People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No. 44 October 30, 2011 |
CULTURE
& PEOPLE’S
MOVEMENTS
‘Awaaz
Do’: Legacy & Relevance of
Progressive
Cultural Movement in
From
Our Correspondent
THIS
wasn’t meant to be a
purely academic occasion, though there’s nothing wrong with
professional
academics, of whatever political hue, discussing the relevance
of left-wing
cultural and intellectual movements, past, present and future.
The Safdar
Hashmi Memorial Trust (SAHMAT) had invited a good number of
academics to a
three day symposium held in New Delhi
on October
13-15, 2011, but the
gathering also comprised practising artists and activists,
many of them young,
and this gave a density and immediacy to the discussion not
often found in
learned assemblies. Most of the participants, while presenting
papers or
commenting on them, were moving constantly from the past to
the present,
discussing in the main what the radical movement, specifically
the PWA
(Progressive Writers’ Association) and the IPTA (Indian
People’s Theatre
Association), did and how, but probing at the same time the
historical
imperatives behind the movement’s decline and the
possibilities of time present
emerging from the promises of time past. There was a good deal
of critical
introspection and a certain affectionate remembrance of things
past, as is only
right and proper, but there was a palpable urgency in posing
questions of the
here and the now. The legacy of the progressive cultural
movement was viewed as
an active set of principles and values which are germane to
the cultural
practices of the day, particularly because the crisis in the
lives and
liberties of the people has continued, and in some respects
worsened, in the
intervening years. There is a great deal to be done,
therefore, to record and
re-assess what the progressive movement promised and achieved,
and how it set
up a model for a representative relationship with the
people and their
organisations. This is precisely what SAHMAT had stated in its
preliminary note,
and this theme came up again and again in the discussions over
the three days. Sohail
Hashmi, on behalf of SAHMAT, welcomed the participants on the
13th morning at
the
The
first session had four
senior speakers, a bit ‘star-studded’ as Mihir Bhattacharya
commented from the
chair. Prabhat Patnaik, in his paper, ‘Politics, Culture and
Socialism’, told
the story of transition from feudalism to capitalism and the
subsequent movement,
historically prolonged as the working people consciously
struggle for it, from
capitalism to socialism. A cultural revolution is logically
entailed in the
second instance, for the transformation of petty property into
collective
property leaves open the danger of values and practices of the
old community –
the caste system, for instance, or the subjection of women –
lingering in the
new. This is the result of the historical failure of the
bourgeoisie to
complete the democratic revolution and liberate the
individual, as
K N
Panikkar’s paper,
‘What Is Progressive about the Progressive Cultural
Movement?’, concentrated
precisely on the moment of this theoretical labour in the
array of concepts and
textual practices of the past and the present. The creative
moment is also the
political moment in the history of the movement, and this led
to heated debates
regarding tradition, some advocating a total rejection of the
past, others
following the logic of Lenin and Namboodiripad towards a
retrieval of what is
of the people and for the people in bourgeois and even feudal
culture. But the
primacy of the political often meant the subjugation of
cultural work to the
exigencies of strategy and tactics, making creativity largely
instrumental. The
new situation in
Aijaz
Ahmad presented a
paper on ‘The Progressive Movement in Its International
Setting’, and started
off by reminding the audience that internationalism was a
fundamental value for
the progressive cultural movement. This value is manifest once
again in the
current radical movements sweeping across the Arab world, and
in the wave of
protests and demonstrations moving from southern Europe to the
northern and
crossing the Atlantic to the
Sashi
Kumar’s paper was on
‘The exercise of hegemony in contemporary culture and media
and the need for a
counter-hegemony initiative’, offering an incisive analysis of
the international
scene in the ‘mediosphere’. The historical shift from classic
capitalism to
monopoly to finance capital entails a parallel shift in the
media-culture
confluence, realism to modernism to post-modernism being
grounded on the
technological move from the photographic to the cinematic to
the electronic.
