Saturday, December 27, 2014

Vartalaap at AOA

I was invited to a student run initiative 'Vartalaap' (eng: Conversation) organized at the Academy of Architecture today. Vartalaap demands the invitees to talk on a subject of their choice after which students can have a discussion with them. I was together in a session with Chaitanya Karnik for this vartalaap. I have never come across a situation where an audience is ready to listen to whatever I wanted to talk about. This invitation left me in some serious thought on what I would have to tell the world if given a podium for 30 minutes?

A few days back in an academic council meeting at SEA, I had the opportunity of meeting a number of intellectuals, practitioners and academicians from different disciplines - most of them quite noted in their own fields. In this gathering was also a film maker Madhushree Dutta, whom I have passingly known (and so has she known me passingly). Over a round of drinks she went on to narrate her initial journey into the larger arena of cultural politics, and how funding for art projects is often secured. Madhushree recalled a meeting with an organization as large as the UN where prominent people from different fields were invited and asked for what they would like to do (or so is what I remember). At that time, being a young film maker still finding her way through the cultural landscape in India, Madhu felt quite lost. She asked to herself, "Madhu, if someone asks you to talk on any topic of your choice, what will you talk?" She further asked herself, "You don't have any thing to say, to tell the world?" (quotes are not verbatim) Madhu certainly lost a great opportunity, but this piece of her experience held much importance for me. The above incident happened in Madhu's life more that 20 years ago. Recently she has been invited to be on the jury panel for documentary films that will be presented in the Venice Bienalle 2015. It's quite an honour, and Madhu was very happy too, to have traveled thus far in her professional journey.

When I was invited for Vartaalaap I faced a similar dilemma. Ofcourse this talk was not organized by any mega institution, but the pressure to think of a subject that I would have liked to talk about kept me wondering through out the week, to the effect that I demanded the organizing team to define a theme. Thoughts similar to those of Madhu's ran in my head - I wondered if I really had any thing to talk, to share? Rather, I questioned, "Don't I have any thing to talk?"

While I decided to recite a chapter of my master's thesis finally, today was a bigger relief. Chaitanya had put together a presentation last night for this session. He gave an elaborate presentation, in precise answer to the question of what after all would he have to say on the subject of architecture after his years of engagement with the very profession.

Chaitanya is an idealist, and his talk was constructed from the stand point of an idealist. He argued on what must one think like, recalling Plato, Vitruvius as well as Corbusier and their tryst with idea versus reality. Chaitanya has lectured on a similar subject with the same anecdotes to many students in the past, and I have been fortunate to have witnessed his lectures on theory of design before. The sheer energy and assertion with which he places his point is enthusiastic, and the listener is quite likely to be mesmerized by the world he creates through his passionate words. Chaitanya believes in purity - of language, expression and architecture. He has excellent command over several languages - he never mixes Hindi with English, or Bengali with Marathi - all are languages known to him personally, along with his investment in Sanskrit. He believes that everything that is true of language is true of architecture. Grammar, structure, meaning and communication - all occur when creating architecture - it is ordered. Rather, it has to be ordered.

Reeling through examples of artists and architects like Isamu Noguchi, Zaha Hadid, Le Corbusier, Gunther Uecker or traditional examples like the English Gardens or the Japanese buildings, he evoked that architecture demands perfection. Chaitanya eulogized about the personalities that the discipline of architecture celebrates too. His focus thus was on building a character, a personality one must be in order to be able to produce a piece of architecture, that leaves behind an idea, that lives much beyond a persons life. Even in the past, Chaitanya has held in his opinion that one's work is not separate from oneself. One's work is one's life and vice versa. "Our job today," he went on to say, "is to create ideas and ways to build ideas."

There were several beautiful anecdotes and comparisons from literature, sculpture, poetry and philosophy that he shared over the entire lecture, which are hard to note now, because I haven't had the chance to record them. However, intermittently he spoke of some examples like Benares, and also ended with an image showing a man on the ghats of Ganga bathing, backed by his own child perhaps, who aided to rub his back.

Chaitanya's passionate talk created a space of idealism in the room which I was hesitant to dismantle. Hesitant because I have experienced the power of idealism and also because I wanted the students to feel it so that they are energized. After all, if there is any space you can practice idealism, it is the academia. Also, idealism according to me is best employed as an academic project, or one can call it a philosophical project. It is with skepticism that I entered the conversation. Positioning myself to not be invested much in the idea of idealism any longer and to be someone who has taken to cultural mapping, I interpreted Chaitanya's notion of idealism to be top down - one that decides the ideal and works out a way to achieve it.

Within this, Chaitanya introduced personalities of two kinds, both which have different methods of deciphering the same knowledge, or truth (about the self, or the world). One is the believer and the other is the skeptic. He mentioned both as valid modes of moving towards giving birth to an idea, but personally held the position of the believer - he who believes, for example, that there exists God, there exists truth, there exists the possibility of manifesting the ideal. I seemed to hold the other extreme - that of the skeptic - that of the non-believer, the one who doubts, one who is unsure, ambiguous, although not dismissing the idea of perfection, rather interrogating it. However, both the believer and the skeptic, he said lead to the same point - whose paths are like the two opposite faces of a pyramid leading the the singular tip. The commonality between both personalities is their struggle to move towards the perfect - one is moving because he knows, the other is moving because he has to find, but towards the same goal.

The beauty of this conversation lay in the harmonious agreement of disagreements. Our comfort with each other's occasional diametrically opposite points of view did not bother each other, rather our logic of arrivals to a conclusion were clear. It also seemed that the path of belief as well as disbelief worked respectively for each of us. To simply state an example, if he believed, for instance, "God is there", I merely asked "Is God not there?" Both struggled to perhaps achieve that truth. But drives our search is the belief or disbelief respectively.

