Friday, 24 April 2026

Rushdie in the belly of the Donald

The story of Jonah is well known to Muslims. Indeed, there is a sahih hadith which equates Jonah & the Prophet as being at the same state of sanctity. 

Remarkably, there is at least one Muslim who pretends not to know this. 

45 years ago, Salman Rushdie wrote the following essay, titled 'outside the whale' for Granta 

Anyone who has switched on the television set, been to the cinema or entered a bookshop in the last few months will be aware that the British Raj, after three and half decades in retirement, has been making a sort of comeback.

It had never gone away. There had been Television adaptations of Forster's 'Passage' as well as re-runs of the Korda's films starring Sabu- the elephant boy0 not to mention 'Carry on up the Khyber' & 'It aint half hot Mum'. Hollywood's 'Gunga Din' & 'Kim' too were well received. My favourite was 'Nine hours to Rama' with Robert Morley in black-face playing a Congress Minister.  However, Rumer Godden's 'River' & 'Black Narcissus' had their movements. John Masters' 'Bhowani Junction' was a favourite with my parents. 

After the big-budget fantasy double-bill of Gandhi and Octopussy,

Gandhi was supported by the Indian Government. Octopussy had Vijay Amrithraj but was deeply silly.  

we have had the blackface minstrel-show of The Far Pavilions in its TV

which made a loss 

serial incarnation, and immediately afterwards the grotesquely overpraised Jewel in the Crown.

It made Art Malik a star.  

I should also include the alleged ‘documentary’ about Subhas Chandra Bose, Granada Television’s War of the Springing Tiger, which, in the finest traditions of journalistic impartiality, described India’s second-most-revered Independence leader as a ‘clown’.

The Communist Chief Minister of West Bengal, Jyoti Basu, asked Indira to stop its release though Bose's nephew- Sisir- had contributed to it.  

And lest we begin to console ourselves that the painful experiences are coming to an end, we are reminded that David Lean’s film of A Passage to India is in the offing.

Victor Bannerjee's finest performance.  

I remember seeing an interview with Mr Lean in The Times, in which he explained his reasons for wishing to make a film of Forster’s novel. ‘I haven’t seen Dickie Attenborough’s Gandhi yet,’ he said, ‘but as far as I’m aware, nobody has yet succeeded in putting India on the screen.’

Fair point. There had been no Indian 'Lawrence'. Did Lean succeed? Well enough.  

The Indian film industry, from Satyajit Ray to Mr N. T. Rama Rao, will no doubt feel suitably humbled by the great man’s opinion.

No. They laughed heartily at the director of 'Ryan's daughter'. Still, 'Lawrence' is immortal.  

These are dark days. Having expressed my reservations about the Gandhi film elsewhere, I have no wish to renew my quarrel with Mahatma Dickie.

Coz he'd always win. He had placed Outram in Ray's 'Shatranj' & secured Indira's backing.  

As for Octopussy, one can only say that its portrait of modern India was as grittily and uncompromisingly realistic as its depiction of the skill, integrity and sophistication of the British secret services.

One can only say that if one has nothing to say.  

In defence of the Mahattenborough, he did allow a few Indians to be played by Indians. (One is becoming grateful for the smallest of mercies.)

One isn't becoming a prat. Once was always that.  

Those responsible for transferring The Far Pavilions to the screen would have no truck with such tomfoolery. True, Indian actors were allowed to play the villains (Saeed Jaffrey, who has turned the Raj revival into a personal cottage industry, with parts in Gandhi and The Jewel in the Crown as well, did his hissing and hand-rubbing party piece; and Sneh Gupta

who was the hostess on 'Sale of the Century'. Asians disliked her because they considered her too dark.  

played the selfish princess, but unluckily for her, her entire part consisted of the interminably repeated line, ‘Ram Ram’).

To be fair, she wasn't a RADA graduate. She was from Kenya & pretty damn enterprising. I believe she returned to India to work with handicapped kids.  

Meanwhile, the good-guy roles were firmly commandeered by Ben Cross, Christopher Lee, Omar Sharif, and, most memorably, Amy Irving as the good princess, whose make-up person obviously believed that Indian princesses dip their eyes in black ink and get sun-tans on their lips.

It sounds as though Rushdie actually watched that dreck. No one else did. By then every Indian family in the UK had a VCR.

Now of course The Far Pavilions is the purest bilge. The great processing machines of TV-soap opera have taken the somewhat more fibrous garbage of the M. M. Kaye book and pureed it into easy-swallow, no-chewing-necessary drivel. Thus, the two central characters, both supposedly raised as Indians, have been lobotomized to the point of being incapable of pronouncing their own names. The man calls himself ‘A Shock’, and the woman ‘An Jooly’.

That isn't why it bombed. 

Around and about them there is branding of human flesh and snakery and widow-burning by the natives. There are Pathans who cannot speak Pushto. And, to avoid offending the Christian market, we are asked to believe that the child ‘A Shock’, while being raised by Hindus and Muslims, somehow knew that neither ‘way’ was for him, and instinctively, when he wished to raise his voice in prayer, ‘prayed to the mountains’.

Hindus can pray to the mountain- more particularly if it is Kailash, Govardhana, Arunachala etc. 

It would be easy to conclude that such material could not possibly be taken seriously by anyone, and that it is therefore unnecessary to get worked up about it. Should we not simply rise above the twaddle, switch off our sets and not care?

No. We turn on the VCR & watch either Kung Fu or Porn or Porn Kung Fu.  

I should be happier about this, the quietist option – and I shall have more to say about quietism later on – if I did not believe that it matters, it always matters, to name rubbish as rubbish; that to do otherwise is to legitimize it. I should also mind less were it not for the fact that The Far Pavilions, book as well as TV serial, is only the latest in a very long line of fake portraits inflicted by the West on the East.

It didn't make a profit. What if inflicted was a loss on its producers. But the same thing happened with 'Zulu Dawn'.  

The creation of a false Orient of cruel-lipped princes and dusky slim-hipped maidens,

sadly, our maidens tend to be as fat as fuck 

of ungodliness, fire and the sword, has been brilliantly described by Edward Said in his classic study Orientalism, in which he makes clear that the purpose of such false portraits was to provide moral, cultural and artistic justification for imperialism

Fuck off! Imperialism is only cool if it makes a profit.  

and for its underpinning ideology, that of the racial superiority of the Caucasian over the Asiatic.

Nobody complained about 'Temple of Doom'. Why? It wasn't boring shite.  

Let me add only that stereotypes are easier to shrug off if yours is not the culture being stereotyped;

by you.  

or, at the very least, if your culture has the power to counterpunch against the stereotype.

Like Octopussy?  

If the TV screens of the West were regularly filled by equally hyped, big-budget productions depicting the realities of India, one could stomach the odd M. M. Kaye. When praying to the mountains is the norm, the stomach begins to heave.

Salman's Muslim stomach begins to heave when he hears about what kaffirs get up to.  

Paul Scott was M. M. Kaye’s agent, and it has always seemed to me a damning indictment of his literary judgement that he believed The Far Pavilions to be a good book.

It sold 15 million copies. That's all that matters.  

Even stranger is the fact that The Raj Quartet and the Kaye novel are founded on identical strategies of what, to be polite, one must call borrowing.

Nope. They are based on writing stuff ordinary people find engaging. Kaye & Scott weren't rich & hadn't been to Oxbridge. They provided for themselves & their families by working hard & producing middle-brow literature of (in my opinion) an 'improving' or humanistic type.  

In both cases, the central plot-motifs are lifted from earlier and much finer novels. In The Far Pavilions, the hero Ash (‘A Shock’) – raised an Indian, discovered to be a sahib, and ever afterwards torn between his two selves – will be instantly recognizable as the cardboard cut-out version of Kipling’s Kim.

Or Tagore's 'Gora'.  

And the rape of Daphne Manners in the Bibighar Gardens derives just as plainly from Forster’s Passage to India.

No it doesn't.  Adela wasn't raped. Daphne was- by Indians who beat up her lover. Shit like that goes down all the time. That's why you need to get a fucking hotel room if you want to get intimate with your girlfriend. Oddly, this is not the case if she happens to be a goat. 

But because Kaye and Scott are vastly inferior to the writers they follow,

Everybody is inferior to Rudyard fucking Kipling. Also Shakespeare. Even my own 'Omelette- Denmark's Humpty Dumpty Prince' has not displaced 'Hamlet' on the English stage. 

they turn what they touch to pure lead. Where Forster’s scene in the Marabar caves retains its ambiguity and mystery, Scott gives us not one rape but a gang assault, and one perpetrated, what is more, by peasants. Smelly persons of the worst sort.

Coz that's what actually happens in India. Peasants are horny buggers.  

So class as well as sex is violated; Daphne gets the works. It is useless, I’m sure, to suggest that if a rape must be used as the metaphor of the Indo-British connection, then surely, in the interests of accuracy, it should be the rape of an Indian woman by one or more Englishmen of whatever class…not even Forster dared to write about such a crime.

It wouldn't have been a crime. The victim was clearly a prostitute- or had become so- unless she wasn't & her family decided to keep quiet about it. Obviously, the true irony here is that hardly any Whites were killed or molested in the Forties. Millions of Indians were killed or raped during that period by darkies like themselves.  

So much more evocative to conjure up white society’s fear of the darkie, of big brown cocks.

Small brown cocks. African heritage men are believed to be better endowed. That's why Tamils like me would shave our heads in the hope of being mistaken for the possessor of a giant dong. Sadly, nobody was taken in- probably because of my Peter Sellers' accent. 

You will say I am being unfair; Scott is a writer of a different calibre from M. M. Kaye.

Because he has a dick.  

What’s more, very few of the British characters come at all well out of the Quartet – Barbie, Sarah, Daphne, none of the men. (Kaye, reviewing the TV adaptation, found it excessively rude about the British.)

Kaye was right. She belonged to the older, Rumer Godden, generation. Indians were happy she made a lot of money by showing filial piety to her own ancestors.  

In point of fact, I am not sure that Scott is so much finer an artist. Like Kaye, he has an instinct for the cliche. Sadistic, bottom-flogging policeman Merrick turns out to be (surprise!) a closet homosexual. His grammar-school origins give him (what else?) a chip on the shoulder.

It must be said, the actor playing Merrick was very good.  

And all around him is a galaxy of chinless wonders, regimental grandes dames, lushes, empty-headed blondes, silly-asses, plucky young things, good sorts, bad eggs and Russian counts with eyepatches. The overall effect is rather like a literary version of Mulligatawny soup. It tries to taste Indian, but ends up being ultra-parochially British, only with too much pepper.

