location of the
point if I defy the standard geometry itself? How will any definition
I offer be understandable to my interlocutors who inhabit the same
pedagogy?
I am hoping to learn from Aniket
Jaaware, who writes as a Dalit and asks how a person can inherit both
the Dalit potential from all Dalits and the Brahmin potential from
all Brahmins, and how one can make sense of the idea that only such a
joint inheritance will make us whole. I am hoping to learn from
androgynous thinking, which asks if a joint cultivation of both our
yin and our yang is not only an option but an obligation. I am hoping
to use the work of Punya Sloka Ray, who spoke of the teacher
language/ learner language relationship between languages. I am
hoping to learn from the writings of Lev Vygotsky, who proposed that
a child's learning is best understood not by examining the individual
child alone, but in the context of the child's intimate relationship
of cognitive growth with direct encouragement from the mentor,
idealizable as one mentoring adult for diagrammatic simplicity, a
context conceptualized as the ZPD, the Zone of Proximal Development.
I am hoping not to cleave to these positive contexts alone, not to
ignore the cynical realpolitik of the notions of 'satellite' state
and 'client' state in international relations as I seek to make sense
of the as yet unclear geometry of the identizones in which I seek,
relationally but not only in ways that are completely determined by
the standard pedagogy, to understand why an Ambedkar could view an
M.P. Rege as his spiritual child, and why a Rege could spend his life
honouring this task that his spiritual father had given him. I knew
Rege, and I am hoping to make sense of this without ignoring the fact
that I had to keep him at a distance because there was much in his
vision that I very strongly rejected.
If you can help me, please do.
Probal Dasgupta
21 November 2018