One characteristic of this rapid shift has been a tendency
towards ‘flatism’,
the world of representation shunning depths and contours, and
directing all
gazes to surfaces and spectacles. The synchronic organisation
of texts yields
place to the non-linear. Consequently, the attention becomes
habitually
flitting and homogenised, parallel to the miscellaneous flow,
or rather, the
torrent, of images and sounds. The texts become
self-reflexive, minimising
their referential function, so that nothing outside the closed
sensorium of
texts disrupts the cosy feel-good quiescence of the great
consuming public. But
the hidden agenda of finance capital and the conniving state
apparatus makes
this sensorium a part of the surveillance ever-tightening its
grip over the
people, denying space to social desire, stifling access to
inter-communication.
The working of the Internet shows up the trend. The job of
disruption and
resistance falls therefore to the vanguard of the people who
work in the interstices
of the system to subvert its ends, and to those who physically
come out to be
together and tear asunder the magic web of media. The recent
upheavals in the
Arab world and elsewhere demonstrate the power of the radical
tradition which
seeks both to understand the world and change it.
The
second session on the
first day had four speakers, all involved in various sectors
of Cultural
Studies, with Sashi Kumar in the chair. Samik Bandyopadhyay
presented a paper
on ‘Defining Progress Culturally: The Aborted Project’,
bringing up a
particular moment in the 1930s in
IMPORTANCE OF
CULTURE
Sadanand
Menon’s concern
was ‘Art as Resistance’, and his audio-visual presentation
focussed on the
fascinating figure of Harindranath Chattopadhyay, man of
learning, classical
singer, radical poet and composer, theatre-person, actor,
choreographer,
political agitator, member of parliament, spiritual seeker,
man about town, and
a great deal more. Harindranath wrote and composed in Hindi
(Hindustani, more
often than not), bringing his natural gifts and acquired
expertise to bear on
the new set of cultural tasks demanded by his left-wing
politics. This was a
sign of the times, for classical culture, folk forms and
modernist experiments
were all being accessed for the cause of the people, and even
artists of less
rigorous commitment like the young Ravi Shankar joined the
ranks. The written
word was important, but the visual and the auditory forms took
precedence. The
theatre and, later on, the cinema became important; music and
dance thrived;
the visual arts took off in new directions. The cultural scene
was hectic with
experiments in the thirties and the forties, and there was
easy traffic between
modernist experiments and the new people’s culture, the latter
often aspiring
to extend the horizons of the former. Harindranath was a
central figure in that
endeavour.
Ram
Rahman’s illustrated
presentation was titled ‘The importance of culture in direct
political action:
P C Joshi’s seminal influence on cultural practitioners
through the words and
photographs of Sunil Janah’. The detailed analysis of Janah’s
path-breaking
photographs and a reading of his meticulous notes point to the
dynamics of a
new visual culture which restores to the working people their
central position
in history. The versatility of his technique came from the
photographer’s
ideological position. Janah not only directed the viewer’s
gaze to the new
subject of history, the working people, but also invented
newer technical means
to accomplish the task. The cause was prime mover. The artist
in Janah trained
himself to be with the people and with other artists engaged
in the same task.
There was no reward, not even much recognition from polite
society, but it was
a happy ambience of creativity and commitment which made many
artists and
activists live together in a minimalist material environment.
The commune was
the preferred abode and working place of both the activist and
the artist. P C
Joshi, who had trained himself to be an organic intellectual
of the working
class, provided the leadership to this notable coming together
of aesthetics
and politics.
Sumangala
Damodaran’s presentation titled ‘Singing Resistance: The
Musical Tradition of
IPTA’, traced the many dimensions of the rich musical
repertoire of what she
referred to as the ‘IPTA tradition’, comprising the IPTA
itself and other
organisations like the Kerala People’s Arts Club in Kerala and
the Praja Natya
Mandali in Andhra, which aligned themselves with the IPTA.
Underscoring the fact
that there was hardly any collection or analysis of music as a
significant part
of the progressive cultural movement in the 1940s and 50s, she
argued that the
actual repertoire demonstrates that protest music as a genre
is not stereotyped
by limited number of forms or styles, as is usually perceived.
The sheer range in
the repertoire across the
country helps establish the legitimacy of protest music as
good and rigorous
music on the one hand and also as constituting a very
significant element in
the aesthetics-politics relationship on the other. She
highlighted that in the
Indian case as well, like in various other parts of the world,
the protest
music movement engaged with and threw up serious debates on
the relationship
between the individual and the collective, the ‘authentic’ and
the ‘crafted’
musical form and between the simple and the complex. She also
played clips of
the IPTA tradition’s songs to illustrate her arguments.