Such was the nature of today's conversation. I am hoping that there is some record that students have made of the talk by Chaitanya, for his examples were deep and beautiful.

I personally felt that the setting of vartalaap could have been different to have more interaction, it became more of a lecture rather than a conversation. For a conversation, however, both sides have to be equally prepared. Still, sometimes it is pure joy to see someone so deeply engaged in conversation with the self. In this spirit, I skipped my talk and let the audience float in the ideal space Chaitanya created for all of us.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Master Class with Prasad Shetty

On History

Excerpt from a lecture by Prasad Shetty to first year Architecture students at the School of Environment and Architecture (SEA).

Language: English / Hinglish.

This lecture is loaded with rhetoric that has been lost in simple transcription. The stress on words, pauses, and manner of utterances by the speaker are hard to press in written text, and thus the text below must not be understood at mere level of transcription.

Some portions of this excerpt have been edited to keep sense of the conversation.

--


Prasad: It is very important for you all to remember these terms in a broad chronological manner. You should know what is world history . . . what is the history of this world, what is the history of human beings?
                        You are human beings?
What is the evidence?
[that] You got 95% [marks]?

Nishi (student): The form structure

Prasad: But form structure toh woh bee hives bhi banaate hain
             (But form structure is being made by the bees also as hives)

Nishi:     They are animals. We have an ability to think, we have a brain.
Prasad: Animals don’t think? What is the evidence? Gargi what is the evidence? (loudly) Proof kya hai ki tum insaan ho? What is the proof that you are a human being?
                        You have any proof? (softly)You have to think so much? That you are a human being?

A student murmurs: Aadhaar card

Prasad: What what? Kai-kai-kai? (what what what?)
Aadhaar card?

(laughter in class)

Prasad: No he is right, he is right, No this is right actually - this is very important.  We have so many cards – driving licence, aadhaar card, PAN Card, Ration Card, Pass port, Debit Card … thousand … voting card, visiting card... There are so many things that we have na?

That is the evidence that we are human beings?

Maitreyee’s your dog doesn’t have a visiting card? Uske pas aadhaar card hai? Why don’t you get aadhaar card for your dog? Why don't you get? Why?

Uska passport hai? (Does he have a passport?) Have you traveled with him?Usko passport lagta hai? (Does he require a passport?)  Have you traveled with him or her? Has anyone traveled with a dog or cat abroad? Usko lagta hai? Passport lagta hai?

Aditya (Student): They need a registration with the BMC [Bombay Municipal Corporation].

Prasad: BMC ka registration kya hai? Haan? BMC ka kya hai?

Students: They are given a licence.

Prasad: So pets are given or you all are given?

Student: We are given on their behalf.

Prasad: You are given that you can have a pet?
You are given so that they know that the animal is not a stray dog or a cat.
Achha, so it cannot be picked up and killed, or fed to some crocodile…

Okay
So one of the things is to kind of have an overview or have a world view so to say…
But as human beings you have a certain history. One of the agendas is to be familiar with that history.
                …
The second agenda is to introduce and familiarize you guys with certain concepts, terms, ideas with which you can handle your histories. You can think through you history. History itself is an idea. Writing of history is also an idea. There are many ways of writing history. . . So how do you handle your past and future? How do you handle it? How do you handle? You need to handle na? You don’t have to handle? Do you have to handle or no? You’ll are burdened – you are coming with 5000 years of history and probably you will remain for the next 5000 years, as human beings. So how do you handle it? So what is the gear that you wear, what are the gloves that you wear, what are the spects that you wear, what are the tools you need to have. How do you handle this past and the present?

Woh toh material hai! (But that is material) To go through anything, you need some tools, you need some tools for anything, to handle anything, you need some tools right? We will introduce you to certain ideas, certain concepts, approaches, by which you will be able to approach at least, how do you handle your past future and how do you kind of deal with? Nahi toh everything is about Shivaji in history… (referring to the typical schooling in social sciences in India)

---

(round bracketed English translations are mine)
[square brackets, additions are mine to sharpen the spoken rhetoric]

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Memory and Architecture

Mera Kuch Saamaan
Ijaazat (1987)
Music Director: RD Burman
Singer: Asha Bhosle
Lyricist: Gulzar


Mera Kuch Saamaan Tumhare Paas Pada Hai -2
Saavan Ke Kuch Bheege Bheege Din Rakhe Hain
Aur Mere Ik Khat Main Lipti Raat Padi Hai
Vo Raat Bujhaa Do, Mera Vo Saamaan Lauta Do - 2
Mera Kuch Saamaan Tumhaare Paas Pada Hai - 2

Patjhad Hai Kcuh ... Hai Na ?
Patjhad Mein Kuch Patton Ke Girne Kee Aahat
Kaanon Mein Ek Baar Pahan Ke Laut Aai Thee
Patjhad Kee Vo Saakh Abhi Tak Kaanp Rahi Hai
Vo Shaakh Gira Do, Mera Vo Saamaan Lauta Do - 2

Ek Akeli Chhataree Main Jab Aadhe Aadhe Bheeg Rahe The - 2
Aadhe Sookhe Aadhe Geele, Sukha To Main Le Aaye Thee
Geela Man Shayad Bistar Ke Paas Pada Ho Vo Bhijwa Do,
Mera Vo Saamaan Lauta Do

Ek Sau Sola Chaand Ki Raatein Ek Tumhare Kaandhe Ka Til - 2
Geeli Mehendi Ki Khushboo, Jhooth Mooth Ke Shikwe Kuchh
Jhooth Mooth Ke Wade Bhi Sab Yaad Karaa Do; Sab Bhijwa Do,
Mera Vo Saamaan Lauta Do - 2

Ek Ijaazat De Do Bas, Jab Isako Dafanaaungee
Main Bhi Vaheen So Jaungee
Main Bhi Vaheen So Jaungee

---

English Translation

Some of my things (belongings), with you, are still kept,
Some damp, wet days of the monsoon lay,
And a night nestled in one of my letters...
Help me forget that night, return me my belongings.

