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Games the elite play
From religious notions about dirt, South Asia's preference for
women leaders to patronage in a democracy, DIPANKAR GUPTA
resolves many of the paradoxes of contemporary India in Mistaken
Modernity - India Between Worlds. In the process, he makes a
damning indictment of the elitist middle class and shows how it
is not modern in areas it considers itself to be. Modernity, he
argues, is not about technology and consumption, but about
attitudes. Exclusive extracts from the soon-to-be-released book.
THE Indian elite derive a lot of their swagger from the
traditional divisions in Indian society. That they cannot be
relied upon to usher in modernity is because they adhere to
symbols and norms that heighten the distance between people. In
this chapter, we will take a close look at this phenomenon by
first examining what snobbery is really all about and then going
on to show how this attitude is reflected in various social
arenas, and how it has become a dominant motif in various aspects
of our everyday lives. Sadly, we do not recognise such
consequences of elite snobbery when we see them. This is because
our socialisation never really critically questioned values and
norms that have come down from pre-modern times. The effects of
elite snobbery can hardly be isolated for, as we shall see, they
spread all the way from the choice of our national anthem, to the
fascination for cricket, as well as to how the underprivileged,
particularly the handicapped, are treated in our society ...
* * *
The law breaking elite
Observe a queue in front of a railway station or the outpatients'
department in a general hospital. Mainly people who are poor to
lower-middle class will be waiting patiently for their turn
amidst flies, spit and the stench of human bodies. Enter a middle
class or upper-middle class person, and before you know it, rules
are being broken. This man is jumping the queue, leaning across
the counter, calling up contacts, sending his card in, or just
plain forcing his way through.
People who usually break the law in this country belong to this
so-called elite class. It is another matter that prison
statistics do not reflect this fact. Given the elitist
disposition of our law makers and breakers, it is hardly
surprising that our jails should be stacked with thousands of
poor people whose crime may have been something as insignificant
as saying a wrong word, or straying into a landlord's fields.
Members of the middle class upwards are brought up to believe
that it is their privilege to flout the law. Given this fact, it
is hopeless to look at this stratum to usher in either
modernisation or enlightened citizenship. Modernisation has an
early tell-tale sign: everybody is actually equal before the law.
Regardless of the growth of consumerism, technology and whatever
else, it is substantive equality before the law that has been the
first distinguishing trait of modernisation. This aspect is often
lost sight of when we discuss issues relating to modernisation
and development in India.
To ensure that people are in a true sense equal before the law,
it is necessary to have law enforcement officers who have
sufficient autonomy, dignity, integrity and self-respect. Only
then can they perform their duties without fear or favour. It is
not as if people spontaneously submit to the law. It is in human
nature to seek shortcuts everywhere. The famous anthropologist
Bronislaw Malinowski recorded that even in faraway, pre-
industrial Melanesian islands, customs and traditions were broken
quite routinely if nobody was looking (Malinowski 1926:30).
The principal reason why road traffic in Western societies is
orderly is because the fear of the police strikes everybody
equally. If an affluent American were to be pulled up for a
traffic violation, you will not hear him barking at the
policeman: "Don't you know who I am?" But in India this is
exactly what an affluent Indian would spontaneously say to the
cowering policeman. Such a swagger would compound the charge
several times over in the West.
In India, the law enforcers are beholden to political patrons and
the effects of this run all the way down the hierarchy. To be
answerable to the public is translated in this country as being
answerable to political bosses. Politics here is not so much
about representing people but about extending patronage. It is
then not at all surprising that law breakers take precedence over
law enforcers. After all, what good are patrons if they cannot
break the law? If a patron cannot do that much, why have a patron
at all? Anybody can stand forever in a queue, anybody can swat
flies waiting for the doctor to show up in a general hospital.
There is a great demand for patrons because of the huge divide
between those who call themselves "middle class" (quite
erroneously, though), and the rest. The middle class upwards
strata actually constitutes the elite of Indian society. But this
elite sector stands out not because of its many accomplishments
(remember the snob) but because those below them live in such
desperately unenviable conditions. Frayed white collar class
families struggle and save to buy a scooter; those who belong to
the dirty white collar sector are in debt up to their ears trying
to marry off their daughters or to give their children a half-
ways decent education. Once we go below this segment of the
population, the situation is really quite abysmal. Chasing after
buses, cycling for miles to work, pulling rickshaws, slogging in
sweat shops, and it just keeps getting worse.
What the Indian elite class lacks in material and intellectual
resources is compensated by the high status it enjoys in this
country. This is why in whichever field the middle class
dominates, rules and laws are flouted with abandon. The business
world is full of greasy palms and dirty fingers. This is so well
known that it hardly needs any elaboration. Private schools and
professional colleges in our country are notorious for taking
bribes during admission. This has become so much a part of middle
class lives that nobody even flinches at the thought of bribing
one's way even into an institution of learning.
Politics is corrupt because from Laloo Yadav to the Gandhis, the
constant effort is to emerge as grand patrons. Politics in India
is democratic only to the extent of holding elections. But apart
from these grand episodic events, governance, or administration,
is thoughtless in routine, and patronage-based when caring and
motivated. Those who have ambitions and believe they have a
reasonable chance of attaining them stay close to political
patrons regardless of party labels. These ambitious people are
usually members of the middle class whose dreams of upward
mobility are stoked by nearness to positions of influence.
Thus while democracy and elections give the impression of
representation, governance at all levels is oiled by connections.
There are too many deprived people and too little wealth to go
around. Second, disparities being what they are, members of the
middle class cannot make common cause with the rest. Neither do
the poor have the temerity to oppose them as they too could do
with a little patronage coming their way. This is what allows
patronage to be replicated all the way down, till a point comes
when there are not enough resources to be a patron or disburse
patronage.
For the middle class in our country, patronage works both ways.
Members of this class seek patronage above and hope to be patrons
of those below. The evils of patronage are thus concentrated in
this class no matter which way one looks at it, from the bottom
or from the top. For the middle class to find clients to
patronise is also a marker of prestige. But there are other
important considerations too. Giving patronage to those below
them allows the middle class to stay away from performing
mindless menial jobs themselves. Standing in a queue, buying
one's rations, getting cinema tickets, etc., are bothersome
things whose tedium a little patronage can alleviate.
It should be noted that patronage is also competitive.
Competitions generated by patronage thrive on breaking rules. If
there are no rules to be broken, there is no scope for patronage.
The other kind of competition, the healthy one, is when the
contest is bound by a firm set of rules. Patrons and their
clients find this very suffocating. The only rule that patronage
allows for is that all rules have to be broken. Patronage not
only brings about competition among patrons, but also competition
among the patronised. As both these aspects overlap in the case
of the Indian middle class, it is not at all surprising that
members of this stratum are least trusting of others, and most
willing to break the law. How can this class then ever usher in
modernisation or citizenship?
What is worse, they cannot even devise a true national anthem
that respects the culture of the majority of our citizens.
Mistaken Modernity - India Between Worlds, Dipankar Gupta,
HarperCollins, p. 240, Rs. 295.
Dipankar Gupta is professor of sociology at the School of Social
Sciences, Jawaharlal University, New Delhi.
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