The
first session next
day, on October 14, was dedicated to a discussion on the
progressive movement
and its tradition in Hindi and Urdu. While conducting this
session, Murli
Manohar Prasad Singh presided over it as well.
Presenting
an overview of
the development of progressive movement in Urdu, Arjumand Ara
underlined how
the changes in Urdu literature following the Great Uprising of
1857 reached
their logical culmination in this movement. At the same time,
she pointed out
the new questions and issues that have come up in Urdu
literature in
In her
brief overview of
the history of progressive literary movement in Hindi, Rekha
Awasthi linked it
with the struggle between traditional schools and the new
creative concerns
that was already going on. Her presentation forcefully negated
the thesis that
the progressive movement was something foreign and an
artificial
transplantation in
Presenting
a brief survey
of the role of the progressive movement, Manmohan described it
as the
culmination of the renaissance that was already going on in
the Hindi-Urdu
region. He stressed, in particular, the role of the movement
in placing realism
at the centre of the creative process, in making the process
of democratisation
consistent and complete, forging the secularisation of our
society, solving to
an extent the question of linguistic nationalities, forging a
critical
relationship with tradition, forging counter-traditions, and
in radicalising
the whole atmosphere. At the same time, however, he pointed
out how the
movement lost its sheen and role in the changed circumstances
after the
country’s independence, stressing how the multi-class front
which the freedom
struggle had forged suffered a dissipation and how the
progressive movement
proved to be incompetent to deal with the new situation. In
the end, Manmohan
also underlined how the present juncture is different from the
heyday of the
progressive movement, so that the progressive movement cannot
be revived and
channelised in the same manner. He also drew attention to the
changing
situation when the growing discontent against neo-liberalism
is creating the
possibility for the progressive forces to forcefully intervene
in the
situation.
Taking
Manmohan’s logic
forward, Asad Zaidi underlined how the progressive movement
was a movement for
modernity. But at the same time he drew attention to its
contradictions. In
this context, he drew attention to the progressive movement’s
failure to
overcome the separate development paths in Hindi and Urdu
after independence,
and to the bitter reality that after independence the
progressive current in
Hindi has increasing moved towards the rightist position on
the question of
Urdu and its rights.
Anis
Azmi presented a
brief survey of the growth of Indian People’s Theatre
Association (IPTA) in the
area of Hindustani, and its role in ensuring for the genre of
drama a place of
honour in society, as a cultural form, and making it an
instrument of
socio-cultural awakening. While stressing the achievements of
the progressive
movement, Chanchal Chauhan also drew attention to how it put
the writer and not
the writing at the centre of the creative process and how it
suffered
weaknesses like sectarianism.
In his
concluding address,
Murli Manohar Prasad Singh underlined how the progressive
movement was the
biggest socio-cultural churning in this area after the Bhakti
movement of the
medieval period and what multidimensional changes it did bring
about in our
society. At the same time, he stressed the necessity of
unification of all transformative
currents in accordance with the requirements of today.
The
fourth session was
chaired by Basudeb Chatterjee and had four speakers. Mihir
Bhattacharya
presented a paper on ‘Moment and Movement’, in which he
proposed that a
political movement of the people introduces a moment in
culture which acts as
something like a singularity, altering the configuration of
its dynamics, and
though the movement dies out, the moment stays, and works
often as a manifest
power in the construction and reconstruction of texts, and
sometimes as an
immanent force which enters into a relationship with other
forces. The
progressive culture in
Anuradha
Roy spoke on ‘Music
as a Mass Movement: Bengal in the 1940s’, describing the
innovative music of
Jyotirindra Maitra, Salil Chowdhury and others, and holding
that this had
entered the political landscape in a limited fashion, rousing
the elite among
the activists to greater fervour but failing to reach the
masses in general.
The Communist Party had presumably faltered in declassing its
cultural
apparatus and politicising its supporters. The people in the
countryside, in
the main, were still immersed in ‘folk’ culture, which had an
element of
radical thought embedded in it. The creativity of the radical
elite was hobbled
by city-based techniques and traditions; that is the factor
which allegedly
inhibited the production of a play like Nabanna
outside the limits of
the city.