Some autumn... isn't it?
In autumn of some leaves, the light sound of their fall,
Came back as my ears wore it at once,
Of autumn, the branch that is still shivering,
Let that branch fall, return me those of my belongings...

Under one umbrella, when we both were soaking partially,
Partially dry, partially wet – I had taken the dryness with myself,
Perhaps the wet mind that is still lying near the bed,
Send that (wetness) across, send across my belongings...

One hundred and sixteen moon nights and a mole on your shoulder,
The smell of the wet henna, and some cooked up false complaints,
Remind me all those false promises too, send them across
Return me my belongings...

Give me the permission when I shall bury all of this
And I myself will sleep there
And I myself will sleep there...



Tuesday, November 18, 2014

State of Mind

These days I don't like to write. Although I think of transcribing many things that I listen in discussion that people around me engage in. I keep wondering if they are just talking something much more important than what I have (if at all) got to say. I don't think I have anything to say any more.

When I ritualistically listen to the Bollywood songs on my headphone while traveling to and back from work, I pay attention to the space they create in my head, the composition, the meaning in the composition, and make evaluations in my head about their overall effect. 

I read excerpts of my masters thesis today. Inspite of my belief that there is something significant in that idea, I was disappointed in my writing. Very few have read it. I don't ask people to read it, and yet I want it to be discussed. Who will read it, critique it, help me make it more meaningful?

I am still not able to find place in this place. This place, that is the city, the home, the new school - that which I thought to be mine. Where do  I belong? And if not here, where do I go? In this spirit, I gathered courage to talk to my parents of finding a new place, failing to receive any encouragement. 

I don't connect to anyone, I am disconnected to myself. My ideas remain in my head, they bloom and burst in my own mind - because I feel they are insignificant as compared to the ideas my peers are producing. I doubt the intangibility of ideas. What do ideas really do anyway? Where have they taken me - am I not back to pavilion? 

That day I sang for the students and felt empty. My songs were empty. As if they came from a voice outside of me. They did not transform me in any way. The students yet appreciated!

What is this state of mind? Am I experience another culture shock? And I just realized that the whole post is dotted with 'dont's'. Quite opposite to what the positivist America should have done to me. Although, it will take time, may be to realign and re establish.

Escalator / Borivali

I cross over the footbridge from Borivali East to West, where the staircase that takes me up has recently been modernized into an escalator. Watching that piece of machine in a public space like the railway station of Mumbai is pure entertainment. People of all kinds in the city - young, old, infants, men, women, villagers, migrants, rich, poor are subject to this new animated object that takes them up. Every morning I see different encounters of such cross section of people with this machinic animal. Women in saris pull them high to avoid their flowing ends to get into the complicated machinery, villagers look astonished and puzzled about when to step into the moving platform, they wait for others to hold hands and give them the confidence and assurance that the machine wouldn't overpower them, or many are confused where to keep the hands once on the moving treads - finally holding the shoulders of strangers standing besides them... It is pure joy to look at such first experiences with technology. Does this not become art in public space - if one considers the pure function of art to amuse people in a way that they find their own selves?


Monday, October 20, 2014

Constructs of Silence

Finding your narrative to suit multiple people at the same time can sometimes jam you! What do I mean  by this?

Most of the times, when we try to be diplomatic, when talking around people having different opinions about a particular thing at hand, we search a way to speak so as to keep the interests of all parties engaged and involved with the "thing at hand". Constructing this narrative of diplomacy (or the diplomatic narrative) is a skill. In this construction - essentially a forced process - where you are constantly telling your mind what NOT to say, rather than what to say, dialogue delivery is an act of elimination. After leaving the words that you have to avoid, your speech is a piece of script that assumes a meaning that is meaningless for what you originally intended to convey. In other cases, the immense openness of this disfigured speech is back interpreted in ways that are not known to you, and become evident only when they result into something tangible - an output of an action that manifests into the physical world. 

I suck at diplomacy. And when I am direct, I am too harsh - to the extent that I may sound extremely proudy, or ignorant of others' choices. I snap quickly when I try to be too diplomatic. That is the reason why I keep my ideas to myself, and bring it out on this blog. Writing helps me to release my inner frustration. I talk more here, because I am turned to silence far too many times because of the realization that I am constantly being labelled as a conceited person, that often comes out through my strong opinions. This blog absorbs my ego, it sucks my frustration. I dont know what people make of what is being written here.

To some extent, I had become comfortable with being diplomatic in the US. I thought I would be able to carry it forward in my practice here. However, being diplomatic in India is much more difficult. This is so, because at any given time, you are necessarily dealing with far too many people, all with different streams of unorganized thought. The "unorganized" part is very important, because while talking, people dont stick to a single topic here. Instead, they talk more like Bollywood masala films - those that have a free reeling combination of drama, emotion, laughter, seriousness and such stuff, in essence a clubbing of contents from varied fields. Most people fail to realize the gravity of a topic of discussion, and stretch and smudge it into different directions. For example if someone is talking about the connectivity of places within the city through transport, several subsidiary and unimportant issues like pollution, sound, smoke, garbage and so on will find place in the narrative. And one would not know when and how a side topic becomes the centre stage of the conversation. In such a situation, one never knows how even one's diplomatic statement will unfold. The vulnerability that comes with this insecurity of how your statements will be construed and perceived crumbles me.

