[Hofstadter traced the deep roots of this hostility to scholars and
scholarship to the Evangelical tradition and its Biblical literalism.
Through the 18th century, he wrote, “[t]he Puritan ideal of the minister as
an intellectual and educational leader was steadily weakened in the face of
the evangelical ideal of the minister as a popular crusader and exhorter”.
These evangelicals looked upon “piety and intellect as being in open
enmity”. One writer, alarmed at the religious revivalism sweeping the
American South in the 1770s, remarked: “Few or no Books are to be found in
all this vast Country, beside the Assembly, Catechism, Watts Hymns, Bunyans
Pilgrims Progress... Nor do they delight in Historical Books or in having
them read to them... for these People despise Knowledge, and instead of
honouring a Learnede Person, or any one of Wit or Knowledge, be it in the
Arts, Sciences or Languages, they despise and Ill treat them - And this
Spirit prevails even among the Principals of this Province”.
(This description calls to mind Hindutva organisations of the present,
within which well-researched works of history or social science are
likewise disparaged, whereas the dated, dogmatic screeds of VD Savarkar and
MS Golwalkar are venerated. The Hindu fundamentalist of the 21st century,
like the Christian fundamentalist of the 18th century, considers “piety and
intellect as being in open enmity”.)
...
The parallels with contemporary India are striking. Narendra Modi’s victory
in 2014 has emboldened the Hindutva core to launch a full-fledged attack on
independent-minded scholars and writers. Their language is far more crude
than the Republicans of 1950s America; but the essence of their
characterisation, or dismissal, is the same. Instead of “pretentious,
conceited, effeminate, and snobbish” they use “libtard, Aaptard, sickular,
10 Janpath bootlicker, toadie of the Italian waitress”, and so on.
...
Another and more worrying difference is this – that anti-intellectual
ideologues can do far more damage in India than they ever could in America.
For the likes of Harvard and Princeton are privately funded, and even
public universities like Berkeley and Wisconsin zealously guard their
scholarly autonomy and integrity. Here, however, our best as well as our
worst universities are amenable to political control and manipulation. And
so, instead of learning physics, biology, history, economics or
international relations, the students at Jawaharlal Nehru University shall
be made to salute the national flag and worship an Army tank to prove their
patriotic credentials.]

https://scroll.in/article/850910/indias-current-anti-intellectual-climate-echoes-mccarthy-era-attacks-on-writers-and-scholars-in-us

India’s current anti-intellectual climate echoes McCarthy-era attacks on
writers, scholars in the US
However, though the US senator and his henchmen deprived independent
thinkers and writers of their jobs in the 1950s, the Hindutva strain takes
lives.

by  Ramachandra Guha

Published Yesterday · 08:00 am

India’s current anti-intellectual climate echoes McCarthy-era attacks on
writers, scholars in the US

Senator Joe McCarthy and his henchmen led a witch hunt against those they
suspected to be communists, depriving several thinkers and writers of their
jobs. | AFP
Books set in other countries and published at other times can sometimes be
strikingly relevant to India today. This is certainly the case with Richard
Hofstadter’s Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, published in 1963. I
first read this book as a doctoral student 30 years ago, and reread it
recently.

As a professor at one of America’s most prestigious universities, Columbia
in New York, Hofstadter watched, with fascinated horror, the persecution of
scholars and writers by the senator, Joe McCarthy, and his gang in the
1950s. After the senator was disgraced and then had died, the historian sat
down to set this recent witch-hunt in the context of other such episodes of
anti-intellectualism in American history.

Hofstadter traced the deep roots of this hostility to scholars and
scholarship to the Evangelical tradition and its Biblical literalism.
Through the 18th century, he wrote, “[t]he Puritan ideal of the minister as
an intellectual and educational leader was steadily weakened in the face of
the evangelical ideal of the minister as a popular crusader and exhorter”.
These evangelicals looked upon “piety and intellect as being in open
enmity”. One writer, alarmed at the religious revivalism sweeping the
American South in the 1770s, remarked: “Few or no Books are to be found in
all this vast Country, beside the Assembly, Catechism, Watts Hymns, Bunyans
Pilgrims Progress... Nor do they delight in Historical Books or in having
them read to them... for these People despise Knowledge, and instead of
honouring a Learnede Person, or any one of Wit or Knowledge, be it in the
Arts, Sciences or Languages, they despise and Ill treat them - And this
Spirit prevails even among the Principals of this Province”.

(This description calls to mind Hindutva organisations of the present,
within which well-researched works of history or social science are
likewise disparaged, whereas the dated, dogmatic screeds of VD Savarkar and
MS Golwalkar are venerated. The Hindu fundamentalist of the 21st century,
like the Christian fundamentalist of the 18th century, considers “piety and
intellect as being in open enmity”.)

In 19th-century America, such anti-intellectual religiosity further
consolidated itself. One influential preacher dismissed Shakespeare and
Byron as “triflers and blasphemers of God”. Another remarked that he would
rather have zeal without knowledge than knowledge without zeal. “Thousands
of college graduates are going as fast as they can straight to hell,” said
this anti-intellectual fundamentalist. “If I had a million dollars I’d give
$999,999 to the church and $1 for education,” he added.