Subodh
More read a paper
on ‘Progressive Movement in
Sunil P
Elayidom’s paper was titled ‘Imagination and the Making of the
Real: a critical
reading of the progressive cultural practices of
twentieth-century Kerala’.
Progressive cultural practice in Kerala during the middle
decades of the
twentieth century was one of the finest examples of culture
acting as a
constitutive element of the real. It was a historic juncture
where the domain
of culture evidently attained the status of a determinant of
the real, rather
merely representing or reflecting the conflicts and
contradictions of social
life. Through explicit interventions in the making of the
real, imagination
established its own materiality, overthrowing the modern
understanding of the
function of art and ideas. The first part of the presentation
located the
materiality of the imaginary against the modern understanding
of it, drawing
from contemporary Marxist notions of the function of art. The
second part
summarised the history of progressive cultural practice in
twentieth-century
Kerala with an emphasis on the paradigm shifts that occurred
in the domain of
sensibility. The third and final part explained the challenges
of the present
and pointed to the urgency of developing a new perspective for
progressive
cultural practice, to address the emerging societal reality
and to intervene in
it.
HISTORY OF
RADICAL ART
The
fifth session on October
15, was in two parts. The first part was chaired by Geeta
Kapur, who started
with comments of her own on the artistic breaks which
punctuate the history of
radical art. The relationship of the visual to the visible is
mediated by the
means of artistic representation which have to be re-fashioned
for the
juncture. Chittaprosad and Somnath Hore brought in the
austerity of an involved
gaze to transcend mere pity and terror which often aid the
pornography of the
visual. This part of the session had a paper entitled
‘Articulating Suffering,
Voicing Protest: visual art in solidarity with the “people”’
from Sanjoy Mallik,
which took people
through Chittaprosad’s
reportage for the Party on the man-made famine of 1943,
culminating in a
publication titled Hungry
Bengal. The
copies of the book were confiscated and destroyed by the
British as it was
critical of the policies that led to the famine. Showing
pages of the book on
the visual projection, the presentation discussed the
propagandist nature of
Chittaprosad’s satirical posters and gave a critical
overview of the imagery
therein. Mallik’s presentation also dealt with Somnath
Hore’s engagement with
similar issues through his early sketches, drawings,
portraits of peasants,
pulp prints, lithographs, and his book Tebhaga:
An Artist's Diary and sketchbook.
Akansha Rastogi,
who first presented
Mallik’s paper (since he could not attend the symposium),
then added her own
comments on Chittaprosad. She sought a different approach to
discuss the
artist, presenting six different drawings done by him on one
day (January 7, 1945)
in Titvala,
The
second paper of this
part of the session was by Santhosh S on ‘Ramkinkar Baij: A
Chronicle of
Redemption Foretold’. Ramkinkar was an adivasi who had risen
in the ranks of Santiniketan
artists through sheer talent, but he never forsook his roots.
The work that he
did there, for instance, the large cement sculptures in the
Kala Bhavan
complex, points to the uprooting of the indigenous people from
their habitat
and to the defiance which the sinewy and graceful bodies
articulate. He moved
thoughtfully away from the graces of the Bengal School, not
disowning the
masters like Abanindranath and Nandalal and Benode Bihari, but
placing a
separate agenda for art next to their visionary invocation of
India. In this
effort he was right next to Rabindranath himself, who was
delving into the dark
recesses of a modernist psyche in his enigmatic and
teratological universe. But
Ramkinkar’s was a more historicised world, ravaged by time and
torn by
conflict, in which the everyday labour of women and men and
their bonding
through the graces of common life stand out in their dynamic
plasticity.
The
second part of the
fifth session was chaired by Malini Bhattacharya. Moloyashree
Hashmi made a
presentation on ‘The Jana Natya Manch experience’, narrating
the genesis and
explaining the rationale of this particular street theatre
movement founded by
Safdar Hashmi and others. The aim was to reach out to the
working people, and
this was an overt and deliberate strategy to politicise the
theatre movement in
a particular direction. The technical transformation of the
performance text
and the over-all dramaturgy followed from this avowed
political aim. The result
had been a series of ‘entertainment’ events in the Brechtian
sense, not just
some political preaching with a bit of clowning added on,
since Safdar’s – and Janam’s
– enterprise was to reach that point in the working people’s
consciousness
which looked critically at the world. Janam has continued its
work with a
considerable degree of success, part of the serious left
movement in India but
not a mere appendage to electoral campaigns.