The novels hadn't done very well but the TV series was a hit. No one grudged Scott his success though his jaundiced view of the final days of the Raj was somewhat unfair. Still, Wavell himself was uncomfortable with things he was obliged to do in 1942. That is why he was determined to put an end to the Raj.  

And yes, Scott is harsh in his portraits of many British characters; but I want to try and make a rather more difficult point, a point about form.

Rushdie could never see what actual point was being made.  

The Quartet’s form tells us, in effect, that the history of the end of the Raj was largely composed of the doings of the officer class and its wife.

No. It tells us that the Brits had granted Provincial Autonomy in 1935. If, in 1937, the Indians could cobble together a Federal Government, the country would be de facto an independent Dominion.  Sadly, the Indians couldn't get their act together and so a bunch of Brits were left in limbo for a decade.  

Indians get walk-ons, but remain, for the most part, bit-players in their own history.

Nope. They had formed Governments in the Provinces. Then Congress resigned office and so a handful of Brits had to maintain a zombie regime.  

Once this form has been set, it scarcely matters that individual, fictional Brits get unsympathetic treatment from their author.

This is a zombie regime. The Brits would rather have been back home repairing the damage of the Blitz, or fighting Hitler in Normandy.  

The form insists that they are the ones whose stories matter, and that is so much less than the whole truth that it must be called a falsehood.

Their stories matter to themselves & their kids or other relatives. Brits can't help being British. 

It will not do to argue that Scott was attempting only to portray the British in India, and that such was the nature of imperialist society that the Indians would only have had bit parts.

Why not? Scott had been a private soldier in India. He wasn't an expert in Urdu literature & Islamic law. He couldn't do very much in the way of depicting Indians for the same reason that I can't do very much by way of representing Nineteenth Century Geordie lesbians.  

It is no defence to say that a work adopts, in its structure, the very ethic which, in its content and tone, it pretends to dislike.

But no such defence was offered because nobody was stupid enough to charge a work by a British writer with not being that of an Indian.  

It is, in fact, the case for the prosecution.

Only if Brits can be sent to jail for not being Indian.  

I cannot end this brief account of the Raj revival without returning to David Lean, a film director whose mere interviews merit reviews.

Nonsense! The guy was over 70. He had made at least 4 great films. He deserved his comeback.  

I have already quoted his masterpiece in The Times; here now are three passages from his conversation with Derek Malcolm in the Guardian of 23 January 1984: 

He was turning 76. Everyone agreed he was a great director. No one thought he was a Professor of Film Studies or Cultural History or 'Subaltern Studies'.  


'Forster was a bit anti-English,

He was a Pacifist during the first World War. It would be fair to say he was anti-Imperialist & a great friend to Indian & Indians.  

anti-Raj and so on. I suppose it’s a tricky thing to say, but I’m not so much.

Good for you. Your 1942 film 'In which we serve' raised morale. Don't apologize for fighting Hitler & Tojo. They were evil bastards.  

I intend to keep the balance more. I don’t believe all the English were a lot of idiots. Forster rather made them so. He came down hard against them. I’ve cut out that bit at the trial where they try to take over the court. Richard [Goodwin, the producer] wanted me to leave it in. But I said no, it just wasn’t right. They wouldn’t have done that.

Lean is absolutely right. Forster over-egged the cake. Back then, most educated Indians knew a lot about the law. To be fair, there were other anachronistic elements in the novel. I suppose, his point was that Ronnie was a dim bulb. He mismanaged the whole thing. 

As for Aziz, there’s a hell of a lot of Indian in him.

Aligarh Muslim schoolboy of a previous generation. He incarnates Akbar Illahabadi's couplet 'Payt masroof hai klerki mein/ Dil hai Iran or Turk mein ('tis but the belly makes necessary the clerk's white collar/ Our heart never forsakes Janissary & Ayatollah!

They’re marvellous people but maddening sometimes, you know…. He’s a goose. But he’s warm and you like him awfully. I don’t mean that in a derogatory way – things just happen to him. He can’t help it. And Miss Quested…well, she’s a bit of a prig and a bore in the book, you know. I’ve changed her, made her more sympathetic. Forster wasn’t always very good with women.

All this is perfectly fair. 

One other thing. I’ve got rid of that ‘Not yet, not yet’ bit. You know, when the Quit India

Non-Cooperation movement. Quit India was 20 years later 

stuff comes up, and we have the passage about driving us into the sea? Forster experts have always said it was important, but the Fielding-Aziz friendship was not sustained by those sorts of things. At least I don’t think so. The book came out at the time of the trial of General Dyer

there was no trial 

and had a tremendous success in America for that reason.

Because 'miscegenation' was big there. It was uncontroversial in India. One of the best books about Indian Shiah Islam was written by an English woman who married a Shia intellectual back in the early Nineteenth century.  (Mrs Meer Hassan Ali (born Biddy Timms) was an Englishwoman who married an Indian Shia Muslim, Meer Hassan Ali, in the early nineteenth century and authored the well-regarded book, Observations on the Mussulmauns of India (1832)).

But I thought that bit rather tacked on. Anyway, I see it as a personal not a political story.

Perfectly fair. Forster was expounding G.E Moore's ethical philosophy. He comes to the conclusion that this can be implemented in England by English people- not India even if English peeps there have some Indian chums.  

Forster’s lifelong refusal to permit his novel to be filmed begins to look rather sensible.

He refused permission for all his novels. They weren't cinematic in the manner cinema was conceived in his heyday.  

But once a revisionist enterprise gets under way, the mere wishes of a dead novelist provide no obstacle.

Merchant/Ivory/Jhabwallah made great versions of Forster & even Henry fucking James.  

And there can be little doubt that in Britain today the refurbishment of the Empire’s tarnished image is underway.

There can be no doubt whatsoever that nobody gave a flying fart.  

The continuing decline, the growing poverty and the meanness of spirit of much of Thatcherite Britain

VS Naipaul liked her. Graham Greene didn't. We are on Naipaul's side.  

encourages many Britons to turn their eyes nostalgically to the lost hour of their precedence.

Trafalgar? That was cool. The problem with the Raj was that it was as boring as fuck. Even Piers Brosnan couldn't save Merchant Ivory's 'Deceivers' (based on John Masters's novel) from bombing at the box office.  

The recrudescence of imperialist ideology and the popularity of Raj fictions put one in mind of the phantom twitchings of an amputated limb.

Carry on up the Khyber came out in 1968. That pretty much killed off the Raj as a topos for adventure films in the style of Korda's 'the drum' (1938).  

Britain is in danger of entering a condition of cultural psychosis, in which it begins once again to strut and posture like a great power while in fact its power diminishes every year.

Very true. Thatcher might invade the Punjab.  

The jewel in the crown is made, these days, of paste.

The Kohinoor wasn't. It emerged from an Afghan's anus. That is why British Crown still is famous.  

Anthony Barnett has cogently argued, in his television-essay ‘Let’s Take the “Great” out of Britain’, that the idea of a great Britain (originally just a collective term for the countries of the British Isles, but repeatedly used to bolster the myth of national grandeur) has bedevilled the actions of all post-war governments. But it was Margaret Thatcher who, in the euphoria of the Falklands victory, most plainly nailed her colours to the old colonial mast, claiming that the success in the South Atlantic proved that the British were still the people ‘who had ruled a quarter of the world.’ Shortly afterwards she called for a return to Victorian values, thus demonstrating that she had embarked upon a heroic battle against the linear passage of Time.

Sadly, she saved Rushdie from the Ayatollah's assassins. Fuck you Thatcher! Fuck you very much! 


I am trying to say something which is not easily heard above the clamour of praise for the present spate of British-Indian fictions: that works of art, even works of entertainment, do not come into being in a social and political vacuum; and that the way they operate in a society cannot be separated from politics, from history.

This was the Ayatollah's point. Rushdie was a Brit engaging in propaganda against the great people of Iran.  

For every text, a context; and the rise of Raj revisionism, exemplified by the huge success of these fictions,

Not that huge. Jilly Cooper & Jeffery Archer were big. But Douglas Adams was the only one I can still recall.  

is the artistic counterpart to the rise of conservative ideologies in modern Britain. And no matter how innocently the writers and filmmakers work, no matter how skilfully the actors act (and nobody would deny the brilliance of, for example, the performances of Susan Wooldridge as Daphne and Peggy Ashcroft as Barbie in the TV Jewel), they run the grave risk of helping to shore up that conservatism, by offering it the fictional glamour which its reality so grievously lacks.

If you aren't a shithead of the Rushdie type then you run the grave risk of not being a shithead.  


The title of this essay derives, obviously, from that of an earlier piece (1940) by the year’s other literary phenomenon,

(this was published in 1984) 

Mr Orwell. And as I’m going to dispute its assertions about the relationship between politics and literature, I must of necessity begin by offering a summary of that essay, ‘Inside the Whale’.

Rushdie was too stupid to understand the Biblical reference to Jonah. God wants him to tell the people of Nineveh that God will destroy the City. Jonah runs away but gets swallowed by a Whale. He returns & prophesies doom but God doesn't destroy Nineveh. Jonah feels ill used- just like the Commie who prophesies doom to Capitalism but lives on to watch it flourish as never before. 

It opens with a largely admiring analysis of the writing of Henry Miller:

Coz sex is better than Socialism. 

On the face of it, no material could be less promising. When Tropic of Cancer was published the Italians were marching into Abyssinia and Hitler’s concentration camps were already bulging….

Fuck should an American care if the Old World did stupid Old World shite?  

It did not seem to be a moment at which a novel of outstanding value was likely to be written about American dead-beats cadging drinks in the Latin Quarter.

No such novel was written. Still, it is true that sex is nice.  

Of course a novelist is not obliged to write directly about contemporary history, but a novelist who simply disregards the major public events of the day is generally either a footler or a plain idiot.

In the opinion of a fucking cretin.  

From a mere account of the subject matter of Tropic of Cancer, most people would probably assume it to be no more than a bit of naughty-naughty left over from the twenties. Actually, nearly everyone who read it saw at once that it was…a very remarkable book. How or why remarkable?

Coz sex is nice.  

His attempt to answer that question takes Orwell down more and more tortuous roads. He ascribes to Miller the gift of opening up a new world ‘not by revealing what is strange, but by revealing what is familiar.’ He praises him for using English ‘as a spoken language, but spoken without fear, i.e. without fear of rhetoric or of the unusual or poetic word. It is a flowing, swelling prose, a prose with rhythms in it.’ And most crucially he likens Miller to Whitman, ‘for what he is saying, after all, is “I accept”.’

Fucking is nice. Saying 'boo to Capitalism' is a waste of fucking time.  

