["I think there are many different contradictory tendencies that have
come together to produce events or personalities like Donald Trump and
Modi. I think if we were to follow this old analytic method of
either/or we would miss many of these contradictory aspects of modern
politics and economics. In the same way, Erdoğan mixed in
neoliberalism with Islamism and Putin mixed in Orthodox Christianity
with Russian Eurasianism. There are all kinds of mixtures on offer."

It is a significant acknowledgement that Hindutva and (economic)
neo-liberalism are not the one and the same.
They're not in perfect alignment either.
And, such contradictory elements have been creatively combined with
rather stunning success.]

https://scroll.in/article/829465/modi-combines-savarkar-and-neoliberalism-pankaj-mishra-on-why-this-is-the-age-of-anger

MEET THE WRITER
'Modi combines Savarkar and neoliberalism': Pankaj Mishra on why this
is the age of anger
Mishra spoke about his new book, which seeks to explain why the world
seems to be going up in flames.

3 hours ago
Updated 12 minutes ago

Shoaib Daniyal

We live in a disorienting world. In West Asia, the Islamic State uses
displays of cruelty and religious fanaticism as a propaganda tool. In
large swathes of Europe, far right nationalism is rearing its head for
the first time since after the defeat of fascism in World War II. The
world’s only superpower, meanwhile, has a president elected to office
on an explicit programme of racial and religious bigotry, attacking
Muslims and non-White Americans in his campaign speeches.

And, of course, closer home in India, the ideology of Hindutva, which
considers India to be a “Hindu nation”, grows ever stronger,
assaulting Muslims and Dalits in its wake.

In his new book, intellectual Pankaj Mishra tries to explain this fury
enveloping the world. Titled Age of Anger: A History of the Present,
the work traces traces today’s discontentment to the rapid changes of
the 18th century, when modernity was shaped.

You say that the enlightenment gave rise to some “irresistible ideals:
a rationalistic, egalitarian and universalising society in which men
shaped their own lives”. So why do so many people disagree with the
way in which you see the enlightenment? You’ve shown it to be a very
positive thing. So how are, say, Islamists looking at it differently?
Why do they disagree?
Well, I am not sympathetic to their critique and I am not sure that
they’re directly critiquing the Enlightenment rather than the
consequences of the kind of thinking introduced by the Enlightenment
philosophers in the late 18th century. And let’s be careful here: many
of the consequences weren’t anticipated by these philosophers
themselves.

What they were talking about was a polity. And for them a polity was
the church and then the monarchy. And they thought individuals could
use reason since there had been enough scientific breakthroughs,
enough revelations about the nature of reality out there. They did not
need intermediaries like the church to tell us what to think about the
world, what to think about reality. We could use our individual reason
to construct our own worlds essentially and shape society. That was
the fundamental message they had. They had no idea what would happen
in the 19th century.

What happened in the 19th century was something very different: large
nation-states came into being, the process of industrialisation
started, the use of individual reason expanded, science took off, all
kind of new technologies came into being, and large political and
economic webs were built.

The Islamist critique of that would be: too much responsibility for
shaping the world was placed upon the extremely fallible minds and
sensibilities of the human individual. That this was going against
centuries of custom, tradition and history. Human beings had always
been seen as being very frail and weak creatures who needed some kind
of constraint and that was the role of traditional religion.

Religion reminded humans being of the severe limitations that life
imposes on everyone. Whereas the promise of freedom and emancipation
sets off all kinds of unpredictable processes that result in actually
more oppression and more pain.

So that would be or has been the modern critique of the Enlightenment
– which is shared by a pretty broad spectrum of people, not just the
Islamists. Mahatma Gandhi himself voiced many of these critiques of
modern science, modern industry and the modern nation-state. You have
to remember that Rabindranath Tagore himself expressed those
critiques. So we also have to look at these other critics of
Enlightenment rationalism.

You go into some detail in describing Savarkar in the book. In many
ways, a very good argument could be made that Savarkar was a
rationalist. He said Hindus should eat beef, for example. How does a
Savarkar then map to the more modern forms of Indian conservatism? How
do you go from Savarkar to the current-day gau rakshak?
I think Savarkar is essentially a child of Enlightenment rationalism
despite all the claims made for an unbroken Hindu tradition. The
important thing to note about the Savarkar variety of Hindu
nationalism is that it is deeply European and deeply modern. Which was
one reason why Gandhi was so opposed to it. He said this was the rule
of Englishmen with the English in his book Hind Swaraj.

So Savarkar does not partake of a critique of the Enlightenment. He,
in fact, in very much a product of 19th century Europe, which advances
Enlightenment rationalism in unexpected directions. He starts to think
of a national community of like-minded individuals. He starts to think
of a past which can be recruited by the present, that can be deployed
politically. Savarkar subscribes to everyone of these political
tendencies which are elaborated most prominently by [Giuseppe]
Mazzini. So he comes out of that particular tradition.

So this whole reverence for figures and symbols from the past which
the gau rakshak seems to manifest is a total 19th century fantasy.
People did not think of the past in that way before that century. The
past was very deliberately enlisted into a nationalist project. Every
nationalist – and I write this in the book – had made some sort of a
claim upon the past, made some sort of connection.

We are now looking at history as a series of ruptures and new
beginnings. In Savarkar’s case, the rupture would be the Muslim
invasion of India. That’s also the case for [VS] Naipaul. That was the
big rupture that violates the wholeness of the Hindu past. And now we
are invested in a new beginning, which is the revival of Hindu glory.

