Vijay Prashad
Magical
Realism is an Indian habitus discovered accidentally by Latin American fiction.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez, may his recent illness be as painless as possible, wrote
in a style that evokes for me the social relations of the Indian subcontinent.
No wonder, then, that his technique is so freely, and profitably, used (most
mimetically) by Salman Rushdie and (only partly) by Arundhati Roy.
Consider
two small examples. For almost eight decades, a fire has raged under several
square miles of Jharkhand (formerly southern Bihar). This fire, in Jharia, began
in an unsafe colliery run by British capital and it has burned, uncontrolled to
this day. Over the past three decades the Indian government has relocated about
2500 families (and even considered the wholesale transfer of Jharia town). But
13,500 families remain on the hot surface, with callused feet to carry them each
day over the insatiable inferno. Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away in Nuapada,
Orissa, in the early 1980s, agencies committed to ‘development’ castrated the
local, and very resilient, Khariar bull. Cows in the district, according to
journalist P. Sainath, were impregnated with imported Jersey semen. Two years
later, after expending millions of rupees, the several cows only produced eight
calves of poor health. The diary farmers in this drought prone district suffered
the presence now of worthless cows and the rumor of a fabulous, but now extinct,
bull. Magical realism on the backs of the working-class and peasantry.
Foreign
tourists to India often are amused by the sheer density of experiences, as they
overload with sensory data. We Indians in the US take on a bemused tone when
confronted with the enthusiasm of the liberal tourist. India seems to do things
in excess: too many spices, too many colors, too much noise. Magical realist
fiction thrives on this vision of an overripe India. I suspect that after you’ve
brushed off the orientalist (and sometimes racist) overtones of this reaction
there is a germ of truth to it. South Asian cultures are decidedly
non-puritanical when it comes to public space and there is a sense of revelry in
the north Indian marketplaces with which I am familiar. If the subcontinent has
a tendency to excess, our local fascistic movement is not to let us down on this
score. The Hindu Right is flamboyant in its cultural outrageousness and almost
camp-like in its subservience to the logic of capital. No author of magical
realist fiction would dream of opening a Ministry for Disinvestment. Only in
IndiaI
And
who is the Minister of State for Disinvestment? Arun Shourie, the arch
conservative journalist and author who toes the line of cruel cultural
nationalism. Why is this brutal writer seconded to the primary task of
neoliberalism — to cut down the welfare state? Because, like Nixon in China,
only he can do it on behalf of transnational capital and the big Indian
bourgeoisie. Like many states after the two oil shocks, the bourgeois-landlord
Indian state came under pressure in the 1970s to undertake IMF conditionalities
to earn foreign exchange from commercial lenders. The agent for IMFundamentalism
at that time was the old behemoth, the Congress Party. But the Congress had
created its legitimacy as the force of anti-imperialist patriotism, even if it
had long abandoned its core precepts that put the people before capital.
Import-substitution allowed the Congress to retain its position as a patriotic
force despite its active partisanship on behalf of the big bourgeoisie and
kulaks. With the turn to neoliberalism, the Congress lost its claim to the
national-patriotic as regional bourgeois forces rose to fill the gap, alongside
the gradual rise of the Hindu Right.
The
Hindu Right emerged in the 1980s as the national heir of the Congress, as the
bulwark against the ‘foreign.’ The ‘foreign,’ for the Hindu Right, was not
finance capital and transnational firms, but Muslims, Christians, oppressed
castes and others. Arun Shourie was one of the main propagandists against the
composite nature of Indian nationality, and one of those who promoted the idea
that the Hindu Right would protect the national culture of India. When it came
to power, first in 1996 (for thirteen days) and then in 1998, the Hindu Right
has kept up this posture of cultural nationalism (mainly in its pogroms against
Muslims, Christians and missionaries, and selective elements of ‘foreign
culture’);. At the same time, it has been a champion of neoliberalism, first with
its welcome to transnational private power companies (like Enron) and then in
its ruthless destruction of the regulated economy in favor of cowboy capitalism.
The Budget of 2001, announced last month, is a sign that the Hindu Right has
pushed forward the agenda of neoliberalism: not as stewards of the IMF, but as
agents for the dominant classes who are ravenous for state assets that they can
translate into speculative capital (M-C-M’ on speed).
The
budget of the Finance Minister of the Hindu Right, Yashwant Sinha, was notable
for three magically barbarous moments. First, he proposed that the Ministry of
Disinvestment continue its work with alacrity. State assets worth $550 million
will be put on the auction block — most of these are vastly undervalued
industrial units whose real estate itself merits the sale price. Second, the
state will divest itself of the task of increasing agrarian produce and seeing
to it that food stuff reach the poor at controlled prices. The Public
Distribution System was set up to offer Minimum Support Prices to the peasantry
and to mobilize foodgrain for the poor. But the Finance Ministry will now only
trouble itself to ‘maintaining food security reserves,’ hardly the task of a
social democratic regime on the other side of imperialism. Furthermore, farmers
short of agro-businesses will face the threat of cheap imports of agricultural
commodities once WTO rules come into effect. Third, the state casts out of
regulation all workers who toil in enterprises that employ less than a thousand
workers. Most studies show that these small scale manufacturing units already
function under the radar of governmental regulation, but now they will do so
with impunity. The amended Industrial Dispute Act will allow small
industrialists to ‘hire and fire’ workers at will. This comes at the same time
as the government puts the small scale sector at the mercy of foreign industry,
with an end to excise taxes. Therefore a constrained small scale sector will
certainly employ ruthless tactics to eke out an existence as pressure from
imports mounts against them: the unregulated factory will become ghastly for its
workforce.
Those
who incidentally mouth off about the death of the state should think twice about
that position. The state remains the horizon of our democratic aspirations, just
as we fight for inter-state solidarity. Nationalism of the culturalist form is
bankrupt, but patriotic statism is still necessary to engender democracy. The
state remains the only form available to ensure some measure of accountability:
but not a state in the hands of the dominant classes. To abjure the state as the
horizon of our struggles is to play into the hands of those who want to
dismantle the state in the service of other forms of entrenched power: the state
is the principle forum for the class struggle.
In
1982, Salman Rushdie wrote that Marquez’s magical realism is not ‘an invented,
self-referential, closed system.’ Rather Marquez (and Rushdie himself) writes of
those societies ‘in which public corruptions and private anguishes are somehow
more garish and extreme than they ever get in the so-called "North,"
where centuries of wealth and power have formed thick layers over the surface of
what’s really going on.’ Here, in the relative comfort of the United States,
even the working-poor can comfort themselves with the chimera of American
exceptionalism, with the sense that the Dollar which they hold in their hand can
clobber the daylights out of any other currency. In far off India, a government
tenders a budget that is an act of magic against its own people. But the magic
trick is no mystery to everyone. The Left has been agile in its critique and in
its mass mobilization. The Communist parties in India have planned to hold mass
demonstrations across the country from 12-18 March to counter the ‘naked display
of the pro-big business and pro-Multinational Corporation approach of the BJP-led
government.’ The bad guy is not only the IMF, but decisively IMFundamentalism
sired not simply by the Washington Consensus, but also by the cultural
nationalist, but neoliberal Hindu Right.