Around here things begin to get a little bizarre. Orwell quite fairly points out that to say ‘I accept’ to life in the thirties ‘is to say that you accept concentration camps, rubber truncheons, Hitler, Stalin, bombs, aeroplanes, tinned food, machine guns, putsches, purges, slogans, Bedaux belts, gas masks, submarines, spies, provocateurs, press censorship, secret prisons, aspirins, Hollywood films and political murders.’ (No, I don’t know what a Bedaux belt is, either.)

It is a speeded up Assembly life. Orwell didn't understand that nobody says 'I accept' to life though they may say 'pardon' when they fart. On the other hand, if you say 'you farted', you are accepting responsibility for sucking the cock of every hobo in thirteenth Century China. 

My point is you don't have to go to Rugby or Eton to say stupid shit- but it does help..  

But in the very next paragraph he tells us that ‘precisely because, in one sense, he is passive to experience, Miller is able to get nearer to the ordinary man than is possible to more purposive writers.

Put sex into your books if you want proles to read them.  

For the ordinary man is also passive.’ Characterizing the ordinary man as a victim, he then claims that only the Miller type of victim-books, ‘non-political…non-ethical…non-literary…non-contemporary,’ can speak with the people’s voice. So to accept concentration camps and Bedaux belts turns out to be pretty worthwhile, after all.

A lot of Indians assumed Orwell was some sort of agent provocateur or secret policeman because he wrote utter nonsense. 


There follows an attack on literary fashion. Orwell, a thirty-seven-year-old patriarch, tells us that ‘when one says that a writer is fashionable one practically always means that he is admired by people under thirty.’ At first he picks easy targets – A. E. Housman’s ‘roselipt maidens’

boys who suck cock 

and Rupert Brooke’s ‘Grantchester’ (‘a sort of accumulated vomit from a stomach stuffed with place-names’).

not wholly a sodomite. He swung both ways. It would be fair to say that their poems would have benefitted from more graphic depictions of red hot anal loving.  

But then the polemic is widened to include ‘the movement’, the politically committed generation of Auden and Spender and MacNeice. ‘On the whole,’ Orwell says, ‘the literary history of the thirties seems to justify the opinion that a writer does well to keep out of politics.’

Churchill did very well out of literature in the Thirties.     

It is true he scores some points, as when he indicates the bourgeois, boarding-school origins of just about all these literary radicals,

Like whom? 'Red' Ellen Wilkinson? Atlee made her his Minister of Education. Orwell was writing about shitheads who couldn't get elected rat-catcher. 

or when he connects the popularity of Communism among British intellectuals

Ellen was an actual Commie. British 'intellectuals' were stupid and useless.  

to the general middle-class disillusion with all traditional values: ‘Patriotism, religion, the Empire, the family, the sanctity of marriage, the Old School Tie, birth, breeding, honour, discipline – anyone of ordinary education could turn the whole lot of them inside out in three minutes.’

So could cats- if they could be bothered. 

In this vacuum of ideology, he suggests, there was still ‘the need for something to believe in,’ and Stalinist Communism ‘filled the void.’

Coz being an 'Empire Loyalist' was even sillier. Rushdie misses a trick by not mentioning Orwell's previous career in the Indian Imperial Police.  

But he distorts, too. For instance, he flays Auden for one line in the poem ‘Spain’, the one about ‘the conscious acceptance of guilt in the necessary murder…. It could only be written,’ Orwell writes, ‘by a person to whom murder is at most a word. Personally, I would not speak so lightly of murder.’

Coz Orwell was actually Jack the fucking Ripper. Auden was a limp wristed Nancy boy. 

Orwell’s accusation is that the line reveals Auden’s casualness – a politically motivated casualness – towards human life. Actually, it does nothing of the sort. The deaths referred to are those of people in war. The dying of soldiers is all too often spoken of in euphemisms: ‘sacrifice’, ‘martyrdom’, ‘fall’, and so forth. Auden has the courage to say that these killings are murders; and that if you are a combatant in a war, you accept the necessity of murders in the service of your cause. His willingness to grasp this nettle is not inhuman, but humanizing. Orwell, trying to prove the theory that political commitment distorts an artist’s vision, has lost his own habitual clear-sightedness instead.

What clear-sightedness? The man had shit for brains.  

Returning to Henry Miller, Orwell takes up and extends Miller’s comparison of Anaïs Nin to Jonah in the whale’s belly. ‘The whale’s belly is simply a womb big enough for an adult…a storm that would sink all the battleships in the world would hardly reach you as an echo…. Miller himself is inside the whale…a willing Jonah…. He feels no impulse to alter or control the process that he is undergoing. He has performed the essential Jonah act of allowing himself to be swallowed, remaining passive, accepting. It will be seen what this amounts to. It is a species of quietism.’

Anais wasn't preaching the Gospel of Sex in Miller's manner. He suspected she might be a bit of an artist. I suppose she was. At any rate, she actually fucked her Daddy.  


And at the end of this curious essay, Orwell – who began by describing writers who ignored contemporary reality as ‘usually footlers or plain idiots’ – embraces and espouses this quietist philosophy, this cetacean version of Pangloss’s exhortation to cultiver notre jardin. ‘Progress and reaction,’ Orwell concludes, ‘have both turned out to be swindles. Seemingly there is nothing left but quietism – robbing reality of its terrors by simply submitting to it. Get inside the whale – or rather, admit you are inside the whale (for you are, of course). Give yourself over to the world-process…simply accept it, endure it, record it. That seems to be the formula that any sensitive novelist is now likely to adopt.’

Graham Greene & Evelyn Waugh were doing well. Orwell too did produce two readable books.  

The sensitive novelist’s reasons are to be found in the essay’s last sentence, in which Orwell speaks of ‘the impossibility of any major literature until the world has shaken itself into its new shape.’

I suppose, Orwell & Greene & Waugh were minor masters.  

And we are told that fatalism is a quality of Indian thought.

Muslim thought. Hindus have reincarnation.  

It is impossible not to include in any response to ‘Inside the Whale’ the suggestion that Orwell’s argument is much impaired by his choice, for a quietist model, of Henry Miller. In the forty-four years since the essay was first published, Miller’s reputation has more or less completely evaporated, and he now looks to be very little more than the happy pornographer beneath whose scatological surface Orwell saw such improbable depths. If we, in 1984, are asked to choose between, on the one hand, the Miller of Tropic of Cancer and ‘the first hundred pages of Black Spring’ and, on the other, the collected works of Auden, MacNeice and Spender, I doubt that many of us would go for old Henry.

Nobody would go for Spender. Auden & MacNeice have a couple of memorable poems. Miller did influence Durrell- who was born in India but, quite rightly, avoided writing about that boring shithole.  

So it would appear that politically committed art can actually prove more durable than messages from the stomach of the fish.

There are no such messages. Nin's porn is effective. That's all that matters.  

It would also be wrong to go any further without discussing the senses in which Orwell uses the term ‘polities’.

Stupid senses. He isn't talking about the boring business of solving collective action problems.  

Six years after ‘Inside the Whale’, in the essay ‘Politics and the English Language’ (1946), he wrote: ‘In our age there is no such thing as “keeping out of politics”. All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred and schizophrenia.’

Politics was about stuff like setting up a National Health Service. It wasn't about saying boo to Capitalism. 


For a man as truthful, direct, intelligent, passionate and sane as Orwell,

i.e. a stupid, crazy, paranoid liar 

‘politics’ had come to represent the antithesis of his own worldview. It was an underworld-become-overworld Hell on earth.

Fortunately, the shithead died soon afterwards. Sadly, Hell isn't a real thing. 

‘Politics’ was a portmanteau term

Nope. A portmanteau term is created out of two different words- e.g. smoke plus fog becomes smog.  

which included everything he hated; no wonder he wanted to keep it out of literature.

He didn't. He just didn't know anything about it.  


I cannot resist the idea that Orwell’s intellect and finally his spirit, too, were broken by the horrors of the age in which he lived,

that of Stanley Baldwin? 

the age of Hitler and Stalin (and, to be fair, by the ill health of his later years).

He didn't live in Germany or Russia.  

Faced with the overwhelming evils of exterminations and purges and fire-bombings,

He did face the Blitz & did his bit- however shit- for King & Country.  

and all the appalling manifestations of politics-gone-wild, he turned his talents to the business of constructing and also of justifying an escape route. Hence his notion of the ordinary man as victim, and therefore of passivity as the literary stance closest to that of the ordinary man.

Orwell knew his Bible. He got that Jonah was deeply disappointed when God decided not to destroy Nineveh. He himself had wasted his life criticising a system which could reform itself easily enough.  

He is using this type of logic as a means of building a path back to the womb, into the whale and away from the thunder of war.

He really isn't. Still, he gets that sex is a good thing. Proles want more sex. The solution is improved condoms.  

This looks very like the plan of a man who has given up the struggle.

Orwell wrote a shitty essay. So what?  

Even though he knows that ‘there is no such thing as “keeping out of politics”,’ he attempts the construction of a mechanism with just that purpose.

Nope. He tried to enlist when war was declared but his health was too poor. So he joined the Home Guard & worked for the Beeb doing propaganda aimed at India. A patriot albeit a stupid one. 

Sit it out, he recommends; we writers will be safe inside the whale, until the storm dies down. I do not presume to blame him for adopting this position. He lived in the worst of times.

He lived through Britain's finest hour.  

But it is important to dispute his conclusions, because a philosophy built on an intellectual defeat must always be rebuilt at a later point.

Rushdie is too stupid to build shite.  

And undoubtedly Orwell did give way to a kind of defeatism and despair. By the time he wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four, sick and cloistered on Jura, he had plainly come to think that resistance was useless. Winston Smith considers himself a dead man from the moment he rebels. The secret book of the dissidents turns out to have been written by the Thought Police. All protest must end in Room 101. In an age when it often appears that we have all agreed to believe in entropy, in the proposition that things fall apart, that history is the irreversible process by which everything gradually gets worse, the unrelieved pessimism of Nineteen Eighty-Four goes some way towards explaining the book’s status as a true myth of our times.

Nope. It is a reminder that 'it really can't happen here'- unless, obviously, stupid Pakistanis demographically replace the English.  


What is more (and this connects the year’s parallel phenomena of Empire-revivalism and Orwellmania), the quietist option, the exhortation to submit to events, is an intrinsically conservative one.

No. Rolling back stupid Left/Liberal shite is the Tory option.  

When intellectuals and artists withdraw

Nobody notices. 

from the fray, politicians feel safer.

If the only thing they need to worry about is artists or intellectuals then they are entirely safe. 

Once, the right and left in Britain used to argue about which of them ‘owned’ Orwell.

Sodomised him? That was a thing?  

