Amarendra Pandey
There
have been numerous accounts of the nation-building process during the freedom
struggle especially in the first half of the twentieth century. Whether it is
literature or social sciences, one finds celebration of this process. Even
serious academic deliberations too celebrated this process till about 1960s.
After that the nation-building process came under scrutiny and questions were
posed as to who constitutes the nation and who are the people either excluded
from the nation or being pushed to the margins of the nation. Beginning in the
early 1980s, subaltern studies series in India brought a new dimension in
understanding the history in general and the history of the Indian nation in
particular from the margins of the society. This paper uses the understanding
of the subaltern studies collective to look at Satinath Bhaduri’s novel Dhorai
Charit Manas to analyse how the nation looks from the grass root. This
novel is a story of a character Dhorai who is born in a low-caste community in
north Bihar. The story covers the time span of first half of the twentieth
century and is coeval to time span of high nationalism in India under the
leadership of Gandhi. Through the story of Dhorai, the novel also looks at how
villages and villagers were imagined by the elite class of city-based
nationalists and their grass root volunteers. The novel problematizes the
imagination of the nation and indicates a clear disjunction in the priorities
of the mainstream politics at the national level and grass root politics at the
rural level. The paper seeks to understand and analyse this disjunction and
argues for dismantling of meta-concepts of nation and nation-building and
replace it with more nuanced understanding of the nation from its margins.
nation,
nation-building process, elite, subaltern, village, caste
VOL.16, ISSUE No.4, December 2024