![]() Reflections on Different ApproachesAmiya P. Sen THE BHAGAVADGITA IN THE NATIONALIST DISCOURSE By Nagappa Gowda K. Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2011, pp. 247, Rs 695.00 VOLUME XXXVII NUMBER 1 JANUARY 2013 In relation to the Bhagavadgita, three extraordinary developments may be said to have occurred in British India. First, there is the text’s seemingly turning self-referential. From being a smriti, it had acquired a near canonical (shruti) status. By the late nineteenth century, many considered the Gita to hold the key to all moral and metaphysical truths, the quintessence, if you will, of all Hindu wisdom. By now, evidently, the focus had turned away from the Brahma Sutras and specifically in the case of Bengal, from the Vedas as well. By the 1850s, reformist Brahmos had rejected the latter as pramana (authority) and in another twenty years, even a somewhat conservative figure like Bankim Chandra took the Vedic revival of Dayanand Saraswati as undesirable and anachronistic. A second development followed from the first. It cannot be entirely fortuitous that more commentaries on the Gita (whether partial or complete) were produced in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century than, say, in the five centuries preceding. Finally, it was also in the colonial era that the very concepts of orthodoxy and pramana were palpably diluted with texts like the Gita being translated into Indian and European languages and thereafter made available in print. By the 1880s, pocket-sized editions of the Gita were in circulation, which, reportedly, were carried about by young revolutionaries on their person.
In engaging with the work under review, the first question that we might ask ourselves is whether or not such developments as listed above were born entirely of Hindu nationalism. Prima facie, this would indeed appear to be the case. Admittedly, there was very little in modern Indian life that was left untouched by a burgeoning nationalism. There was, for instance, the subtle overlapping of political idioms and the religious. At first glance, Bankim Chandra’s partial commentary on the Gita would appear to end on a strongly pious note and one might reasonably advance the thesis that Bankim’s reading of this classic hinged on the sentiment of bhakti. On the other hand, a close scrutiny of the commentary and other related works will reveal that for Bankim, bhakti was no less a mechanism for reconstituting Hindu society and the Hindu nation. Personally, I am often led to believe that there are palpable links between the renewed neo-Hindu emphasis on monotheism and the construction of a homogenized nationhood.
And yet, it might be useful to ... Table of Contents >> |