In those days both sides wanted him; and, as Raymond Williams has said, the tug-of-war did his memory little honour. I have no wish to reopen these old hostilities;

coz everybody would pound your ass? 

but the truth cannot be avoided, and the truth is that passivity always serves the interests of the status quo, of the people already at the top of the heap, and the Orwell of ‘Inside the Whale’ and Nineteen Eighty-Four is advocating ideas that can only be of service to our masters.

Or mistresses. Rushdie's made him eat her shit. He keeps quiet about it for understandable reasons.  

If resistance is useless, those whom one might otherwise resist become omnipotent.

No. Their power does not increase. They just don't have to use it on useless people. 

It is much easier to find common ground with Orwell when he comes to discuss the relationship between politics and language.

Only if you have shit for brains. Politics is about collective action problems. It has a mathematical representation. Propaganda isn't politics. It is either marketing or mania.  

The discoverer of Newspeak was

wrong. Math matters. Language doesn't.  

aware that ‘when the general (political) atmosphere is bad, language must suffer.’

Because stupid shitheads think language matters. It doesn't.  

In ‘Politics and the English Language’ he gives us a series of telling examples of the perversion of meaning for political purposes.

He was perverting language not for a political but a polemical- and paranoid- purpose. Had the English listened to the cunt, they wouldn't have set up a National Health Service because they would have said 'there is no such thing as a British Nation' & 'Illness is not Health' & 'Dictatorship is not Service'. As Churchill said, Labour is setting up a Gestapo State with 'Death Panels' staffed by GPs. 

‘Statements like Marshal Pétain was a true patriot, The Soviet Press is the freest in the world, The Catholic Church is opposed to persecution are almost always made with intent to deceive,’ he writes.

Also, when people say 'Hello' what they really mean is 'Go to Hell!'  

He also provides beautiful parodies of politicians’ metaphor-mixing: ‘The Fascist octopus has sung its swan song, the jackboot is thrown into the melting pot.’
Nobody gives a fuck about such things because language doesn't matter at all. Orwell said 'if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought'. He may as well have said 'if thought can fellate language, language can also sodomize thought while taking a dump on the tits of Hope.' 
Recently, I came across a worthy descendant of these grand old howlers: The Times, reporting the smuggling of classified documents out of Civil Service departments, referred to the increased frequency of ‘leaks’ from ‘a high-level mole’.

Nothing wrong with that. A mole is a guy with a different allegiance. He reveals classified information for some purpose of his own. 

It’s odd, though, that the author of Animal Farm, the creator of so much of the vocabulary through which we now comprehend these distortions – doublethink, thoughtcrime, and the rest – should have been unwilling to concede that literature was best able to defend language, to do battle with the twisters, precisely by entering the political arena.

He was stupid, not utterly mad. The political arena is about making the NHS work better. It isn't about defending Language from anal rape by Thought who is also shitting on the tits of Hope.  

The writers of Group 47 in post-war Germany – Grass, Böll and the rest,

were shit.  

with their ‘rubble literature’, whose purpose and great achievement was to rebuild the German language from the rubble of Nazism

It remained what it was though, no doubt, it changed under the influence of the occupying powers.  

– are prime instances of this power. So, in quite another way, is a writer like Joseph Heller. In Good as Gold the character of the Presidential aide Ralph provides Heller with some superb satire at the expense of Washingtonspeak.

It was mediocre. Catch 22 is the only thing he will be remembered for.  

Ralph speaks in sentences that usually conclude by contradicting their beginnings: ‘This Administration will back you all the way until it has to.’ ‘This President doesn’t want yes-men. What we want are independent men of integrity who will agree with all our decisions after we make them.’

Come to think of it, Catch 22 isn't that good. Still, it was about something interesting- viz. the US Airforce in Italy during the Second World War.  

Every time Ralph opens his oxymoronic mouth he reveals the limitations of Orwell’s view of the interaction between literature and politics.

Orwell was a useless pile of shite. Still, he was a patriot & answered the call of King & Country. Adolescents like two of his novels. Why? They are short. They aren't subtlee.  

It is a view which excludes comedy, satire, deflation; because of course the writer need not always be the servant of some beetle-browed ideology. He can also be its critic, its antagonist, its scourge. From Swift to Solzhenitsyn, writers have

been useless. Swift, it must be said, wrote well.  

discharged this role with honour. And remember Napoleon the Pig.

Or don't. It makes no difference.  

Just as it is untrue that politics ruins literature (even among ‘ideological’ political writers, Orwell’s case would founder on the great rock of Pablo Neruda),

Neruda was shit. So was Allende. Also Pinochet. Still, Chile & Argentina have more than their fair share of literary talent.  

so it is by no means axiomatic that the ‘ordinary man’, I’homme moyen sensuel, is politically passive.

Nothing is axiomatic.  

We have seen that the myth of this inert commoner was a part of Orwell’s logic of retreat;

We really haven't. He wrote a silly essay about some shithead. Nobody cared.  

but it is nevertheless worth reminding ourselves of just a few instances in which the ‘ordinary man’ – not to mention the ‘ordinary woman’ – has been anything but inactive.

Sadly, ordinary Pakistanis weren't able to kick Rushdie's head in & claim lots of money from the Iranians for performing this service to Islam.  

We may not approve of Khomeini’s Iran, but the revolution there was a genuine mass movement.

It was shit.  

So is the revolution in Nicaragua.

See above.  

And so, let us not forget, was the Indian revolution.

There was no such thing. Some Commies wagged their tail. They were beaten into submission quickly enough.  

I wonder if independence would have arrived in 1947 if the masses, ignoring Congress and Muslim League, had remained seated inside what would have had to be a very large whale indeed.

Even Sri Lanka got it. The Imperial game was not worth the financial candle.  


The truth is that there is no whale. We live in a world without hiding places;

Rushdie hid very successfully from Iran & other irate Muslims.  

the missiles have made sure of that.

This shithead hadn't heard of fall-out shelters. Didn't he watch Dr. Strangelove?  

However much we may wish to return to the womb,

Nobody wants that 

we cannot be unborn.

We can die. That's good enough.  

So we are left with a fairly straightforward choice. Either

be sensible & treat politics as having to do with collective action problems or 

we agree to delude ourselves, to lose ourselves in the fantasy of the great fish

Nobody does that. Jonah is inauspicious. That's why the sailors want to dump him in the Ocean.  

– for which a second metaphor is that of Pangloss’s garden

They are wholly unrelated. Johah spent three nights & days praying & repenting in the belly of the whale. Pangloss doesn't have a garden. He is a Liebnizian. Candide rejects his philosophy & decides to do something useful- viz. cultivate his garden. Rushdie was incapable of understanding anything he read.  

and for which a third would be the position adopted by the ostrich in time of danger;

Ostriches don't really stick their head in the sand. They'd have gone instinct had such been the case.  

or we can do what all human beings do instinctively when they realize that the womb has been lost for ever: we can make the very devil of a racket.

Rushdie is talking of babies. But non-babies don't soil themselves & scream their lungs out.  

Certainly, when we cry, we cry partly for the safety we have lost; but we also cry to affirm ourselves, to say, here I am, I matter, too – you’re going to have to reckon with me. So, in place of Jonah’s womb,

where he did 'tawbah'- i.e. repentance 

I am recommending the ancient tradition of making as big a fuss, as noisy a complaint about the world as is humanly possible.

Rushdie screamed his tits off. Then he went into hiding.  

Where Orwell wished quietism, let there be rowdyism; in place of the whale, the protesting wail. If we can cease envisaging ourselves as metaphorical foetuses, and substitute the image of a newborn child, then that will be at least a small intellectual advance. In time, perhaps, we may even learn to toddle.

Rushdie did toddle off to America. Sadly, he got stabbed there probably because he was wailing or soiling himself in some manner which attracted attention. 

I must make one thing plain. I am not saying that all literature must now be of this protesting, noisy type. Perish the thought; now that we are babies fresh from the womb, we must find it possible to laugh and wonder as well as rage and weep. I have no wish to nail myself, let alone anyone else, to the tree of political literature for the rest of my writing life.

Geture-political. The big Pakistani baby made a ruckus but then had to run away and hide after the Ayatollah heard of him.  

Lewis Carroll and Italo Calvino are as important to literature as Swift or Brecht.

Carroll & Swift wrote good English. They matter to English speakers. Calvino & Brecht were shite.  

What I am saying is that politics and literature, like sport and politics, do mix, are inextricably mixed, and that that mixture has consequences.

For Jeffry Archer- sure. For Rushdie- not so much.  


The modern world lacks not only hiding places,

says a dude famous for hiding 

but certainties. There is no consensus about reality between, for example, the nations of the North and of the South. What President Reagan says is happening in Central America differs so radically from, say, the Sandinista version that there is almost no common ground.

Dubya & the Donald make Reagan look like Mary fucking Poppins. Rushdie migrated to New York, not Nicaragua.  

It becomes necessary to take sides, to say whether or not one thinks of Nicaragua as the United States’ ‘front yard’. (Vietnam, you will recall, was the ‘back yard’.)

Rushdie preferred to have an American front & back yard though, no doubt, an apartment is lower maintenance. 

It seems to me imperative that literature enter such arguments, because what is being disputed is nothing less than what is the case, what is truth and what untruth.

That's stuff economists & journalists are better at keeping track of.  

If writers leave the business of making pictures of the world to politicians, it will be one of history’s great and most abject abdications.

It will make no fucking difference whatsoever.  

Outside the whale is

dry land- which is where Jonah gets to after he has repented.  

the unceasing storm, the continual quarrel, the dialectic of history.

which, Marx tells us, is economic not literary.  

Outside the whale there is a genuine need for political fiction,

There really isn't. Entertainment is all we ask for.  

for books that draw new and better maps of reality, and make new languages with which we can understand the world.

Rushdie couldn't understand shit.  

Outside the whale we see that we are all irradiated by history,

No. Economics is ergodic. History really doesn't matter. Those who do not learn from it are condemned to teach it or gas on about it because that's how they can make a little money. 

we are radioactive with history and politics; we see that it can be as false to create a politics-free fictional universe as to create one in which nobody needs to work or eat or hate or love or sleep.

No. Politics-free fictional universes can be entertaining. That's all that matters. 

Outside the whale it becomes necessary, and even exhilarating, to grapple with the special problems created by the incorporation of political material, because politics is by turns farce and tragedy, and sometimes (e.g. Zia’s Pakistan) both at once.

Pakistan was actually less of a shitshow than Khalqi, Commie, Afghanistan. Indeed, it compared favourably with Iran.  

Outside the whale the writer is obliged to accept that he (or she) is part of the crowd, part of the ocean, part of the storm, so that objectivity becomes a great dream, like perfection, an unattainable goal for which one must struggle in spite of the impossibility of success.

Fuck off! You can be like PG Woodhouse or Agatha Christie or J.R Tolkein. Alternatively, you can be a prancing ninny like Rushdie.  