The
second speaker, Lata
Singh, spoke on ‘“Transgression” of Boundaries: Women of
IPTA’. She narrated
the point of departure for the women who joined left-wing
movements in general
and the IPTA in particular, defying familial and social taboos
in place in all
parts of India. The practical problems were well-nigh
insurmountable, given the
stigma that was attached to genteel women’s public role in
general and
appearance on the stage in particular. Sheela Bhatia, Dina
Gandhi, Reba
Roychoudhury and Rekha Jain, among others, went through both
the agony of the
wrenching of bonds and the ecstasy of liberation. But,
significantly, though
the women of the IPTA were held precious and greatly
respected, their creative
possibilities did not really find enough of an outlet in the
organisation. They
remained largely at the level of performers. The net gain was,
however, in
setting up a model for transgression, moving to a different
gender culture and
overcoming class boundaries.
Malini
Bhattacharya made a
brief presentation, pointing out that IPTA productions were
not merely
insertions in the continuing history of the Bengali theatre or
music with a bit
of leftism added, but attempts to disrupt the mainstream in
terms of both
aesthetic construction of texts and organisation of cultural
events. A
theatrical text like Nabanna (1944) brought in new
stage techniques in
the interest of a realist representation of the life of the
peasant, but its
authenticity flowed from its politics, which also demanded
creating a new
audience for the new drama, reaching out to the people in
settings of large
political gatherings in city as well as country. Nabanna
was by no means
confined to Kolkata; it went on tours as well, just as other
cultural events
moved with the squads from town to country. She referred to
forms of
performance of and by the rural poor, and the IPTA’s efforts
to open up
communication with these as a legacy that needs to be renewed.
Session
Six was chaired by
Saeed Mirza and Sadanand Menon. Kalpana Sahni spoke on the two
brothers, Balraj
and Bhisham Sahni, who had both disappointed their father by
forsaking the
family business in Lahore and joining up the IPTA movement in
Bombay. Their
families were involved, just as others were, for the IPTA of
the thirties and
forties was more a way of life than a cultural association.
Impoverished but
intrepid, Balraj brought his enormous acting and directorial
talents into the
new theatre and the new cinema, introducing ‘method’ acting in
both. Bhisham
was more into theatre and writing. This was the time of
shoestring budgets when
invention was spurred by necessity and the artist was a worker
living with
other workers in communes. The morale was high because they
knew the importance
of the cause and drew inspiration from fellow artists and
audiences. This
feeling of solidarity was largely due to the active support of
the Party. That
is why many were heart-broken when P C Joshi was removed from
leadership and
the squads broke up. The political and artistic values were
not lost, but the
tradition of working together for the people's cause became a
casualty.
M S
Sathyu spoke of his
own association with the movement and with some of the
stalwarts who had
brought so much creative energy to the cause. The astonishing
thing about the
PWA and the IPTA was the extent of support which these
organisations commanded
all over India. Hardly any major language community or ethnic
group remained
outside their sphere of influence. In a sense, the progressive
cultural
movement was the first organised attempt at forging a
pan-Indian cultural
identity. And the spread was swift, the scope very large. Even
after the
organisation was wound up the vitality of the movement was not
lost. One must
look at the whole of India, not just Maharashtra or Bengal, to
realise the
extent of its impact. The cinemas of Karnataka and Kerala, for
instance,
thrived on the progressive impetus of the earlier movement and
went on to carve
their own space in the cinematic map of India.