I am always worried about my how I am being perceived here - because more often than not, I fear that I am being misinterpreted in my actions, thoughts and words. And thus I bring it out in this space. I wonder if I am incomprehensible or people just assert their opinions onto others? In the race of being assertive, which I am told to be consistently by many by far, I start becoming defensive - because there is far too much to explain about my logic and therefore my way of looking at things. People are not interested in listening to it.

Finally, isn't much of what we are, actually what we talk? We constantly construct ourselves through our talk, the way we speak and say things in different situations. What when we are not able to talk out things? And what personality does silence construct?

Thursday, October 02, 2014

An Inventory of Change

I landed back in my city, Mumbai, about two weeks ago after spending two long years in the United States. I longed for it in ways more than one. Whenever someone would ask me what I missed about this place, I could only answer that I missed all the chaos, dust, dirt, people and mess of the city. While one may assume these to be negative values, perhaps they had taken an altogether different meaning for me, which I was able to reconcile only once I was detached from it. It had helped me to understand my place more objectively.

Re-entering one's city altogether after two years can be a phenomenal experience. Especially when it is a place like Mumbai, that has been undergoing massive infrastructural transformation, the results can be sublime - stunning and depressing at the same time. As much as people indifferently muttered to me over long calls how "nothing had really changed" in two years, the city does have new stories to tell. The geography of Mumbai, as much as that of the personal space in my home, has evidently changed. The distances and districts people travel have altered. I too, now travel to the opposite end of the city for work. People have moved places of work and residence.

I have taken a long time to even begin to write this post, for I was conscious about understanding my land through the still-fresh lens of the Western world. Therefore, I took the first week in the city to meet people and listen to their narratives, of how has the city transpired into people's lives and what has passed in the last two years. How has it affected the people I once used to stitch a sense of the city through? A mixed sense of apprehension and excitement began as soon as I had finally booked my tickets. Suddenly, all imaginations of change were soon going to become real! While many cautioned me about the troubles of the system and the hardships I would be facing once I am back, I was still eager to experience once again all things that had possibly made my life meaningful!

The feeling of the East, as compared to the West brushed on me as I landed on the Abu Dhabi Airport. While I shall not deem to elaborate upon the suffocating domed chamber of the airport, the gates through which I was to take the last flight in my long journey pleasantly irritated me. As I took position in the queue to board the Mumbai flight, I heard whispers of aging Maharashtrian parents worried of finding their way from the Mumbai Airport, they tried to make connections with others in the same flight assuring assistance. Others from the worker classes were generally confused and insecure about boarding the flight. They constantly tried to disregard the queue and barged places on the baggage checking machine belts to get their clearances early. Pushes and shouts, disapproval and disappointments, shouts and calls, sweat and waits - all had begun to preface my entry into the East.

Yet, the entry to Mumbai wasn't as worse. Mumbai had to itself a newly constructed international airport, that was the talk of not only the town, but also overseas. The airport looked stunning, and until I stepped out, I still felt being in the US - with all the glamour and glitz of the new terminal, quickly passing through the art works of artists I once attended sessions and shows of, I finally arrived in Mumbai when a new morning was yet to dawn.

--

A ready and expected announcement of Mumbai on your face is its multifoldedness. As I began to explore new friends and places that had shifted neighbourhoods, I realized how repeatedly I cut across the formal and informal environments to reach to a space that hybridly fit into an altogether hidden location. I experienced this in a gleeful visit to my new neighbour Arjun Sharma's house in Gokuldham, as well as the new School of Architecture (SEA) in Borivali, where I am now working. The approach to both these places is characterized by a landscape of tall buildings and ad hoc settlements.

Coming from a consistent formal landscape of cars and individuality, Mumbai throws you into life and activity - that which is far too close to one's body inculcating an immediate tendency to protect oneself - both physically and mentally. All spaces leak into and influence each other without permission, an aspect that has become more apparent after my cross cultural encounter. However, the speed of activities is slow, where you can actually see multiple things happening, not in a linear, or cyclic pattern, but all that the same time. I look at the roads where heavy trucks and buses, cars and rickshaws, bikes and cycles along with pedestrians and animals cross each other together at the same time. They look like a galaxy of objects suspended in space moving towards each other. 

As I met up friends after long years at the nearby Oberoi Mall in Goregaon, I realized that the building had only densified with more shops flourishing within the smallest of crevices within. In the food court crowded with people, I saw how the donut vendors, from whom we ordered a set of 6 selected sweets, handled multiple people with great ease. While he took the order from one, he took the items out for the other and pressed the button to print the bill for the third. There was no room to lose any time, passenger or money. And while he did all of this, he introduced his stuff to another recently arrived customer.

Prices of all things possible had changed - almost equalling the rates of those in the US. The train fares had changed from those being correspondingly incremental to your journey within the city, to slabs of Rs. 5, 10 or 15. I was never able to look closely to the revised fare-charts. The rate boards generally installed over the ticketing counters were all brutally torn and removed. They looked ugly. The stations themselves had been initiated into a mega transformation - those beginning to get covered in  tin vaults resting on steel structures, covering up a massive area underneath - that was once occupied by numerous stalls and enterprises now removed for purposes of expansion of the railway premises.

