Concept Note

“Self-rule and Non-violence : Hind Swaraj a Century After” seeks to mark the hundredth anniversary of the publication of Gandhi’s first book, Hind Swaraj, with a series of conferences that engage Gandhian thought as a key moment in the modern history of transnational thinking and practice. A prominent product of the transnational politics of colonialism, Hind Swaraj emerged from Gandhi's early political life and travels, and was written in a single sitting while on the ocean from England to South Africa. The text articulated the fundamental themes of Gandhian thought, themes which have most often been understood as motivated by a nationalist sensibility, but which in fact offered a prominent and groundbreaking example of transnational thinking (as distinct from cosmopolitanism or a return to the universalism of classical Indian thought).

While its title is generally translated as Indian Home Rule, Hind did not refer to a determinate nation-state, but rather was an old Arabic name for an indeterminate and vast region across the Indus river. And Swaraj (literally "self-rule") is a term invented by Gandhi that de-territorialized the concept of political independence by linking it specifically with the ethical practice of the individual, with self-mastery and self-discipline as its touchstones. Drawing attention to these fertile ambiguities, the proposed discussions chart an innovative intellectual approach to Gandhi that speaks to global politics today. Reflection on Gandhi has been dominated by historians, social scientists and political activists on the one hand; and experts in philosophy and religion on the other. The former have focused their work on the much-examined Gandhian political concept of swadeshi, or home industry, while the latter have examined the well-known ethical concepts of ahimsa (non-violence) and satyagraha (truth-force). The idea of swaraj, and its conceptualization of transnational politics and ethics, remains understudied.

Conceived as a conversation across Johannesburg, Mumbai and New York, this project will focus on the concept of swaraj as an analytical lever to discuss the empirical ground, philosophical implications, and public life of Gandhi's imagining of transnational ethico-political practice. The task of these meetings is not only to think about self-rule in its transnational or global dimensions, but also to create a transnational space for such thinking by bringing together individuals and institutions from around the globe in a network to which each contributes and none leads. It is hoped that this network will continue to exist and even expand after the project is completed.
 


SCHEDULE

December 18, Friday

   
5:00 pm Opening Remarks: Arjun Appadurai
   
6:00 - 8:00 pm Opening Reception: “DETOUR” curator Ranjit Hoskote
  An exhibition marking the Centennial of Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj
 

December 19, Saturday

   
10:00 - 11:30 am  Amar Kanwar: “The Invisible Image”
  Vyjayanthi Rao: “Hindu Modern: Considering Gandhian Aesthetics”
  Chair: Ritu Birla
   
11:30 - 11:45 am Tea
   
11:45 - 1:15 pm Lalit Vachani: “Searching for Gandhi in Narendra Modi's Gujarat: A filmic journey”
  Rachel Dwyer: “The paradoxical hero: Gandhi in Hindi cinema”
  Chair: Faisal Devji
   
1:15 - 2:30 pm Lunch
   
2:30 - 4.00 pm Chris Pinney: “Bombs, Knowledge and Amulets: Hind Swaraj and the shadow of B. G. Tilak’s 1908 trial”
  Isabel Hofmeyr: “Violent Texts, Vulnerable Readers: Hind Swaraj and its South African Audiences”
  Chair: Pamila Gupta
   
4:00 - 4:30 pm Tea 
   
6:30 - 8:00 pm PUBLIC EVENT in honor of Professor Carol Breckenridge
  Lecture: Ashis Nandy
  Chair: Arjun Appadurai
  Respondents: Faisal Devji and Ritu Birla
 

December 20, Sunday

 
10:00 - 11:30 am SR Hiremath: “Quest For Swaraj: The grass root experiences of Nonviolent Direct Action: Environment and Self Rule”
  Rajni Bakshi: “Self, the 'other' and striving for Swaraj"
  Chair: Aishwary Kumar
   
11:30 - 11:45 am Tea
   
11:45 - 1:15 pm Dilip da Cunha: "Beyond the River Bed"
  Madhusree Dutta: “Aap Hamare Hai Kaun (Who are you to us)”
  Chair: Shruti Kapila
   
1:15 - 1:30 pm Closing Remarks: Ritu Birla and Faisal Devji
 

Venues:

   
18th December Opening Remarks:
Jnanapravaha
Queens Mansion, 3rd Floor
G. Talwatkar Marg
Fort, Mumbai 400001

18th December Reception:
Gallery Chemould
Queens Mansion, 3rd Floor
G. Talwatkar Marg
Fort, Mumbai 400 001

19 - 20th December Conference:
Jnanapravaha
Queens Mansion, 3rd Floor
G. Talwatkar Marg
Fort, Mumbai 400001

19th December Public Event:
National Centre for the Performing Arts
Godrej Theatre, NCPA
NCPA Marg
Nariman Point
Mumbai 400 021

Please register here for Hind Swaraj

   

Register Here
   
 
18th - 20th December: 3 day Conference
19th December: Public Event