Interpretations of Indian History by Romila Thapar Kunal Chakrabarti and Geeti Sen
Interpretations of Indian History by Romila Thapar Kunal Chakrabarti and Geeti Sen
Interpretations of Indian History by Romila Thapar Kunal Chakrabarti and Geeti Sen
Geeti Sen: May I begin by asking you, Romila, about whether there exists an
Romila Thapar: I would like to start by saying that there isn't a uniform
interpretation that was current in the 1920s, the 1950s and that
which is current now.
In all of this there is a context to the interpretation which is
indologists and the British. By the British I presume you mean Prinsep
and others who began the actual work in India.
Would the difference be suggested by an armchair-reading say, by
Max Mueller sitting in a room in Germany, and the down-to-earth
great length about India or China, or any other part of the world.
GS: This attitude persists. A certain scholar from the United States visited
the American Academy at Benares in 1967 when I was there as a
GS: In your books you have mentioned that these scholars relied always
on Brahmanical learning and that this produced a certain bias. I don't
know if this was consciously done (they obviously thought that the
understanding. This bias exists in art history: where you find that a
western scholar will not interpret anything unless there is access to a
text to back it up, some shastric information. Classical civilisations
were also identified by the texts associated with them.
not questions that interested these early scholars; but these are
fundamental issues today.
The question then is why did they select certain texts? Their
primary interests were to try and discover what were the laws
of India before
they came to administer the legal system; so
Kunal Chakrabarti: One might make a distinction even among the scholars
who were in India, between the orientalists of the Asiatic society project
and the administrators who were getting down to the nitty gritty of
RT: Yes, there is certainly the feeling that this is the 'other'—an
attitude which comes through very strongly, for example in the
GS: To ask what extent was the nationalist historian affected or influenced
in his own thinking by what had been said? They also accepted certain
RT: Well, that was one concern. European nationalism did that with
the Greek civilisation;
they pushed it back as far as possible.
Where there is a revival of nationalistic historical writing, as
for example today in India in certain circles, there is again this
tendency to say that we were the originators and it all started
GS: Did the nationalists, when they were writing in the 1880s and 1890s,
make the division between Hindu and Muslim?
scholarship.
religion; because
the initial approach was from those who were
familiar with only the Semitic religions. This is of course prior
to anthropology, it is prior to Durkheim, it is prior to all the
put all these segments that constituted this vast mass of Hindu
desperate attempt to fit in the texts, fit in the rituals and the
cults, to give it some semblance of order on the basis recognised
as existing in the Semitic religions.
KC: You have called this Hindu religion a construction. Now there was
one motivation that made the European historians look at Hinduism
as one category, and quite another motivation for the nationalists.
But it did help the nationalist agenda, didn't it? When you are talking
RT: O yes, I think this is initially an intellectual idea, but with wide
social ramifications. It doesnot affect just the historians and
scholars but by the early twentieth century, the community also
sees itself more clearly in these terms. What interests me is
whether one can trace the points in history when the term Hindu
comes to be used by what we today call Hindus for themselves.
Now I haven't been able to take it further back than about the
fourteenth century; which means that two or three centuries
after the arrival of Islam, people are still not seeing themselves
as or calling themselves Hindus. This really becomes current
after the fifteenth century, and even then it occurs in the texts
but not as frequently as we imagine it does. So I think that this
scholarship.
The expediency of the moment perhaps compelled some
nationalist historians to see it as being to their benefit: to
channelise forces and energy together into a monolithic society.
But perhaps today in 1993 we need not perceive it in that way...
I would just like to add a little footnote because I don't want
to condemn the nationalist historians out of hand. There was a
very articulate group in the '30s and the '40s who supported an
alternative periodisation in terms of nomenclature. This was
when references were made to the ancient, medieval and
modern periods of Indian history—as a very deliberate move
94 / The IIC Interviews
people fell into this lazy habit of saying ancient, that is Hindu,
medieval, that is Muslim, modern, that is British. So in effect
KC: Also, in all fairness, although the nationalist historians had borrowed
this cultural baggage they turned it upside down, didn't they? Many
of them were very good historians. They were not obscurantists; they
were at worst anachronistic. Even ivhen Jaiswal is speaking of the
monarchy.
GS: One tends to draw parallels... One parallel comes immediately to mind
which is another myth that, Romila, you have blown away in your
book on Ashoka. There has been a tendency to say, well, Ashoka was
converted overnight to Buddhism. As you have carefully demonstrated,
it was not just after the battle ofKalinga but a gradual phase-out to
come to terms with Buddhism as the most acceptable, most beneficial
means to consolidate an empire. How do you come to the conclusion
that it is with the twelfth year of his reign that he effected the official
conversion ?