The scale of change reminded me of the large basilicas and churches I had freshly seen back in the West. The station at Andheri specifically baffled me, making me feel like a dwarf in its large floating belly. I was also quite surprised to look at the installation of escalators on the stations taking the passengers upstairs to the cross over bridges, almost adjoining the traditional steel staircases. They, without a doubt created awkward corners and pockets in their crooked alignments. I have always remained fascinated in this aspect of misalignments of any new additions or alterations that the public infrastructural projects in the city takes onto itself. Sharp edges, open ends suggesting continuation, as if inviting for another thingly member to join hands and extend itself remain one of the features of the procedures of misalignment and extensions.

An altogether new station has come up between Goregaon and Jogeshwari - called Oshiwara! Although it has still not been inaugurated, much work has been accomplished. While one can debate if two years, and the time it was being planned since ahead, is justifiable for a station of that scale to become operative, the physical semblance of the project on ground already makes the geography and experience of movement along that axis different.

Things which appeared to be quite simple in the US to execute or even learn seem to be a farfetched or even non existent process here. The city still presented an interesting mix of traditional and modern, in the way information is shared and kept from people who have continued to productively misuse and operate within the lack of availability of information. I had to visit the bank to merely ask if my account had turned inactive for not using it at all for the last two years. The bank had installed a new machine where account holders could automatically get their pass books updated. My brother explained to me his initial errors in inserting the wrong face of the passbook, fretting over the machine's lack of instructions, which he eventually figured out. Yet, when he encountered a failure of the registry of his card in the adjoining ATM of the same bank, he went back to check about error. The bank had no solution to his problem. When he asked if he could cancel the card, the bank had no set form, no information, in other words, no redressal system. An information that I could have easily checked online, became an affair of almost 2 hours of traveling 3 kilometers going to the bank and getting back to home.

I have not yet had the chance to travel through the Metro, which is supposed to have convenienced a lot of east-west traffic. But I did cut across the whole city driving through the Bandra-Worli Sea link late in the evening. The journey presented to me a city that had lit up quite differently than before. It revealed to me towers that were  yet waiting to surpass the tallest buildings I had once seen there. And several new projects were ready to be filled up with human life. Cranes and pulleys animated the night, and shouted at me the dream of the city. However, people were still endearing, always available for help. In the company of laughter and friends in the car, we approached our destination in the far end of the city, asking for directions to the people on the streets. And when we were lost even after feeding the address into the freshly 3G internet enabled Google Maps on the phone, our rescue remained a common friend who was just a phone call away who custom-explained the directions along with the landmarks and estimated time we would take to arrive our destination!


(The images for this post shall be posted later)