Outside the whale is the world of Samuel Beckett’s famous formula: I can’t go on, I’ll go on.

Fuck Beckett. Bugs Bunny is the way to go.  

This is why (to end where I began) it really is necessary to make a fuss about Raj fiction and the zombie-like revival of the defunct Empire.

It must be said, Lapierre & Collins's 'Freedom at Midnight' made Indian Independence sexy. But, it was no such thing. It was as boring as shit.  

The various films and TV shows and books I discussed earlier propagate a number of notions about history which must be quarrelled with, as loudly and as embarrassingly as possible.

Rushdie was soiling himself as he wrote this.  

These include: the idea that non-violence makes successful revolutions;

The Glorious Revolution, in England, featured no violence. Norway separated from Sweden without violence. After the Armistice, there were peaceful revolutions in most German states though, no doubt, in Bavaria, things subsequently turned violent. 

the peculiar notion that Kasturba Gandhi could have confided the secrets of her sex-life to Margaret Bourke-White;

there were no secrets. Her hubby had told everybody he'd given up sex. Nobody thought she'd taken a lover.  

the bizarre implication that any Indians could look or speak like Amy Irving or Christopher Lee;

The Pakistanis, bizarrely, chose Count Dracula to play Jinnah in the movie they financed. 

the view (which underlies many of these works) that the British and Indians actually understood each other jolly well, and that the end of the Empire was a sort of gentlemen’s agreement between old pals at the club;

Nehru really was an old pal of Cripps. Atlee came to stay and showed Nehru Labour's plan for India. It was everything Nehru wanted. This happened in 1938.  

the revisionist theory – see David Lean’s interviews – that we, the British, weren’t as bad as people make out;

VS Naipaul quoted Santayana 'the world never had sweeter masters'. But Niradh Chaudhuri was more adulatory.  

the calumny, to which the use of rape-plots lends credence, that frail English roses were in constant sexual danger from lust-crazed wogs (just such a fear lay behind General Dyer’s Amritsar massacre);

frail Indian lotuses were in greater danger.  

and, above all, the fantasy that the British Empire represented something ‘noble’ or ‘great’ about Britain;

It was great that Britain made a profit on it. It was noble of Churchill & Co. to protect it from the Japs.  

that it was, in spite of all its flaws and meannesses and bigotries, fundamentally glamorous.

Okay. That's stretching things. The place was bureaucratic & as boring as fuck.  

If books and films could be made and consumed in the belly of the whale, it might be possible to consider them merely as entertainment, or even, on occasion, as art.

Films made by Hollywood studios were pretty good. So were novels churned out by nice English ladies who had families to feed.  

But in our whaleless world, in this world without quiet corners, there can be no easy escapes from history, from hullabaloo, from terrible, unquiet fuss.

Rushdie's world featured 'safe spaces', on Ivy League campuses, for post-colonial shitheads like himself. He aimed for something better for himself but then had to go into hiding. He may have lost an eye but he has the satisfaction of having lived to see his country bomb the shit out of Iran. 

Thursday, 23 April 2026

Chandan Sengoopta on Saytajit Ray



 Prof. Chandan Sengoopta has a well researched paper in which he rebuts the view that Satyajit Ray was apolitical. He points out that Ray's grandfather had participated in the campaign against the partition of Bengal by Lord Curzon. His father was sympathetic with the swadesi movement & Ray himself, as a child, had been rather good at spinning cloth. 

Calcutta had a large European, Commercial, population and their discriminatory practices (e.g. Ray being paid one third as much as his English colleague who was equal in rank) must have rankled with the highly educated 'bhadralok' gentry which Ray, himself, represented. 

Before Pather Panchali: The Feudal-Colonial Nexus Ray‘s first serious script, it is well-known, was based on Rabindranath Tagore‘s Ghare Baire and drafted in 1946. 

Before partition- but the atmosphere was darkenting. Direct Action Day riots occurred in August of that year. Tagore's prediction that Muslims would slaughter Hindus was coming true.  

The film was to be directed by Harisadhan Dasgupta (1923-1996),

a documentary film maker with whom Ray sometimes collaborated 

who had recently returned to Calcutta with some Hollywood experience.

He had been to film school in California. It is said that he had been an apprentice to a black-listed actor/Producer. Left wing sympathies was by no means a disadvantage in the Indian film industry.  

Quite a lot of preparatory work was done for the film but the project collapsed when Ray refused to accept changes suggested by the producer.

The boy would have been 23 years old. Ray was 2 years older.  

Shortly after this fiasco and before his fateful encounter with Jean Renoir (who would come to Calcutta in 1950 to film The River), Ray also wrote scripts of Manik Bandyopadhyay‘s ‗Bilamson‘ (‗Williamson‘) and Subodh Ghosh‘s ‗Fossil‘, two starkly anti-colonial stories by communist writers.

The Pakistani's made a good film out of a story by the former. The script was by Faiz Ahmed Faiz. Meanwhile, Pasolini- who had come to India to make 'Motherland' for the Government- had eloped with Harisadhan's wife.  

As Sharmistha Gooptu has shown, Ray‘s thematic choices broadly paralleled trends in mainstream Bengali cinema and in the 1940s, the Bengali film industry, threatened with marginalization by Hindi films from the Bombay studios, evolved specifically Bengali sub-genres, one of which was the anti-colonial melodrama.

Why would this be 'specifically Bengali'? An action film based on the life of, the Indian Bruce Lee,  Bagha Jatin (about whom Dasgupta did do a documentary) would have been a smash hit. 

Ray‘s projects, had they been accomplished, would have pioneered this genre, which came to be represented by films like Hemen Gupta‘s Bhuli Nai (Unforgotten, 1948)

about the 1905 Partition. Back then Hindus had opposed it. More recently, they insisted on it.  

or the same director‘s Byallish (‘Forty-Two, 1951) set against the backdrop of the Quit India movement.

The Brits had fucked off. Hindus from East Bengal were well and truly fucked.  

Ghare Baire, with its emphasis on the Hindu communal character of the swadeshi movement of 1905-7, was a topical subject for the 1940s, a time when Indian politics had divided sharply along communal lines.

No. The country had been partitioned. The minority either accepted second class status or was chased away.  

Tagore‘s novel showed how, Nikhilesh, a liberal landowner, opposed the boycott of foreign goods being called for by his friend Sandip because it was inimical to the interests of his poor and largely Muslim tenants but was destroyed by the forces of fanatical nationalism.

He was killed by Muslims who were killing and looting his Hindu neighbour. This was a case of religious fanaticism, not Nationalism. Also stealing money & raping girls is an agreeable way to pass the time.  

Ray balanced this critique of nationalism, however, with ‗Bilamson‘ and ‗Fossil‘, both of which portrayed the collusion of British colonialism and Indian feudalism.

The Indian landlords paid for British protection. Then they fucked off. Sad.  

‗Bilamson‘, first published in 1943, recounts how the weak-willed Bengali landowner Mahidhar lets his estate be taken over by an Englishman named Stephen F Williamson.  Williamson shows no compunction in destroying lives and communities in order to build roads and factories and the first person to resist him is the local boy Dhurjati, who organises Mahidhar‘s tenants against Williamson. Refusing to leave, Williamson goes on a rampage against the villagers and Dhurjati is killed. Mahidhar tries to evict Williamson but the story ends with Williamson plying him with drink and lecturing him on the sacred duty to stick it out for their shared ideals.

Sadly, the scene where Williamson sodomizes Mahidhar is not shown. Williamson crowns his career of inequity by going off to fight the Japanese. He was so thoroughly racist that he didn't want 'orientals' to take over Bengal & rape & loot its people. Thus, in the end, Williamson is just as bad as Churchill who used to bugger Gandhi senseless.  

An allegory representing the establishment and perpetuation of British colonialism in India, the story implies that colonialism endured because, ultimately, the Indian feudal classes colluded with the British.

Because they were 'plied with drink' & sodomized incessantly by the Viceroy.  

‗It was‘, as Ray outlined the subject later, ‗about an English manager of a zamindar‘s estate and described how a spirited youth takes a stand against the manager‘s exploitation of poor peasants‘.

In other words, it was shit. Indians were very good at exploiting the fuck out of each other. What they were shit at was fighting the Japs or Chinks or whatever.  

Ray‘s one-line summary suggests that his treatment may have included more intense and direct confrontations between Dhurjati and Williamson than in the original story.

Would it feature sodomy? No. How about a cricket match like 'Lagaan'? Fuck that. Such a film might be entertaining. Ray was against entertainment.  

This surmise is supported by the fact that when Ray read out his script to a potential producer, the latter suggested that at the end of the film, the idealistic young hero should cry ‗Quit India!‘ as he confronted the cowering British manager.

The Premier of Bengal at that time was Fazlul Haq. Britishers, like Williamson, were fighting the Japs or the Germans.  

Ray considered it a crass suggestion but whatever its merits, the fact that it could be made indicates that Dhurjati must have survived to the end in Ray‘s treatment, which, therefore, may have been more overtly nationalistic than the original.

Less shit.  

 Subodh Ghosh‘s short story ‗Fossil‘ (1940), set in the tiny princely state of Anjangarh, is also a parable about the colonial-feudal nexus.22 The king of Anjangarh and his court are benighted and cruel but the new law agent, a Bengali polo-playing idealist called Mukherjee, has grand visions for transforming the state. He develops the mining industry and the king‘s treasury overflows with money.

Money is bad. Everybody should starve to death- unless the Japs are willing to enslave Bengal.  

Prosperity, however, brings new challenges. The members of the kurmi tribe

i.e. the agriculturist caste 

are no longer inclined to be serfs and want to be paid for their services.

In which case they need to kill the King, his family, etc. It is called a Revolution.  

The mining syndicate, run by British businessmen, accedes to their demands (the mines could not be operated without kurmi labour) but the king is appalled by the tribals‘ insolence. Eventually, a big mining disaster kills numerous kurmis and in a separate incident, the king‘s own forces fire on a kurmi band for cutting down forest trees without permission, killing nearly two dozen people. 

But were they also sodomized?  

Fearing criticism and press attention, the king and the syndicate join hands to cover up the incidents.

Oh. Sodomy did feature. Sad.

Mukherjee turns ashen when he learns of their plan, and the story ends with him watching the corpse of the kurmi leader and of those who died in the forest shooting

the big 'forest shooting' back then was the Katyn forest massacre 

being lowered into the pit where so many kurmi labourers had already died in the accident. He imagines a distant future when palaeontologists, examining fossilized bones recovered from that pit – ‗whitish, without any bloodstains‘ –

but with bullet holes. Bengalis have shit for brains.  

would decide that these poor, subhuman creatures must have been buried by some sudden natural catastrophe.