This whole way of looking at time, of looking at human agency and
identity is a product of the European 19th century. And that’s where
Savarkar should be placed. I think we spend too much time comparing
him to the Germans and the Italians of the 1930s. I think we should go
back and look at the 19th century more closely. And also look at
Savarkar – which I’ve done in the book – together with various other
tendencies such as Zionism.

But it’s not only Savarkar who’s doing this, right? There’s a whole
galaxy of Indian leaders, right from Nehru to Jinnah, taking off from
the Enlightenment. In your book, you quote Dostoyevsky, who underlined
a tragic dilemma: of a society that assimilates European ways through
every pore only to realise it could never be truly European. Is there
anything that can be done to break this dilemma?
The short answer would be a pessimistic one: that there is no way to
break this. Because once we make that original break from
pre-modern/rural/traditional society, break away from belief in god,
from belief in a horizon that was defined by transcendental
authorities, once you stop living in that world, then you are
condemned to finding substitute gods. And the national community and
the nation state has been that substitute god or transcendental
authority for hundreds and millions of people for the last two hundred
years.

And one reason it endures – even though in many ways the nation state
has lost its sovereign power after being undermined by globalisation –
is that as an emotional and psychological symbol, and as a way to
define the transcendental horizon, the nation state is still
unbeatable. So once we make that basic move away from the pre-modern
modes of life into this modern, industrialised, urbanised mode of
existence, we have basically embarked on a journey where there’s no
turning back. There’s no breaking out of that.

Where do you situate Modi on this scale?
I think Modi is an interesting case. He’s not only someone who
incarnates the tendencies that we identify with Savarkar – who is a
model for Modi – but also mirrors many contemporary tendencies which
one can identify with a sort of aspirational neoliberalism. The man
from nowhere who makes it big: that’s the story that Modi has tried to
sell about himself. That he’s the son of a chaiwallah who has overcome
all kinds of adversity including violent, vicious attacks from the
country’s English-speaking elites who wanted to bring him down but
failed. And he has overcome all these challenges to become who he is.
And he invites his followers to do the same.

So, in that sense, he not only is a Hindu nationalist in the old
manner of thinking of India as primarily a country of Hindus and as a
community of Hindus which needs to define itself very carefully by
excluding various foreigners, but also someone who is in tune with the
ideological trends of the last 30 years, which place a lot of premium
on individual ambition and empowerment, not just collective endeavour.
So he is a very curious and irresistible mix, as it turns out, of
certain collectivist notions of salvation with a kind of intensified
individualism.

You used a very interesting phrase there: “aspirational
neoliberalism”. In the book, you use another term, “neoliberal
individualism”. In my opinion, you take a negative opinion of this
sort of individualism. Could you tell us what “neoliberal
individualism” is, how is it different from, say, Enlightenment
individualism and why are you taking a negative view of it.
Individualism really is synonymous with modernity, which is all about
individual autonomy and reason. The most important difference is that
the previous forms of individualism had certain constraining factors.
There would be religion, the nation state, the larger collective.

When [Alexis de] Tocqueville goes to America and begins to describe
individualism at work in the world’s first democratic society, he is
aware that all of this is made possible because religion is a very
important factor. There are many intermediate institutions there to
mediate between individuals and the larger reality of society. So
these factors were extremely important for individualism to actually
work properly.

What neoliberal individualism proposes, though, is essentially that we
don’t actually need these intermediaries. It buys into a kind of
extreme libertarian fantasy of the kind we see people like Peter Theil
[co-founder of PayPal and vocal Trump supporter] expressing. They’re
saying, “we don’t need government”, “we don’t need collective
endeavour of any kind”, “we don’t really need notions of collective
welfare, general welfare or common good”.

They believe individuals pursuing their self-interest can create a
common good. And the marketplace would be where these individual
desires and needs could be miraculously harmonised. So it’s a kind of
mysticism, really, neoliberal individualism. It basically argues that
we don’t need any constraining factors. We do not need any
intermediate institutions of the kind Tocqueville argued for in
America. Neoliberal individualism says, all we really need is
individual initiative, individual energy, individual dynamism and, of
course, individual aspiration. So this is how neoliberal individualism
is different from previous forms of individualism.

It is interesting that you mention Peter Theil, a major supporter of
Trump. Is neoliberal individualism then powering Trump?
Well, no. That’s the thing. There are many contradictory elements in
this mix. To go back to Modi, he comes from a party which has as part
of its extended family the Swadeshi Jagran Manch. The Manch believes
in Swadeshi but Modi wants to attract foreign investment.

I think we have to start thinking of a world where archaisms,
modernity, post-modernity all exist simultaneously yet differently.
You can think of it as different territories. Trump can therefore
mobilise a whole lot of disaffected individuals who have believed in
the neoliberal ideology and have felt themselves victimised by various
technocratic elites and attract a figure like Theil, who claims to be
a libertarian, and at the same believe that economic protectionism is
the way to go.

***I think there are many different contradictory tendencies that have
come together to produce events or personalities like Donald Trump and
Modi. I think if we were to follow this old analytic method of
either/or we would miss many of these contradictory aspects of modern
politics and economics. In the same way, Erdoğan mixed in
neoliberalism with Islamism and Putin mixed in Orthodox Christianity
with Russian Eurasianism. There are all kinds of mixtures on offer.***
[Emphasis added.]

The central argument being that they correspond to the acute, inner
divisions of human beings. Of people wanting individual power,
expansion and at the same time wanting identity, longing and a sense
of community. So this is, in a way, a little snapshot of where we are
– a kind of endless transition.


Age of Anger: A History of the Present, Pankaj Mishra, Juggernaut Books.


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