Saturday, September 13, 2014

On Theory, Theorists and Theorizing

KC - 10:24 AM
reading ur blog! fun stuff…..you "sexist"
AD - 10:24 AM
lol
any feedback?
KC - 10:26 AM
ur experience reminded me of gandhi and his attempt to humanise the (forced on) profession of dalits by calling them harridan…..it back fired big time
harijan*
KC - 10:30 AM
gandhi wanted to elevate the position of the dalits and their work (manual scavenging and other menial tasks) by calling them 'harijan'
AD - 10:30 AM
right, but what parallel do you see?
are you equating it to my argument on women and domestic work?
KC - 10:30 AM
but he didn't realise that he ended up sounding patronising and inadvertently ended up humiliating the dalits
AD - 10:31 AM
whoops- that is interesting!
may be that is what happened in my case
KC - 10:32 AM
the parallel that i saw was that u too in good conscience were trying elevate the status of house hold work….but it backfired
AD - 10:32 AM
right right
interesting, how language is received
KC - 10:33 AM
am yet to read
AD - 10:33 AM
yet to read what?
KC - 10:33 AM
ur language piece
AD - 10:34 AM
oh ok. i meant that i just realised from our present conversation how language can be received in absolutely inverse way as compared to the intended
KC - 10:35 AM
oh like that…ya….like they say "author is dead after his work'
AD - 10:36 AM
i am realizing this more and more as i practice writing and reading. as well as day to day interactions
the multiplicity of (un)intended interpretations baffles me, and at the same time pushes me to silence myself
unfortunately, silence then assumes its own unintended meaning
or interpretation so to say
KC - 10:37 AM
ya i have the same experience but maybe relatively less intense
AD - 10:38 AM
less intense?
KC - 10:38 AM
the space i am in too is very liberal and feminist oriented
here we are expected to use 'she' and not 'he' when referring to a common person
AD - 10:38 AM
ah i see
well, as long as you put a disclaimer, i think its too much to expect
but the problem of academia or even academics is this: that while we do apply theories to everyday events and acts, we still remain too academic. There has to be a way of drilling in the theory into the everyday with ease, so that you can really intervene into the society
KC - 10:41 AM
i am not complaining….i see their point….when for millenniums together iof we go on saying that 'man is a political animal' even though it means both the sexes, somewhere the bias in usage of pronouns does creep into the psyche
AD - 10:42 AM
yes, i am sure you have read Simon De Beauvoir on this
KC - 10:43 AM
ya i feel the same like u every single day….but one thing i have realised is that today disciplines have gotten so fucking specialised that unless u are in that discipline u won't understand the nitty grit ties of their arguments
AD - 10:43 AM
yes, i buy that
KC - 10:43 AM
actually i haven't read that book….my friends doing literature are reading that
AD - 10:44 AM
its so hard hitting
superb text
KC - 10:44 AM
i will read it sometime this year then
AD - 10:45 AM
you type very slow :P :-/
KC - 10:45 AM
shut uppp ok
AD - 10:46 AM
i am serious
do you use only to fingers out of the 10?
like all old people of our generation do?
only 2*
KC - 10:58 AM
it is the tormentor's way of pacifying the oppressed by making them believe that their is some (imaginary) space where the oppressed is powerful
AD - 10:59 AM
what is this jargon
*please use simple language*
KC - 11:00 AM
it is like carrot-policy
AD - 11:01 AM
what is carrot policy?
KC - 11:01 AM
i dunno about your day to day experience in US but in popular culture, there is a lot of sexist tone
AD - 11:01 AM
you are going in some imaginary space without enough referents for me to relate our conversation :P
KC - 11:02 AM
there is this super-popular tv show called modern family….its a great show but in spite of being calling themselves 'modern family' none of the women characters in the show work in a 'formal' profession
AD - 11:02 AM
lol
all they care about here, is that women must work
the man woman equality, in much ideological conception here, is that man=woman
and so whatever a man does, a woman HAS to do
i find that very literal
KC - 11:06 AM
what is even more amazing about the show is that there are couple of gay characters who are partners….one is more effeminate than the other….guess who goes to work? the less effeminate one
AD - 11:09 AM
sigh!
KC - 11:09 AM
it is only after being criticised by the media that now the show shows the female and the effeminate guy to be working
but u know honestly i don't see a solution apart from women working and earning their own money….we forget the super powerful influence that money plays
KC - 11:12 AM
money is a such basic requirement in every person's life that if one has to be dependent on others for it, the self-esteem of that person goes for a toss
AD - 11:13 AM
umm
you are saying that money brings independence
and independence brings confidence
and confidence gives a voice to unheard
agreeable
KC - 11:14 AM
ABOUT THINGS I DIDNT MAKE CLEAR EARLIER - i was referring to ur observation of how the these husband-wives jokes portray women to be stronger but implicitly it means the opposite
AD - 11:14 AM
ah ok
but my argument is more fundamental - there is a certain agency that the biological make up of the body brings
or allows
KC - 11:15 AM
hence i was trying to draw ur attention to another case in our country whereby we worship so many goddesses but it doesn't translate into anything when it comes to respecting women
AD - 11:15 AM
it is that which is at the political contestation
i am fed up of the goddess-woman equation also
all these cliche metaphorical debates that try to elevate the status or the state of response of women
i think instead of man woman, we have to begin to think of all of ourselves as human
it is only then we begin to respect each body
and the irony of the goddess example is that even in Gods exist man-woman divide
or the male-female divide
KC - 11:18 AM
hence i argued that it is the tormentor's (men) away of pacifying the oppressed (women) by showing her and falsely making her believe that there is some space (imaginary and in this case the divine space) where women are powerful
AD - 11:20 AM
the effiminacy in gay-world is also such a terrible cliche
i think that steretopying is essential in the medium of image
KC - 11:21 AM
and like u pointed out to the horror of women themselves posting and enjoying such sexist jokes, similarly but more horrifying is when women in this country yearn for a boy-child and rue their fate when it is a girl instead
AD - 11:22 AM
i thought that was a done-to-death debate in our society
KC - 11:22 AM
it amazes me that they are so unreflexive
AD - 11:22 AM
i mean there was nothing to academics to push on that front
KC - 11:23 AM
but apparently effeminacy in gays is a very common thing
AD - 11:23 AM
absolutely
KC - 11:24 AM
true but when the phenomena continues, the debate can't end
AD - 11:24 AM
i mean there is nothing new to debate
you can only educate and you can mull over the same debate again and again as an academic
and secondly, the debate doesnot have to be dispensed academically to people, it has to be at a humanistic level
that is the problem - i think the academia makes such issues almost into an industry
an industry of publishing papers
an industry of education
an industry of knowledge
KC - 11:27 AM
true there is nothing to the debate for academicians
AD - 11:27 AM
in this specific case
the academicians have to go out in the field and apply their theories
then they will understand the challenges of changing mindsets
they cannot sit in their class rooms and research cabins and merely write and talk about it