After shooting themselves- right? 

The notion that the decadent representatives of feudal India sustained colonialism was central to contemporary communist doctrine and propaganda.

Because, after Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, the Commies had 'sustained colonialism' to the best of their ability- i.e. not at all.  

That Ray, a lifelong liberal, was inspired by it is interesting in itself but it is particularly intriguing that he returned to it, as we shall see later, in a major work of his later years, Shatranj ke Khilari.

Which shows Indian Muslims are more than a bit shit.  

Pather Panchali and Beyond None of this interest in colonialism and nationalism, of course, was immediately perceptible in Ray‘s celebrated first film, Pather Panchali (1955).

He was an artist.  

As we saw earlier, however, critics have seen it, together with the other films of the Apu trilogy, as reflecting and complementing the optimistic Nehruvian vision of a new, progressive India even though the films were set in the 1930s and 40s and despite the ‗complete absence‘ in the films of the ‗dams, irrigation projects, and machinery‘ that characterized the high hopes of Nehru‘s India and which featured prominently in such films as Mehboob Khan‘s Mother India. 

Dhan Gopal's 'Caste & Outcaste' had been published in America in 1923. It was a success. There was a market for a lyrical evocation of a rural childhood even in a shithole country.  

Nehru was a steadfast supporter of the young film-maker and Ray, on his part, admired Nehru so deeply that he even contemplated making a short film which would help the prime minister raise national morale during the 1962 war with China.

It was the commercial Cinema which produced such morale boosting movies. Film stars raised a lot of money. Ray was useless.  

This mutual admiration had little to do with such typically Nehruvian projects as state socialism or industrialization, stemming more from the cosmopolitan liberalism that Ray saw in Nehru and the artistic sensibility that he detected in the prime minister‘s writings.

Nehru thought everything which wasn't boring was vulgar. Ray agreed.  

As C A Bayly has argued, socialism was not all there was to Nehru‘s politics:

being boring was all there was to it.  

‗Nehru had a delicate understanding of the need for social and religious liberality in his vast and disparate society.

No. He understood that Bengalis were shit. Keep them out of decision making. Let the State decline.  

It was his liberal, rather than his socialist, political judgement which characterised the Pandit‘s rule‘. And it was this liberal Nehru whom Ray admired.

Nehru was, as he said, the last Englishman- a crap one- to rule India. That's what Ray admired.  

Although the documentary on the China war was never made, Ray‘s affiliation with the Nehruvian ethos was expressed powerfully in Kanchanjangha (1962), his first film based on his own story and also his first in colour.

Foreigners who wanted to understand why India had been beaten so thoroughly by the Chinese found the explanation in this movie. Darjeeling had been taken by the Brits from Sikkim. China claimed Sikkim, Bhutan, Ladakh etc. on the basis of their claim to Tibet. The Indians wouldn't fight for it because it wasn't Indian land. It was real estate stolen by Brits in 1849. Moreover, the Indians, in their stupid & lethargic way, were moving towards liberating themselves from the British legacy- i.e. private enterprise, the rule of law, having an army & not getting invaded incessantly, etc. etc.  

It told the tale, more or less in real time, of a few hours in the life of a Bengali upper-class family on holiday in Darjeeling, counterposing the old-world values of the elderly magnate Indranath, who cherishes his British title of Rai Bahadur

because the Brits had defended Bengal & kept Hindus from being killed or forcibly converted. Indeed, they had extended its territory to include Darjeeling.  

and adores the ‗erstwhile rulers‘,

who didn't keep losing wars 

with those of Ashok, a young man from a vastly different social background.

No. He has the same social background- i.e. caste/religion. He is just less well connected & economically successful. Obviously, being Bengali, he isn't going to rise by his own hard work & enterprise. 

The latter is no revolutionary and initially hopes to find a job by cultivating the Rai Bahadur, who promptly subjects him to a discourse on the greatness of British rule.

The Brits had beaten the Japs. They would have beaten the Chinese. Nehru would shit himself and surrender.  

Indranath questions what ‗the fruits of independence‘ will be, although he is glad he has lived to taste them, unlike one of his friends, who, he contemptuously remarks, had participated in the nationalist movement and died in jail.

Other contemporaries had been released from jail & then killed or chased away from their ancestral homes in East Bengal.  

Ashok is so irritated by Indranath‘s declamations about British greatness that when he finally agrees to give him a job, he turns it down, declaring that he would find one through his ‗own effort‘. 

Why not start learning Chinese?  

Although he later claims that it was the unusual ambience of Darjeeling that had infused an uncharacteristic courage into his soul, Ashok‘s words suggest something more complicated. ‗To find a job so easily … to hell with it!‘, he exclaims. ‗What will be, will be. Let me struggle. No charity! So what if he‘s the chairman of five companies, so what if he is a Rai Bahadur!‘

So what if he pays taxes? Nehru's government will piss the money against a wall one way or another. China's Chairman is our Chairman! 

Jobless young males would recur insistently in Ray‘s films of the 1970s

his son, fortunately, was able to become a film-maker like his dad- with his dad.  

and many of the director‘s views on the nation would be articulated through or around them. Ashok, however, has none of the detachment of Pratidwandi‘s Siddhartha or the cynicism that Somenath comes to acquire in Jana Aranya. Despite the economic difficulties of life in India,

they would get worse 

the Nehruvian dream, as Ashok all but explicitly declares, still survived for his generation.

He thought he could get a job. Since he was of working age & was capable of work, this was a realistic ambition.  

‗Struggle‘ would lead to success not simply for Ashok the individual but, it is implied, for his class and his nation, proving Indranath‘s generation wrong.

Proving them right. The Brits had struggled to rise as had the Indians who worked for them and who later took over the management of enterprises created by them.  

Ben Nyce has rightly observed that Kanchanjangha is ‗a political statement about post-independence India‘ but he does not analyze the interesting way in which the statement is articulated.

It was a shitty film which, because of the date when it came out, confirmed that India would accept the loss of territory the Brits had conquered from non-Indian polities. Also, they would be as lazy as shit.              

The clash of nationalist faith and colonial toadyism

which couldn't exist because the Brits had fucked off 

is presented as a debate between two generations and two social classes, albeit not entirely as a face to face exchange. Instead of listing the fruits of independence‘,

West Bengal was now ruled by Hindus, not Muslims.  

Ashok speaks up for freedom itself,

being unemployed gives you more free time 

whilst acknowledging the responsibility that came with freedom (‗struggle‘). Indranath, however, does not get an opportunity to reply – the debate is closed by Ashok‘s response. This structure was typical of Ray. All his characters, even the least likable, were given ample space and a largely uninhibited voice – this respect for his characters, of course, was largely responsible for Ray‘s reputation as a ‗humanist‘ who, like Jean Renoir, believed that everyone had his reasons. What the champions of the humanistic‘ Ray tend to overlook, however, is that all reasons weren‘t necessarily equal in Ray‘s universe.

They were all nonsense.  

Certain types of characters and their views, even though freely articulated, were invariably contested within the narrative and refuted directly or by implication.

It is vulgar to be productive. Scolding is the sole activity worthy of a buddhijivi.  

Debates were never left open but closed on specific notes, endorsing one side or another by giving it the last word. Ray‘s narratives, in short, are all-embracing but they are never allforgiving.

They are silly. How does scolding an industrialist help protect the country from Chinese invaders?  

A Nation in Making? In 1964, Ray made Charulata, which he would always regard as his most perfect film. Based on the novella ‗Nashtaneer‘ by Rabindranath Tagore, the film has been written about extensively.

Husbands should have sex with their wives. Women want to have babies. At least, let them adopt a child.  

Its political content, however, has not been appreciated adequately.

It had none. 

Set in 1879-80, two years after Queen Victoria was proclaimed as the Empress of India at a grand durbar in Delhi, the film contains a remarkable recreation and critique of nineteenth-century moderate‘ nationalism.

There was no such thing. Either you were a loyalist or you just focussed on making money. Either way, you had zero importance.  

Much of this is achieved through Ray‘s radically expanded characterization of Bhupati, the wealthy Bengali intellectual who is so obsessed with his political newspaper that he neglects his young and gifted wife Charu,

Why is he not fucking her? That is his fucking job. If his 'political newspaper' can get him into the good books of the Administration, he may get the title of Rao Bahadur. But nobody would greatly care.  

who falls in love with Bhupati‘s cousin Amal. In Tagore‘s original, Bhupati is a bit of a lightweight – there are hardly any references to his politics in the story and the story is mostly about his romantic travails.

In those days, grooms were twice the age of their child-brides. Some neglected fucking them because they came to see them more as daughters who should be educated rather than people who wanted to have babies. Tagore had a sister-in-law who committed suicide coz she was getting no nookie & thus was doomed to a childless existence. 

Ray‘s Bhupati, however, is a fully fleshed-out liberal –

nobody cares if a slave is liberal or conservative.  

and Liberal: he is a fervent supporter of Gladstone).

Gladstone didn't need his support. India had no MPs in Westminster. Ireland did. That's why Gladstone was becoming pro-Irish.  

He hates the label ‗idle rich‘

though he is too lazy to fuck his wife 

and seeks to use his wealth to bring about political reform and national improvement.

By scolding people.  

He has no time for literature and declares to Amal that from a national point of view, a new tax represents a greater tragedy than Romeo and Juliet.

Romeo & Juliet is entertainment merely. What Ray doesn't get is that India needed new taxes so as to have more resources to solve collective action problems which would raise productivity. Ray had a degree in Econ.  

Bhupati is always ready to criticize the government (which shocks Amal) but he is as loyal to British rule as the great Bengali teacher, politician and journalist Surendranath Banerjea (1848-1925), whose speeches Bhupati adores and on whose paper The Bengalee Ray modelled Bhupati‘s newspaper The Sentinel.

Surrender-not did help set up the Indian National Congress which achieved mass contact through cow protection.  

To be outspoken‘, Bhupati tells Amal, ‗is not necessarily to be disloyal‘ but when Amal plays ‗God save the Queen‘ on the piano, he wryly comments that saving the Queen was all very well, but how would the Bengali people be saved?

They had been saved by the Brits. Once the Brits fucked off, their condition would deteriorate- unless they let rural girls get transferred to giant factory dormitories.  

The answer, for Bhupati‘s generation, is not by ending the Raj but by its continuation in a less despotic and more genuinely British form.

That was A.O Hume's idea. Sadly Surrender-Not wasn't interested. Bengalis like scolding only.  

Bhupati‘s political mentors are ‗Burke, Macaulay, Gladstone‘ and even though he has never been to Europe, he worships ‗France, Germany, Greece, Italy – the land of Mazzini and Garibaldi‘. This belief in the providential nature of European rule had also been held by Rammohan Roy (1772-1833), whom Bhupati hails as the ‗first and greatest liberal of the nineteenth century‘ and ‗the father of our political consciousness‘ at a party to celebrate the victory of Gladstone and the Liberals in the British general election of 1880.