In the first half of the 20th century, there was a belated awakening of
respect for scholars and scholarships in the United States of America. Two
presidents, bearing the same surname, were instrumental in integrating
cutting-edge knowledge into politics and public policy. These were Theodore
Roosevelt, who was associated with the Progressive movement; and Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, who was associated with the New Deal. But the tide turned
backwards again in 1952, when the presidential campaign between General
Dwight Eisenhower and Adlai Stevenson “dramatized the contrast between
intellect and philistinism in the opposing candidates”. Eisenhower’s
victory, writes Hofstadter, “was taken both by the intellectuals themselves
and by their critics as a measure of their repudiation by America”.
Stevenson’s “smashing defeat” was seen by many as “a repudiation by
plebiscite of American intellectuals and of intellect itself”.

Some months after Eisenhower became president, the historian, Arthur
Schlesinger, wrote that “[t]he intellectual... is on the run in American
society”. Writing of the “acute and sweeping” hostility towards
intellectuals expressed by the right wing in the 1950s, Hofstadter said it
constituted “a categorical folkish dislike of the educated classes and of
anything respectable, established, pedigreed, or cultivated”. Diehard
Republicans thought intellectuals to be “pretentious, conceited,
effeminate, and snobbish; and very likely immoral, dangerous, and
subversive”. They further believed that “the discipline of the heart, and
the old-fashioned principles of religion and morality, are more reliable
guides to life than an education which aims to produce minds responsive to
new trends in thought and art”.

American anti-intellectualism was fuelled by the cult of the practical or
self-made man, who built businesses and won wars without going to Harvard
or Princeton. As president, Dwight Eisenhower himself enthusiastically
embraced this depreciation of the intellectual. At a meeting of the
Republican Party in 1954, Eisenhower remarked: “I heard a definition of an
intellectual that I thought was very interesting: a man who takes more
words than are necessary to tell more than he knows.”


Anti-intellectualism and India
The parallels with contemporary India are striking. Narendra Modi’s victory
in 2014 has emboldened the Hindutva core to launch a full-fledged attack on
independent-minded scholars and writers. Their language is far more crude
than the Republicans of 1950s America; but the essence of their
characterisation, or dismissal, is the same. Instead of “pretentious,
conceited, effeminate, and snobbish” they use “libtard, Aaptard, sickular,
10 Janpath bootlicker, toadie of the Italian waitress”, and so on.

Not only "Ramachandra Guha" but all jurnos & sickular should be slapped
with case agnst them..Thy accused BJP wtht proof..

— Anant Suresh Patil (@anantspatil) September 11, 2017

Another and more worrying difference is this – that anti-intellectual
ideologues can do far more damage in India than they ever could in America.
For the likes of Harvard and Princeton are privately funded, and even
public universities like Berkeley and Wisconsin zealously guard their
scholarly autonomy and integrity. Here, however, our best as well as our
worst universities are amenable to political control and manipulation. And
so, instead of learning physics, biology, history, economics or
international relations, the students at Jawaharlal Nehru University shall
be made to salute the national flag and worship an Army tank to prove their
patriotic credentials.

In his book, Hofstadter perceptively remarked that the Right “has always
liked to blur the distinction between the moderate progressive and the
revolutionary”. This again, is as true of India as of America. Liberals who
have made very public criticisms of Marxism, Maoism and Stalinism are
characterised by Hindutva ideologues as communists merely because they
oppose right-wing extremism as well.

Intellectuals may believe that they are merely writing books or essays, but
their enemies on the Right see them as undermining the Nation itself.
Writing of the search for scapegoats so characteristic of American
religious fundamentalists, Hofstadter observed:

 “There has always been in our national experience a type of mind which
elevates hatred to a kind of creed; for this mind, group hatreds take a
place in politics similar to the class struggle in some other modern
societies. Filled with obscure and ill-directed grievances and
frustrations, with elaborate hallucinations about secrets and conspiracies,
groups of malcontents have found scapegoats at various times in Masons or
abolitionists, Catholics, Mormons, or Jews, Negroes or immigrants, the
liquor interests or the international bankers. In the succession of
scapegoats chosen by the followers of this tradition of Know-Nothingism,
the intelligentsia have at last in our time found a place.”

One could write in comparable terms of the Hindutva Right-wing. The first
group to feature in their capacious demonology are, of course, Muslims;
followed by Christians, communists, foreigners, Nehru and the Nehru-Gandhi
family, and (for some) Mahatma Gandhi himself. In this succession of
scapegoats chosen by the followers of this tradition of Know-Nothingism,
the intellectual has at last in our time found a place.

Writing of his own country, Richard Hofstadter observed: “Some individuals
live by hatred as a... creed.” In India, alas, one would have to replace
the “some” with “many”. And while scholars like Hofstadter, living before
the age of social media, were confronted with this hate only erratically
and sporadically, intellectuals in our country face it every day, even
every minute. The term “McCarthyism” has passed into the dictionary, but in
fact there is far more hostility to intellectuals in the India of today
than there ever was in the America of the 1950s. Joe McCarthy and his
henchmen worked to deprive independent thinkers and writers of their jobs;
but the anti-intellectual Indians of today can go much further, and – as
the examples of Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare, MM Kalburgi and Gauri
Lankesh show – even deprive independent thinkers and writers of their lives.

This piece was first published in The Telegraph.

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