that is the difference of an armchair intellectual versus a teacher
KC - 11:29 AM
the big schism between academics and common people is worrisome but like i said earlier knowledge itself has gotten so complicated that unless one is training oneself formally one doesn't have access to such knowledge
AD - 11:30 AM
absolutely
i feel what is also worrisome is the amount of information that one has to process today to merely add a new comment
to any discipline
KC - 11:32 AM
to take the example of history itself….the way history was constructed by professional historians fifty years ago and the way it is done today has gotten so intricate and so many methodologies and evidences have come into play that history no longer in the 'story' format!
the linear trajectory of history is a dead and gone thing
AD - 11:32 AM
sure
infact the emergence of historiography as a field itself is a pointer to your comment
KC - 11:35 AM
but if i try to argue and explain the common person that simplistic notions of past are no longer possible….he or she doesn't understand at all…human beings by nature carve for the comfort of an explanation and if a simple one does the trick, they will stick to that
AD - 11:35 AM
well, that is what I understand as an exciting challenge
and that is what I believe is the practice of a teacher
KC - 11:35 AM
CRAVE*
AD - 11:36 AM
to step by step construct as well as dismantle this wall of questions
for their students
KC - 11:37 AM
but i don't understand when u say academicians should apply their theories? like how do apropos they do that
propose
AD - 11:39 AM
i believe it is one thing to sit back and look objectively and theorize, but another to really instrumentalize it into an action for intervention - that requires a pedagogical capability
and it is probably a third thing to really practice the pedagogy, and perhaps learn from it so that it can be revised, which ultimately inform back the theory
KC - 11:41 AM
i think if academicians are able to disseminate their theories more widely that itself should do a lot of the job…that itself would be a lot of 'practice'
AD - 11:42 AM
ah well, this brings us to our initial dilemma
of the worry about how the theory is actually received
rather than how it is disseminated
KC - 11:43 AM
i didn't understand the 'received' part
AD - 11:43 AM
i personally do not think that disseminating theory in today's media saturated and made-accessible world is any difficult
and as we know the medium is the message, so to control the medium and the control its reception is the key if it was in the hands of the academician
but still, the academician can not understand how his or her theory will be interpreted and operationalized if at all
KC - 11:47 AM
media which is like butterfly chasers can only disseminate limited ideas….but a formal and disciplined dissemination of knowledge has a more long lasting effect
AD - 11:48 AM
honestly, dissemination doesnot worry me
and theories i also feel, are territorial
and belong to an area, they have a limited sphere of influence
and they must have that
otherwise one loses the specificity
KC - 11:50 AM
but that uncertainty about reception of knowledge will always be there…that shouldn't deter one from transmitting knowledge…and honestly a big deal is made out of not knowing the intention of the author argument
unless one is too stupid i don't see how can go terribly wrong in grasping the message of the theorist especially if he or she is explaining it repeatedly
AD - 11:52 AM
oh no no - you are missing an important thing, and this is what you realize when you study in a globalized university - the charges of words and their meanings held by different cultures is so different that theories are more often than not, misinterpreted
KC - 11:56 AM
ya bro but we are studying western theorists all the time but that is not leading to us COMPLETELY misinterpreting the author…i agree that we can never completely know the intended argument but with effort and some sympathetic reading one can beta gist of the other person's argument
get a*
AD - 11:56 AM
and that is my biggest problem with our education system
we have internalised a western view of all the problems of our state and culture
our knowledge production is a mere regurgitation of the methods adopted via western theorists
do we even have a theory of our own ? probably we had it before!?
(and i am saying this at the risk of being understood as a hypocrite, for I too came here to perfect my theorietical skills, at Yale)
KC - 12:00 PM
that is a problem but u know what, earlier when we were discussing about gender parity, gender rights and ethics, we were arguing on western lines…feminism, the principle of equality of all human beings, secularism etc are all western concepts!
AD - 12:01 PM
i dont think so, i think they have just been verbalized by the West for the Modern society
KC - 12:01 PM
if we are going to question western ideas and methods, we will also have to question the above mentioned ideas which promote equity
AD - 12:02 PM
now that brings us to a very interesting cross-junction
do you think adopting western methods make us think in foreign ways?
KC - 12:04 PM
untouchabality was not a problem in this country until the britishers pointed it to us….neither was sati
AD - 12:05 PM
i realized that i would be thrown at by these examples
KC - 12:05 PM
our entire notion of equality was so skewed up…equality existed only among members of jati….west had to come and break this ridiculous notion
AD - 12:05 PM
but that is more to do with modern thought than method
but well, modernism itself was a method
KC - 12:06 PM
ya exactly! modernity (post renaissance) was not just a set of ideas but method too
AD - 12:07 PM
we are essentially debating if theory and method are interrelated
or if they are two sides of the same coin
KC - 12:08 PM
hence what i am saying is that even though we might hate it, there are lots of things about western ideas which we will reject only to our own peril
AD - 12:09 PM
thats quite a deterministic statement
i think it is more nuanced
and it needs to be seriously discussed in detail
KC - 12:09 PM
even i have debated this point several times with my professors…they argue that the theorising itself is a sort of activism for them….
they argue that any social change in the world has a thought behind it which can always be traced back to the much hated theorists of academia
AD - 12:10 PM
ah now i see, they mean to indicate theorising as activism, as politics
ie political thought
that makes sense
KC - 12:12 PM
and also ideas have a longer shelf life than ground activism itself hence in that respect too theorists are extremely valuable
AD - 12:12 PM
there is no question on the relevance and importance of theorists
i was just debating in my head on theory and method
but they are inherently tied
so would you think that there lies a revolution in the reworking of a method
a method that will realize an alternative form of theory?
(look for example the ideas that came from surrealism)
KC - 12:14 PM
u mean art and literature being the new sources of theory?
AD - 12:14 PM
the question also is, if theory in itself has a form, or shapes a form?
art and literature have always been sources of theory, and have always been political anyway
i mean devising a new method altogether
for eg. twitter is a new method of thinking
(very lame eg.)
but you get what I mean to say?
KC - 12:16 PM
ya but am unable to relate to ur example….internet might be a revolution when it comes to source of information and its ease of access but that very ease of access allows so much shit to be published online
AD - 12:17 PM
i didnot want to point to the internet, but the FORM of TWEETING
