Try GOLD - Free

Monsters, Masters

Outlook

|

August 11, 2024

How does one teach the works of writers and thinkers who have abused their power or committed heinous crimes?

- Saikat Majumdar

Monsters, Masters

“THE night of the sword and the bullet was followed by the morning of the chalk and the blackboard.” Few sentences capture the ironic but inevitable sequence of the different stages of colonialism—the military violence of the battlefield followed by the psychological violence of the classroom. Hard and soft power in perfect symbiosis for Europe to control Africa.

These words by the Kenyan writer Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o never fail in the classroom. So far, they have never failed in my teaching career—not in the years in North America where power is easily understood in terms of race relations, not here in India where power, status, and privilege are just as easily grasped as colonial inheritances from the Western world. I’ve often taught Ngũgĩ ’s powerful, polemical plea for the use of African languages in literary creation. It is one of the most vivid and incisive illustrations of the power of ideology—the soft power of religion, culture and education, as that has been pointed out by Marxist critics of the capitalist State. Leading among these critics is the French political philosopher Louis Althusser, whose essay on the ideological work of family, church, and education prepares the ground richly for the class’ understanding of the ideological invasion by European colonialism when we read Ngũgĩ ’s polemic.

Althusser is the creator of some of the most pointed and trenchant insights into power and control in the modern state and the free market. Althusser also killed his wife, the sociologist and activist Hélène Rytmann-Légotien—strangled her in a fit of depression, for which he was sent to the clinics, not to prison. How does one square these two facts with each other? And how do I feel teaching his works for so many years, writing about his ideas, sometimes taking recourse to them to articulate my own? A fatal agent of male violence on women, no matter what his mental state?

MORE STORIES FROM Outlook

Outlook

Goapocalypse

THE mortal remains of an arterial road skims my home on its way to downtown Anjuna, once a quiet beach village 'discovered' by the hippies, explored by backpackers, only to be jackbooted by mass tourism and finally consumed by real estate sharks.

time to read

2 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

A Country Penned by Writers

TO enter the country of writers, one does not need any visa or passport; one can cross the borders anywhere at any time to land themselves in the country of writers.

time to read

8 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Visualising Fictional Landscapes

The moment is suspended in the silence before the first mark is made.

time to read

1 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Only the Upper, No Lower Caste in MALGUDI

EVERY English teacher would recognise the pleasures, the guilt and the conflict that is the world of teaching literature in a university.

time to read

5 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Labour of Historical Fiction

I don’t know if I can pinpoint when the idea to write fiction took root in my mind, but five years into working as an oral historian of the 1947 Partition, the landscape of what would become my first novel had grown too insistent to ignore.

time to read

6 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Conjuring a Landscape

A novel rarely begins with a plot.

time to read

6 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The City that Remembered Us...

IN the After-Nation, the greatest crime was remembering.

time to read

1 min

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Imagined Spaces

I was talking with the Kudiyattam artist Kapila Venu recently about the magic of eyes.

time to read

5 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Known and Unknown

IN an era where the gaze upon landscape has commodified into picture postcards with pristine beauty—rolling hills, serene rivers, untouched forests—the true essence of the earth demands a radical shift.

time to read

2 mins

January 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

A Dot in Soot

A splinter in the mouth. Like a dream. A forgotten dream.

time to read

2 mins

January 21, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size