V
Ramakrishna presented a
paper on ‘Left Cultural Movement in Andhra Pradesh: 1930s to
1950s’. He offered
a detailed historical survey of the cultural scene against the
political and
economic background of the region, and explained the meshing
of culture with
politics in the anti-colonial struggle and the Telangana
People’s Movement. Two
significant things happened. Some of the established writers –
Sri Sri, for
instance – were drawn to the progressive cause and contributed
seminally to the
forging of a new kind of literature and drama, in which the
people’s cause
would be foregrounded. The other was the transformation of
some of the
traditional rural forms – Burrakatha in particular –
into an artistic
vehicle of progressive thought. This drew many talents from
outside the
educated middle-class into the creative pool and deepened the
base of the
movement. The Andhra experience shows how the people
themselves, the labouring
poor from the villages, the ordinary citizens from the towns,
women from all
classes, would be active agents of cultural change and would
take part, as
conscious political subjects, in the struggle for
emancipation. The Party
organisation helped the cultural surge, but the latter had a
momentum of its
own. The visible success of the progressive movement might
have been limited,
but its impact has been long-lasting.
Biswamoy
Pati read a paper
titled ‘Imagined Realities: The left-wing cultural movement in
Orissa, 1930-47’.
The Orissa scene was not really conducive to a sustained
cultural movement of
the kind witnessed in some other parts, but the impact of the
anti-colonial
struggle was deeply felt by the intellectuals and the artists,
and the surge of
popular movements turned some of them in a progressive
direction. The New Age
Literary Forum was set up in 1935, giving a coherent direction
to the
collective self-awareness of committed artists, and one can
see how a socially
felt demand was met by authors like the Panigrahi brothers,
Kalindi Charan and
the short-lived Bhagavati Charan. The progressive turn was
also pivotal in the
works of Sachi Raut Roy and Nityananda Mahapatra, and later
on, Gopinath
Mohanty.
Prachee
Dewri presented a
paper on ‘IPTA and the Music of Assam’. Her paper focussed on
the music that
was composed during the 1950s, with special focus on the works
of Jyotiprasad
Agarwala and Bishnuprasad Rava, who were two people who worked
as partners in
most of their artistic endeavours during this period. Prachee
began with noting
that these two artists had already begun experimenting with
music in the
thirties, moving away from the classical based music of people
like Lakshmiram
Baruah, and exploring the ‘folk’ genres of the region and used
this music in
their plays and films and had also recorded them. Agarwala and
Rava also
theorized on art after their involvement in the IPTA. She
linked up how their
theorizing on performative arts, like Agarwala’s “Shilpir
Prithivi” and Rava’s
“Asamiya Krishtir Samu Abhash” was manifested in their
creations. The work of many
more musicians who entered the fold of the IPTA during this
period, some of
whom were discovered by Agarwala and Rava, such as Bhupen
Hazarika, Dilip
Sharma, Sudakshina Sharma, Anandiram Das and Pratima Pandey
Barua and who sang
in diverse genres such as the Borgeet, Bongeet, Kamrupiya
Lokageet and the
Goalpariya Lokageet, was also traced briefly through playing
some musical clips.
Specifically, Prachee’s paper also focussed on how the IPTA
promoted lesser
known genres, and how these genres themselves influenced the
composition of new
music in the subsequent decades.
One
would like to think
that this was not a symposium of the ordinary kind, which are
a dime a dozen in
season, particularly in New Delhi. The rationale of this
particular exercise
was an exploration of the Marxist view of culture,
particularly people’s
cultural movements, and that surely entails something like a
paradigm shift,
transcending, but not necessarily denying, the established
values of academic
discourse. The activists and creative people who joined the
discussion, the
political workers, the media professionals, the younger crowd
which stayed
throughout -- all these people
brought perspectives which
helped place the movement in its setting, and pointed to
directions which
progressive culture has to move towards in order to solve its
current problems
and renew its pledge to the people. One remembers in this
connection the two
occasions in Vivan Sundaram’s house in Kasauli, the first in
1979 and the
second a couple of years later, when a closely knit group had
met to discuss
similar issues, and which had resulted in the birth of The
Journal of Arts
and Ideas. Some of these people were present on this
occasion too. The
level of commitment and intellectual rigour was very much in
evidence more than
three decades later, with newer and younger people joining in.
As expected, the
three days of the symposium saw the core crowd stay together
late into the
evening of each day, with SAHMAT showing some of the best
films of the
progressive movement, Dharti ke Lal, Neecha Nagar and
Komal Gandhar,
before a late community supper. The discussion, needless to
say, continued till
the end.