يحاول ذهب - حر
THE INDIVIDUAL: FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
April 23, 2025
|The New Indian Express Villupuram
In the age of Trumpism, we can no longer stay content with rights and be indifferent to duties. Individual citizens must create spaces to engage with global affairs
RUMP and Trumpism have become global words. A whole thesaurus of meanings, synonyms and antonyms have been built around the US president's reappearance. But Trump as a set of words is anarchic, compared to Trump as a discourse. Trump as a discourse is devoted to giant collectives like large corporations and super-states. It has little space for the defeated. And Trump as a discourse restricts the conversation around power.
It is in this context that social scientist Chandrika Parmar raised an issue: how do we relate to Trump as an individual? How do we react to him to make sense of our own lives? Parmar holds that the discourse of the individual, for all the talk of individualism, has disappeared. She adds we must reassert the individual as long as Trump remains the trump card in the pack, and the individual the joker.
This point was made in a different era by social activist Ela Bhatt, who was deeply concerned about creating a new front against globalism. Home science, she said, is about homecoming. About being at home in the world. And globalism denies both. Globalism, she claimed, is neither about swadesh nor about swaraj. It is a parochial rendering of politics.
She added it is women who suffer the most. She felt that home science should create a new theory of international relations. She would have added that Trumpism destroys the very idea of citizenship. Citizenship as a right of passage is never complete. The refugee, the migrant, the transient and the student perpetually remain vulnerable.
Bhatt felt a home science of international relations would involve the individual and his domesticity. It is best caught in a joke where the housewife describes the new international relations as a 'Trump-olin'. The challenge for the individual is how not to be squashed in the process.
هذه القصة من طبعة April 23, 2025 من The New Indian Express Villupuram.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The New Indian Express Villupuram
The New Indian Express Villupuram
DIG unfit to hold office if he’s unable to take fair criticism: Seeman to court
DENYING the allegations made by deputy inspector general (DIG) of police Varun Kumar against him in a defamation suit and an accompanying application for a gag order, Naam Tamilar Katchi (NTK) chief coordinator Seeman has told the Madras High Court that the officer is “unfit” to hold public office if he is not able to bear “fair criticism”.
1 min
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
TN salvage three points on final day against Nagaland
GURJAPNEET Singh’s 4 for 75 and DT Chandrasekar’s 3 for 69 came in handy for Tamil Nadu to bag a lead of 66 runs against Nagaland on the final day of the drawn match of the Group A Ranji Trophy tie played at BCCI CoE grounds, Bengaluru on Tuesday.
1 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
Complaint not needed, police can register FIR on threats to witness: SC
THREATENING a witness to give false evidence is a cognisable offence, authorising the police to directly register an FIR and investigate, without waiting for a formal complaint from a court, the Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday.
1 min
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
AFTER 8 LONG YEARS, DE KLERK COMES TO FORE FOR PROTEAS
NADINE de Klerk loves a good celebration on the cricket field. It doesn’t matter whether she took the wicket of an opener or a tail-ender, the South African all-rounder celebrates like she has won everything in life.
2 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
Housing ministry asks RERAs to list extensions to delayed projects
SoP recommended for better functioning
1 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
THE COUGH SYRUP CATASTROPHE
HE recent spate of child deaths in India from contaminated cough syrups starkly exposes a grave systemic failure in the nation’s pharmaceutical regulation. In early October 2025, at least twenty-four children in Madhya Pradesh’s Chhindwara district died of acute kidney failure after consuming Coldrif syrup—a medicine prescribed for the common cold. Three more fatalities in Rajasthan’s Sikar and Bharatpur districts, linked to another dextromethorphan-based syrup from Kaysons Pharma, brought the toll to twenty-seven.
3 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
Curtains fall on Perambalur’s iconic Krishna theatre after 65 years
AFTER entertaining generations of movie lovers for over six decades, the historic Krishna theatre in Perambalur is set to close its doors this week.
1 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
Handwriting doesn’t match in Satara doc’s rape-suicide
INa twist in the Satara doctor’s rape and suicide case, the deceased doctor’s sister claimed that the handwriting found on her palm is not the deceased’s writing. The suicide inscription was written by someone, she suggested.
1 min
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
With rich river network, tapping national waterways will boost green logistics
IMAGINE a future India where goods glide on barges instead of trucks, logistics corridors slide along rivers instead of highways, and the carbon footprint shrinks even as trade expands.
3 mins
October 29, 2025
The New Indian Express Villupuram
Scores stranded at rly stations as north-bound trains delayed by 13 hrs
HUNDREDS of rail passengers experienced severe inconvenience as trains bound for Howrah, Santragachi, Bhubaneswar, Dhanbad and Danapur were delayed by 12 to 13 hours due to Cyclone Montha on Tuesday.
1 mins
October 29, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

