SHIV VISVANATHAN
The message of the Indian state is clear from its response to the
documentary India's Daughter. Rape is permissible and normal, but a film
which is an insult to the nation state is taboo. When culture is under
threat, the vulnerability of women, the obscenity and the banality of rape
are inconsequential

Controversies have a way of fragmenting the narrative of stories. They also
have a touch of scandal which generates not merely outrage but also an
epidemic of political correctness. The recent ban of the BBC documentary
<http://www.thehindu.com/news/govt-firm-on-documentary-ban-bbc-advances-telecast/article6959833.ece?ref=relatedNews>,
titled *India's Daughter*, on the Nirbhaya rape case, is an example. I sat
and watched the documentary. It is powerful and compelling. What holds
one's attention are the fragments of conversation from the convict and the
quiet responses of the family. What is irrelevant or possibly elliptical to
the movie is the commentary of the NGOs that spread out like politically
correct icing. The reactions of Krishnan, Kanth, Seth, all sensitive
people, are reasonable in themselves but they do not touch the core of the
narrative.

*The narrative*

The story, presented in its rawness the rapist's narrative and its various
thematic elements. Listening to the narrative, I was sickened by the sheer
lack of humanity. I felt as if I did not want to be part of the human
species. I was wondering where I had watched a similar display of responses
and the sheer ordinariness of the comments reminded me of Hannah Arendt's
study of *Eichmann in Jerusalem*, a controversial but classically relevant
book.

Arendt's book talked of Eichmann, wondering how to make sense of the sheer
ordinariness of the man and the enormity of his crimes. Eichmann claimed he
was merely obeying orders; that he was an officer enacting his daily
chores. He appeared "normal", or as one psychologist admitted "more normal
than I was after interviewing him". The nature of the crime here is
different. Adolf Eichmann committed genocide; our rapist killed and
disembodied a woman, a paramedical student, removing her intestines as if
it was a bit of garbage.

If Eichmann saw himself as a responsible bureaucrat following orders, our
rapist saw himself as a pedagogue punishing deviants around the city. He
sees himself as a moral policeman, as a surveillance mechanism tracking and
punishing couples roaming "irresponsibly" around the city.

The rapist in this case becomes not a pathological case, but a symptom of
the normalcy of our culture. In fact, it is the sickness of our culture
that we witness through the words, the attitudes, and the body language of
the perpetrator.

The rapist seems ordinary, dressed in a T-shirt and with the makings of a
beard. He could be sending a*rakhee *message to his sisters, full of mild
complaints rather than talking of the woman he raped. There is no remorse,
no sense of loss; he sounds like a man who has had a meal and appears to be
complaining about it. In fact it is the sheer normalcy, the patriarchal
normalcy of the story that creates a link to Arendt's analysis. What one
witnesses is the sheer absence of guilt, the banality of culture.

The narrative opens simply. Our friends have had food, also a bit of
alcohol. They are now tempted to move across their personal Maslovian
hierarchy to fun and sex. They decide to ride towards GB road, where such
activities are reputed to take place. The picture is clear, these are
ordinary men in ordinary pursuits, following predictable urges.

However, they are also folk sociologists theorising on modernity and the
city. They reflect on the human condition and talk about the vagaries of
the city. They express their sense of urban anxiety, about women walking
the city at night, and hint at the seduction and temptation of women
floating freely around. For these men, a freely moving woman is an act of
licence.

Such a woman becomes classified as dirt. Dirt, as the anthropologist Mary
Douglas defined it, is matter out of place. As dirt, the women threaten
order and classification and order has to be restored. They have to be put
in place. The liminality, the ambiguity, the threat of a woman violating
male order is clear. As patriarchs and pedagogues, the men must teach the
women their rightful place.

The rapist confesses. He wanted to teach the young couple a lesson and also
cure the standard masculine itch. If it is collective itch, they resort to
gang rape. He complains that the victim was not pliable; that if she had
submitted passively, she would have been subject to less violence.

*Cultures and responses*

The two lawyers who play the chorus to the perpetrator systematise his
responses. They play the contemporary Manu explaining why men were not to
blame. A woman is not victim but a temptation. She is in fact responsible
for rape, because she is the agency that triggers it. One lawyer in fact
says that a woman in the right place is worshipped as a gem but a woman in
the wrong place has to be punished. As the two lawyers articulate their
defence of rape, one witnesses the logic of the culture at work. The
argument is that men are not to blame. Their feelings are normal. It is the
woman who as temptation has agency. Men are mere facts of biology. Women
create the culture of threat and anxiety which triggers biology.

The documentary juxtaposes the response to rape across two cultures. One
embodied in the radical stereotype of JNU and by young students and reveals
the horror and the anger which boils over. Protest against rape becomes
their initiation rite into politics. They feel their responses are genuine
and are surprised by a patriarchal state which greets them with violence
and water cannons. For these young students, rights is about freedom, about
inventing a culture. For the rapists and the defence lawyers, culture is
about control and surveillance. It is a male panopticon subjecting women to
perpetual scrutiny; even the idea of the woman at home as an icon to be
worshipped is sheer hypocrisy. One realises that domestic violence meets
urban violence in the rape story. In exposing the hypocrisy and portraying
the protest, the documentary creates a politics of hope.

*State reaction*

But the power of culture is the power of controlling memory. The state saw
in the protest in Delhi a threat to its power, its alleged edifice of law
and order.

When a foreign film-maker, especially from the BBC, makes a film, it
suddenly feels that the culture of the nation state is threatened. The
security and the reputation of the nation state is more important than
justice. Security in fact is the new virginity of politics. The Indian
nation state is doubly insulted. First, by media exposure that caused hurt
to culture and second when the exposé is conducted by outsiders. A ban is
the standard reflex of a threatened culture.

The state is literally on red alert. What with *jihad*, moral policing,
culture has been in a state of crisis. Minorities of all kinds, from
students, women, Muslims have been threatening this sense of culture. The
message is clear. Rape is permissible and normal, but a film which is an
insult to the nation state is taboo. Enter the pious patriotism of Union
Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who is both chowkidar and security expert of
the threatened state and its vulnerable cultures. The film is banned and he
adds that he plans to prevent its release in other countries. It is clear
that when culture is under threat, the vulnerability of women, the
obscenity and the banality of rape are inconsequential. Rape is after all
an internal matter and the documentary would damage India's status in the
outside world.

In politics especially famous for its well-intentioned googlies, the
*doosra *also offers another reason for the ban. Some argue that the film
should be banned because of the attention and focus on the rapists.
Inadvertently, it might become a source of encouragement and publicity for
them, bloating their egos, and validating their sense of machismo.

Luckily, what the state proposes, the Internet disposes and the film went
viral. People watched it with a sense of eerie disgust. Yet, one realised
that Mr. Rajnath Singh was shrewd. The documentary triggered unease,
despair but no further protest at a mass level. The 'Letters to The Editor'
did not give way to the battle of the streets. Between the cynicism of
power and the banality of rape in our culture, one wonders about the fate
of democracy. Between patriarchy which reduces gang rape to a collective
hiccup and majoritarianism which is licking its imagined wounds, democracy,
at least at the cultural level, feels empty. This is a disaster which the
film talks about and which we as citizens have to respond to, today.

*(Shiv Visvanathan is a professor at Jindal School of Government and Public
Policy.)*

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/indias-abandoned-daughter/article6979071.ece?homepage=true
-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.

Reply via email to