Roy & Tagore had lobbied Westminster to lift all restrictions on European migration to India. The truth is, the Bengalis gained by British expansion in Burma.  

British rule, Rammohan had thought, would benefit

Hindus by protecting them from Muslims 

Indians by introducing capitalism and bringing about ‗improvement in literary, social and political affairs‘; for him as well as for his admirers, the quest for Indian nationhood was ultimately a quest for modernity.

As opposed to being massacred by Muslims. 

Their nationalism had few real connections with the Indian masses

It was based on fucking over the masses through the Permanent Settlement.  

and was largely restricted to the small community of English-educated Indians.

No. There were plenty of landlords who didn't know English though they might employ them as lawyers or Estate Managers.  

Ray‘s engagement with late Victorian nationalism in Charulata, Suranjan Ganguly has argued, might have been related to Nehru‘s death the year the film was made.

Ray knew Niradh Chauduri whose pro-British views were becoming popular as the country turned into a starving shithole unable to defend itself even from an equally shitty Pakistan. f 

For Ray‘s generation it marked the end of a dream shaped by a nineteenth-century cultural ethos‘.

The English speaking Indian class was no substitute for actual English folk.  

But Nehru, of course, was also a powerful critic of nineteenth-century nationalism.

No he wasn't. Socialism is a nineteenth century ideology which was part & parcel of the agitation for National Self-determination.  

Although he admired the moderates for their ‗advanced social outlook‘, he described them as ‗a mere handful on the top with no touch with the masses‘

because that is what the Brits were saying 

and thinking only in terms of the new upper middle class which they partly represented and which wanted room for expansion‘.

Whereas what Nehru stood for was contraction- i.e. losing territory & then not having enough food to eat.  

This is almost exactly the crtique of moderate nationalism that is implicit in Charulata.

Not to mention Mughal-e-Azam & Raquel Welsch in 'One Million years BC' 

The film even hints at the eventual rise of more radical varieties of nationalism with its references to Bankimchandra Chatterji (1838-1894),

who worked for the Brits 

the novelist whose complex influence on Indian nationalism has been explored in depth by Tapan Raychaudhuri, Partha Chatterjee, Sudipta Kaviraj and others.

Useless Bengalis talking bollocks about useless Bengalis. Bipin's importance lies in his anti-Muslim ideology.  

41 In Ray‘s film, Bankim is not just Charu‘s favourite novelist, but also the author of Anandamath, the novel about an eighteenth-century rebellion that contains the famous hymn Bande Mataram (Hail, Mother), the song that would become the battle-cry of the early-twentieth-century swadeshi movement and, subsequently, of militants, terrorists and Hindu nationalists.

Muslim Nationalism is fine. But Hindus should not have a Nation.  

The first words that Amal says to Charu in the film are: ‗Have you read Anandamath?‘ Later, when Bhupati tries to entice him into marriage by saying that the prospective father-in-law had offered to send him to Britain, he, after rhapsodizing on ‗the land of Shakespeare‘, recites a few lines from Bande Mataram and declines the offer.

Why go to Britain to learn to do useful things? Why not be utterly useless while scolding everything in sight?  

No critic, to my knowledge, has noticed that these allusions to Anandamath, completely absent from Tagore‘s story, are blatantly anachronistic for a film set so firmly in 1879-80. Bankim‘s novel was serialized in his magazine Bangadarsan from March 1881 to June 1882 and published as a book in December 1882.

Nobody gives a fuck.  

Given the care with which Ray had researched the film‘s historical background, this is unlikely to have been a simple error. Instead, I would argue, Anandamath was brought in intentionally

because Bengalis knew Bankim. They didn't know Gladstone.  

to indicate that radical alternatives to Bhupati‘s loyalist nationalism were gestating in Bengali culture.

There was some point to being loyal but useless. Why not be disloyal & useless?  

The association of Anandamath with Amal, moreover, is interesting. Tagore as well as Ray deride his literary efforts so thoroughly that it is hard to take him seriously. And yet, Amal genuinely adores Bankimchandra‘s writings and feels a deep bond with Bengal.

Because he is Bengali.  

Although he opts for marriage, a paid-for trip to Britain and the career of a barrister at the end of the film, he has already revealed his awareness of the racial discrimination that he would experience in England.

Sadly, racial discrimination was much greater in Calcutta.  

A Bengali in Bilet (England), he says in the course of a game of alliteration with Charu, would be treated as a black native and come back to Bengal baap-baap boley (with tail between his legs).

He'd return as a barrister. Would he also have a 'L.L.D' (i.e. will he have married the land lady's daughter)? If so, he might amount to something.  

The Indian viewer would also be aware that whilst many barristers lived lives of prosperous conformity, a whole generation of Indian nationalists, including Gandhi and Nehru, had also trained as barristers in Britain.

They didn't 'train'. The ate dinners & passed exams.  

So, Amal‘s future remains entirely open and we cannot decide whether or not his passion for Bankim and his chanting of Bande Mataram presages a later, serious involvement with some nationalist creed far more radical than Bhupati‘s.

He seems a nice enough lad. Will he fuck his wife? If so, he may have progeny.  

Counterposed to these two men, of course, is Charu who has no political interest and whose love for literature has no English referent.

She wants to get preggers.  

When she tries to write, she first tries to imitate Amal‘s florid style, just as her husband models his political activities on British exemplars. Unlike Bhupati, however, Charu is far from satisfied with the results and turns ultimately to write about the people and places she has herself known. The people Charu envisions in a reverie – presented as a montage of pastoral scenes of rural Bengal – just before she sits down to write her piece would never be seen at a party hosted by Bhupati. Her piece entitled ‗My Village‘ is accepted by an elite  journal that published the work of new writers so rarely that Amal had decided not to send any of his essays to it.

We must scold magazines for not publishing our scoldings. Also, how soon before even goats & cows start publishing articles about their village or their pig sty or whatever? 

The source of Charu‘s creativity‘, Suranjan Ganguly has remarked, ‗becomes the point of convergence where thought, memory, and emotion all come together‘.

In other words, she has a brain. Not a big one. Still, for the moment she is one up on goats & cows.  

This convergence does not simply pull her ever more deeply into her own self. It also enables her to reach into the heart of the nation, represented by her village and its very ordinary residents.

Sadly, she does not mention the pigs & some of the more loquacious plants.  

In short, Charu resolves what Partha Chatterjee has claimed was the greatest tension ‗in all nationalist thought‘ – the tension between ‗the modern‘ and ‗the national‘ – by using the modern vernacular print culture to connect with and represent her people, the unmodern masses of rural India.

also the goats & cows. It must be said, the cow-protection league did have some impact.  

Although Charu‘s literary success is used as a lens to reveal the flaws in Amal‘s approach to literature as well as Bhupati‘s idea of nationalism, the critique does not proceed by debate, as in Kanchanjangha, but by narrative intertwining and analogy.

Basically, the Bengalis were giving themselves a pat on the back for having been less poor & stupid in a previous century.  

The structure of the narrative compels viewers to contrast Charu‘s originality

she recalls some nice cows & goats from her village. Sadly, she doesn't have a baby & thus has to write for the magazines. 

with the ‗derivative discourse‘ of Bhupati and Amal. Before the emergence of Gandhian mass nationalism,

there was cow-protection &  Ganesh Chaturthi & the anti-Partition Swadesi agitation. After that there was Jugantar, Ghaddar, etc.  If Tegart hadn't been able to kill Tiger Jatin, nobody would have bothered with Gandhi.

Partha Chatterjee has argued, the only real alternative to the deracinated modernism of the moderates was religious-communal‘ nationalism.

After 1917, there was a rapidly growing Communist Left.  

Ray‘s representation does not acknowledge this.

If you make a film about Bagha Jatin- it will be as exciting as 'Fists of Fury'. Ray didn't want to make anything which wouldn't bore everybody to death.  

Apart from a few images of a charak festival, Charu‘s reverie ignores the explicitly religious and it is surely noteworthy that Tagore‘s title for her piece, ‗Kalitala‘ (The Kali Temple), is changed by Ray to ‗Amar Gram‘ (‗My Village‘) in the film.

Ray truly hated Hinduism.  

Similarly, when Amal quotes from Bankimchandra‘s Bande Mataram, all religious and idolatrous references are quietly omitted – just the three words sujalang, suphalang, sashyashyamalang (‗rich in waters, rich in fruit … verdant with the harvest 16 fair‘) are used to indicate his attachment to Bengal.

He is a Sickularist cunt.  

Ray‘s Nehruvian sensibility, in other words, is perceptible not only in his critique of Bhupati‘s Eurocentric nationalism but in the ‗secularization‘ of the battle-cry of its future opponents. A similar expurgation, as we know, preceded the approval of Bande Mataram as a national song by the Indian National Congress in 1937. On the advice of Rabindranath Tagore, a committee that included Jawaharlal Nehru decided that only the first two stanzas of the song would be acceptable to Muslims and other monotheists.

Nothing was acceptable to Muslims save the slaughter of Kaffirs.  

So far, so Nehruvian –

actually, Nehru was less boring than Ray. At least, he'd spent a lot of time in Jail. Did he also meet the Shawshank sisters? We hope so.  

but Charulata also moves beyond the progressivism and developmentalism espoused by the Nehru generation. The sylvan images of her village that flit through Charu‘s mind do not suggest an economically battered colony in desperate need of Nehruvian development‘,

i.e. the Etawah model produced by Americans. But AO Hume had done better in Etawah a century previously. 

nor the infinite poverty which, for Bhupati‘s generation, could only be remedied by industrialization and the cultivation of European modernity.

or what would become Japanese modernity, Chinese modernity, Korean modernity etc.  

The nation Charu connects with is not one that, to use Surendranath Banerjea‘s phrase, is ‗in making‘ – it already exists in all its eternal plenitude.

i.e. has lots of cows & goats 

Here Ray is even more Tagorean than Tagore himself was in Nashtaneer‘.

i.e. he is more boring.  

As Dipesh Chakrabarty has shown, Tagore never ignored the actual deprivation and squalor that was to be found in the Bengali village. Nevertheless, he also believed that something transcendental lay beyond the objective and historical condition of those villages: if one had the eyes to see and the sensitivity to experience it, one could ‗pierce the veil of the real‘ and perceive the eternal soul of sonar Bangla (golden Bengal).

Sadly, Tagore's rent roll collapsed during the Great Depression. If sonar Bangla can't produce gold for zamindars, it has turned to lead.  