RT: It was made a little easier by the fact that Ashoka was so prolific
in issuing edicts and proclamations. Data relating directly from
him can be juxtaposed with the Buddhist version from a variety
of sources. If one does that, what certainly emerges very strongly
is that there was a mythology about Ashoka required by the
Buddhist tradition for purposes of legitimising its own history
of the evolution of the sangha.... What comes through in the
edictsis that the king acknowledges that he is a Buddhist but
more than that he is also using his links with a religious ideology
and a broad-based ethical code on a much wider scale as a
statesman.
Rom/la Thapar / 95
RT: I think it was certainly not as intentional as, for example, the
Din-i-Ilahi of Akbar—the kind of comparison commonly made
KC: Your book suggests a distinct shift in emphasis from earlier studies on
Ashoka by, for example, Smith, R.K. Mookerji, etc. At what point do
RT: I think the major change that came after '47, or during the peak
of nationalist ideology—that is a better way of putting it than
after '47—was that taking issue with imperialist historians
becomes less central. The direction which historical analysis
takes thereafter is an attempt to reach out to the fundamentals
of what was happening in the past. There was less concern with
either the niceties and details of personalities or directly political
issues. I think this turning towards looking at social history,
and at economic history is a major shift in emphasis, even if the
biggest impact that his writing has made is not that he found
the answer to historical problems, but he raised relevant
GS: For example, if you look at the granary at Harappa and from the size
KC: This connection with the Ahirs was noted much before Kosambi by
historians like Bhandarkar. So it is not the substance of what he was
important, it is the goddess Durga zvho comes to help Ram in the final
battle against Ravan which is not mentioned at all in the Valmiki
chhaya Sita, the shadow Sita. Now why does this come in?
Obviously because there are various traditions which among
other reasons were appalled at the thought of Sita having to go
aranya—a constant
confrontation between the state systems with
the more open tribal systems as they are called, hunter-gatherers
or primitive agriculturists. The confrontation is then idealised,
as it were, in the two domains of the capital city and the forest.
One reason
why this text is continually reincarnated is because
it does touch on a basic historical change taking place from
literally the first millennium BC until the present, the
KC\ To get back to the question of evidence. Many students of history feel
a little uncomfortable with archaeology because texts are so explicit.
The archaeological evidence also speaks, but in a different language.
Where does the historian stand in relation to the archaeological
evidence?
reports does not make much sense unless one has been through
the mill of digging. This is very important because after all,
GS: I do agree with you that Indian art history has been an exercise of
ecology... Then a whole new dimension opens up, if one sees art history
as a source material for explaining many other factors.
KC: If one looks at the shifts in the study of Indian art one notices that
there was no distinction made between important icons and their
aesthetic value. Even before these questions were sorted out,
understanding of art. After this there was a kind of reaction, and one
finds a very empirical, dry, descriptive classification. But the one aspect
which is steadily neglected is the study ofform, and its significance in
a historical context. Would you attribute this to thefact that art history
is really treated as a separate sub-discipline rather than an integral
part of history?
RT: I agree with you. There has been a change in art history from
the highly mystical to the highly empirical. There is a hesitation
on the part of historians precisely because there has been, over
time, perhaps too great an emphasis on the mystical, and the
historian doesn't know quite how to handle this because he or
she is dealing here with a category which until recently was
outside the concerns of the historian.
One problem is that there are, at the moment, no
major
historicalquestions that would be dependent for an answer on
data from art history. I am referring here to major theoretical
linguistics and history, the fog might lift. That kind of major
GS: What about the Aligarh scholars group and the work done on what
GS: What was the shaping of the historian's mind at say, the end of the
40s, and early 50s when you were a teenager, and when you went to
university? Would you say that that vision is different from that of
today?
GS: It is a problem of schooling also, and that brings us to the whole question
of how textbooks have been rewritten in the last two years in the three
states of U.P., Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. Would you have any
comments on that?
rightly say, that the standards are abysmally low in most schools
and the textbooks that are used have no business to be called
textbooks. But then we don't have a serious policy towards
textbooks. I think that in teaching history, for example, what
we want is a multiplicity of good history books.... Ministries of
Education are often the least knowledgeable about what should
be included in a textbook.
GS: Going from here to a question which has many dimensions; what do
you see, Romila, as the responsibility today of the Indian historian—
the role that he or she can play in shaping a consciousness of a more
pluralistic society, of understanding history on various levels?
RT: I would say that not just the historians but everybody, every
thinking person has the responsibility of shaping the
consciousness, What is so unfortunate at this moment is that
the consciousness seems, at least in some parts of northern India,
to be shaped by people who are not thinking people, who have
not thought out the kinds of slogans they are shouting and the
actions they are endorsing, People who have thought about
these matters could articulate the fact that this is not the way to