tweeting as a method
tweeting as a way of thinking
in snippets
in small fragments
that cross reference
and so on
(just to take an eg.)
KC - 12:18 PM
since accessibility is the concern here i think we should do what many of the scientists are doing...
AD - 12:18 PM
the question still being, if there is a new form of theory waiting in the discovery of a new method
KC - 12:18 PM
science is the worst when it comes to over-specialisation
AD - 12:19 PM
i think we are not on the same page
KC - 12:19 PM
hence many scientists today write popular science books in order to make complex scientific knowledge graspable for the lay person
we are on the same page! the reason u are suggesting tweeting is because it presents knowledge in simple form and is very accessible….i am suggesting another method addressing the same concerns
AD - 12:22 PM
no no, i used the example of tweeting to refer or explicate an example of a new method
(badly framed sentence_
but i was wondering if changing or finding a new method will change the act of theorizing
it certainly will
i am sure
KC - 12:23 PM
oh! but anyways i meant that there should be academicians who just take the task of simplifying social theories for the general populace (like ur heidegger and the hippo)
AD - 12:24 PM
haan
but again, that is not the point i am trying to question you
I am asking you - if you think - that the revision of a method will revise the act of theorizing
KC - 12:27 PM
if just method will change theorising itself, i am not sure….see no one can start theorising out of the blue….he or she will have to deal with the theories presented earlier and critique it to move forward…hence in that respect u will still be dealing with old theories
but a new method backed by strong reason for it and also backed by new theory can bring about a change
KC - 12:29 PM
husserl, heidegger, wittgenstein are some of the figures who tried new style f theorising
AD - 12:29 PM
what is the relationship between method and reason?
KC - 12:29 PM
in fact they didn't wanna theorise….they just wanted to DESCRIBE human experiences
AD - 12:30 PM
interesting
does reason translate into method or is it vice versa?
KC - 12:32 PM
going by the few figures as examples in my mind…i would say reason translates into method
AD - 12:33 PM
so reason dictates method?
KC - 12:35 PM
ya….because academic community is just like any other community…it has its own customs and traditions which it loves to follow….hence someone who wants to 'disrupt' their tradition better have a very good reason to do so
AD - 12:36 PM
how do you measure reason ? (borrowing from david harvey perhaps)
KC - 12:38 PM
there are two parts to this reply:
one is of course, human rationality judges the validity of a reason by scrutinising the premises and the conclusions generated from it
but another equally important factor is that a particular reason needs to be accepted by multitude of people….here the assumption is that if one's reasons are 'sound' one will manage to garner support for his or her position
but we need to remember that we are always living in an age whereby particular ideas or ideologies are always dominant. hence when we come up reasons which challenge the status quo even if they are 'good' reasons, people find it hard to accept it because they are still committed the dominate ideology
in such cases change and acceptance are slow processes
AD - 12:49 PM
very beautifully put, and what in your mind steers the change in reason?
but also, I was a bit disappointed in learning that you suggest that the success of reason relies on the measure of its acceptability by people
but at the same time, I find it interested to learn that the affect of theories, or the acceptances of each theory varies as society evolves itself
KC - 12:52 PM
oh ya it does! there are so many thinkers who were thought to irrelevant in their own times but suddenly jumped to prominence in a later age
but bro ask yourself can u make your theory relevant if u are the only one supporting it??
others will just brand u to be a narcissist
and since social change is what u intend with ur theories, society will have to accept it too
AD - 12:55 PM
thats a strong argument
but that is also assuming that theories are directed outwards
i mean, towards social change
but, if you think that the society begins with you, as the agency of social change, then the only person that the theory has to affect primarily is YOU yourself
thus, theories have to be turned inwards first
and that requires an investment in the self, and the working of the self - and should there be an independent theory of the method of the self ?
how much then should the self be concerned about social change?
KC - 12:59 PM
agreed….but ask urself if one creates knowledge just for oneself??? i don't think so….theories are pieces of opinion about the world and hence the world has a direct stake in your theory
world starts with a self, agreed….but are we living alone??
AD - 12:59 PM
i dont believe so, infact, in the renaissance, the pursuit of knowledge of was to unravel the self
KC - 1:00 PM
we are born in a collective, extremely dependent on others, more than we even realise
AD - 1:00 PM
do we have a choice, in your opinion, to remain secluded and alone?
i mean is it a compulsive "choice" to be in community?
KC - 1:01 PM
and yet da vinci went ahead and attempted the designs of so many contraptions which were thought to be useful for the society
AD - 1:02 PM
while kafka implored
or so did nietzche
KC - 1:02 PM
and yet painters painted images from the christian tradition which obviously was meant for the larger audience….u seriously think these artists didn't crave for external validation? these artists in fact had rich patrons!
AD - 1:03 PM
i am pointing to the inner recesses of the mind they themselves wanted to extract
(referring to the Burrow by Kafka)
(using the self as a repository)
KC - 1:04 PM
who is stopping you from leaving the society and living in a forest?
AD - 1:04 PM
thats a powerful rhetoric
KC - 1:04 PM
but u won't and can't…..not just because others want u in their lives but even u wants others in your life….human beings can't live in seclusion
AD - 1:05 PM
you have jammed me
i submit!
check-mate
wow, this was such a productive conversation!
KC - 1:06 PM
yes it was! a lot of clarity came to some of my ideas
AD - 1:06 PM
same here
but i am sure this wouldnt be possible in a verbal conversation
i think textual chat gave us the time to think and articulate our responses
KC - 1:08 PM
ya thats the advantage of indirect chat especially for someone like me who takes time to articulate
AD - 1:09 PM
no, you take time because you type using two fingers :P
KC - 1:10 PM
actually i just noticed that u were right….i do use only two fingers :-o
AD - 1:10 PM
SEE! I told you
KC - 1:10 PM
but i also take time to frame a reply
AD - 1:10 PM
LEARN typing, it will benefit you
same here, but right now the speed of your thinking adds to your speed of typing
when infact, the speed of your thought must marry the speed of typing
so you are able to type as you think, and then read and rethink if what you thought is indeed what you are thinking
KC - 1:14 PM
i have a lot of typing to do in the next eight months! i will try to drastically improve my speed during this time
AD - 1:14 PM
learn the finger placement - 15 minutes a day
KC - 1:14 PM
what is that
AD - 1:14 PM
you have these free typing softwares
placement of fingers on the keys of the keyboard
KC - 1:15 PM
oh ok i will definitely try that! thanx
AD - 1:15 PM
yup yup
chalo
i will go now
good night
KC - 1:15 PM
ok bro! bye….nice talking
AD - 1:15 PM
:)


--
Above chat with a cousin, a budding philosopher.
12th Sept. 2014