The images that glide through Charu‘s mind and into her essay in Ray‘s film are not just one individual‘s memories: they are visions of the eternal and eternally nurturing nation lying beyond ordinary perception.

Unless, like the good Professor, you live in London. 

A Nation in Disarray It has often been noted that Ray‘s Nehruvian faith in progress,

Industrialization? He wasn't big for it. What was he for? Poverty porn. There was a foreign market for that.  

reason and the nation crumbled over the second half of his career. These were the years when the political liberalism, relatively honest administration and national optimism of the Nehru years came to be replaced by pervasive corruption in government,

Ray worked for a British Company in Calcutta. He knew corruption was already pervasive there. The Bombay Stock Exchange indicted Mundhra for selling forged share certificates in 1956 itself. But Marwaris & British Managing Agencies had been colluding to get round Exchange Controls from 1946 onward. No 'box-wallah' didn't know the sordid details.  

economic stagnation, industrial unrest, violent political clashes in Bengal between the Naxalites (as the Maoists of that period were known) and their political adversaries from the left as well as the right, a huge influx of refugees from the erstwhile East Pakistan in 1971

like the one in 1947? 

and a general lowering of the quality of life all over the nation that could not be obscured by Indira Gandhi‘s increasingly strident socialist rhetoric.

Socialism was the cause, not the effect.  

In the words of Sunil Khilnani, ‗intellectuals outside the government slumped into despair or catatonia‘ during this period:

they emigrated. Ray should have fucked off to Hollywood & made films titled 'Tarzan meets King Kong'.  

‗The sense of a ―crisis‖ was everywhere: India‘s original project seemed to have fallen into corruption and degeneration‘.

It became dynastic.  

It was against this bleak backdrop that Ray entered into a remarkable new phase of his career, charting, from the end of the 1960s, ‗the moral and spiritual collapse of the new urban India … and the death of a whole cultural ethos‘ in films like Aranyer Din-Ratri (Days and Nights in the Forest, 1969),

A forest without either Tarzan or fucking is as boring as shite.  

Pratidwandi (The Adversary, 1970) , Seemabaddha (Company Limited, 1971) and Jana Aranya (The Middleman, 1975).51 The dark themes, unpleasant characters and sardonic humour of this series nonplussed admirers of the old, serene Ray.

By then, Calcutta's reputation as the arsehole of the Turd World was well established.  

‗How does one explain the change in Satyajit?‘, wondered the leftist poet Samar Sen after seeing Jana Aranya, whilst other voices lamented Ray‘s failure to commit himself to revolutionary socialism, which, for them, represented the only rational solution for the Indian malaise.

You could make an exciting film about Naxals on the run from the Police. Ray didn't want to make exciting films.  

 Some forty years later, these films remain little-known in comparison to Ray‘s earlier works and scholars are just beginning to grapple seriously with them.

Scholars grapple with scholarly shite- not boring videos on YouTube.  

All four are key texts for any study of Ray‘s evolving views on the Indian nation but Pratidwandi is the most immediately relevant to the present essay. Based on a novel by Sunil Gangopadhyay, the film charts the experiences of Siddhartha, a young, introspective and unemployed graduate.

Ray's son was a history graduate. He had to go into the family business. Siddharta was a medical student who discontinued his studies after his father died. Will he get a job as a medical rep? No. He is useless. The fact is, plenty of poor would be medicos got work with a Charity hospital & then slowly acquired professional qualifications. Nothing wrong with starting off as a surgical assistant & learning on the job. Alternatively, the boy could have sat the Army's AFMC exam. 

Its most striking sequences are of job interviews. One of them, coming early in the film, is at a Government of India office, where three officials grill Siddhartha entirely in English. One interviewer, speaking in a clipped Oxbridge accent, asks: ‗Who was the prime minister of England at the time of independence?‘ ‗Whose independence, sir?‘, responds Siddhartha.

India's. England was already independent. The answer was 'Clement Atlee- who also nationalised the 'commanding heights' of the British Economy and set up the National Health Service which offered free medical treatment to all. ' 

That slight stress on the ‗whose‘ encapsulates the whole sense of disillusionment with the Indian nation that Ray would express in the 1970s.

No. It is a reference to the Bengali belief that 'China's chairman is our Chairman'. India can't be independent unless ruled from Beijing. Sadly, Churchill had prevented it being ruled from Tokyo. 

(Can one imagine Ashok of Kanchanjangha speaking in such a way?)

No. That's because the Chinese didn't invade till later in the year. Bengalis become very happy if they think some bunch of foreigners is on the point of taking over their country.  

But what really upsets the interviewers is Siddhartha‘s claim that the war in Vietnam, not the moonlanding, is the most significant event of the last decade.

Why not just say 'I'm a Naxal. If you give me a job, I will destroy your enterprise. Also, I will rape your family to death.' ? 

The latter, the young man explains, was a remarkable achievement‘ but far from unpredictable. The Vietnam war, however, had revealed an extraordinary power of resistance‘ that nobody had expected from the Vietnamese people.

Except the French who had to run away from there.  Would the South Vietnamese be able to keep out the North Vietnamese Communists? No. One eighth of the population had to run away. 

This isn‘t a matter of technology – it‘s just plain human courage and it takes your breath away‘.

The boat people showed courage. If they survived, they did well.  

The chair of the interview panel now asks the obvious question: ‗Are you a communist?‘ Siddhartha‘s reply that one did not need to be a communist to admire Vietnamese resistance

to Vietnamese Communism?  

is obviously not adequate and he is asked to leave.

 Because he is a shit candidate for a job in the private sector. 

The viewer, however, is convinced in the next scene that Siddhartha is not a communist. Sitting despondently at a tea shop after the interview, Siddhartha is accosted by an old political friend who reminds him of his activism during his college-days and asks him to come and work for the party‘ again.

i.e. kill Congress supporters then mix their blood with rice and forcibly feed it to their mothers till they go stark staring mad.  

Entirely uninterested, Siddhartha turns his face away and the acquaintance‘s soothing baritone voice is drowned out by Siddhartha‘s angry thoughts.

Stupid thoughts. Emigrate already, you cretin! 

The third ideological option available to him – mainstream Indian nationalism

i.e. joining the IAS 

– is excluded immediately after this encounter. Slinking into one of the fashionable ‗English‘ cinemas of central Calcutta, Siddhartha is confronted with a government newsreel showing images of a smiling Indira Gandhi and proclaiming the greatness of the 1970-71 budget and simply closes his eyes and settles down for a snooze.

Not a wank? Sad.  

But politics cannot be excluded so easily. As was often the case in Calcutta then, a bomb, planted by Maoists or their adversaries, goes off within the cinema and along with everybody else, the drowsy Siddhartha rushes out on to the street. In the melee, his watch falls from his wrist and stops. He takes it to a repair shop and is told that the balance wheel is broken. The broken watch sums up the lack of fit between Siddhartha, his nation, his age and his city.

HMT had been producing (shitty) watches since about 1962. The broken watch doesn't symbolize shit. 

Apart from his obvious disillusionment with the different brands of politics, he is also shocked by the ease with which his old friends have succumbed to various degrees of immorality and how his own sister is ready to sell out to whatever capitalist opportunities are available.

She is prepared to work for a living as a receptionist. She doesn't object to getting a modelling contract. How shocking!  

Virtually nothing about present-day India or Calcutta appeals to him and when he sees a group of American hippies marvelling over a cow and imagining India to be some spiritual haven, he can scarcely hide his disbelief.

He doesn't say 'Moo!' & produce plenty of dung. Sad.  

Pushed into a corner by his own personality and his society, Siddhartha ultimately breaks free by doing something so self-destructive that he has to leave Calcutta and the woman he has just fallen in love with.

He is a loser. Then he loses.  

An ambiguous ending, combining a Hindu funeral chant with the call of a mysterious bird

Maeterlinck's blue bird? 

that Siddhartha had heard in childhood and has been looking for throughout the film, suggests that he may well have recovered his soul but only by sacrificing his worldly prospects and personal happiness.

Medical student loses his Daddy. How will he finance his medical education? He won't. He is a loser. 

In this India, 'struggle‘ had no meaning and the fruits of independence, it seemed, were as sour as Indranath had feared they would be.

Also, film-making would have no meaning- unless it was entertaining & made money.  

Spectres of the Raj Despite his deepening doubts about the Indian nation, Ray‘s anti-colonial attitude never weakened significantly.

It was never strong. Moreover, it was irrelevant. Bengal had been ruled by elected leaders since he was 16. Famine & ethnic cleansing was the result.  

This is often more evident in his stories. In a 1987 science-fiction tale, for instance, the protagonist Professor Shonku has just developed a computerized device that can communicate with spirits. The first spirit he summons is of Siraj-ud-Daula, the last independent Nawab of Bengal, and the only question the spirit is asked concerns the Black Hole incident. Did Siraj really order the inevitable death of so many British people by imprisoning them in a tiny room? The spirit of Siraj replies unequivocally that he hadn‘t known anything about the incident and the British had concoted the story simply to discredit him. ‗Spirits do not lie‘, writes a relieved Shonku in his diary, ‗and it was a great vindication‘.

If Siraj didn't do it, some minion of his did. Why didn't he catch the fellow & string him up? He had 'command responsibility'.  

The Raj is often presented in Ray‘s stories through ghosts but the story I want to discuss in detail, ‗First Class Kamra‘ (First Class Compartment), is only seemingly a ghost story. 

Ghost stories can be entertaining. Ray was against entertainment.  

A rich man called Ranjan Kundu, travelling by train from Raipur in Central India to his hometown Calcutta in 1970, is delighted that by some miracle, he has got a spacious, British-era first-class compartment.

They had been taken out of service in 1955. 

A fervent Anglophile like the Rai Bahadur of Kanchanjangha, Kundu resents the disappearance of these old luxuries in independent India  and we hear much about his views on the decline of India since the departure of the British. Calcutta was now a mess – the telephones didn‘t work, the public transport was unbearably crowded and life had become nasty and brutish. Returning after a visit to London, Kundu had exclaimed, ‗the British know how to live, know the value of a well-regulated lifestyle, know what civic sense means‘.

Sengoopta lives in London. It isn't great, but it isn't utterly shit either. Still, there are way too many darkies & the place stinks of curry. 

No wonder, then, that Kundu is delighted to get his Raj-era compartment and to add to his pleasure, he can travel in lordly solitude because his friend, Pulakesh Sarkar, who was supposed to accompany him, cannot ultimately come. In sheer joy, he simply strolls around the compartment for a few minutes and then, having finished a rather Bengali supper of luchi and vegetables (whilst sighing for the chicken curry, rice and custard pudding that used to be served by the railway caterers in British days), he curls up with a book and drifts off to sleep. Waking up when the train stops at a station, Kundu is startled to find another passenger in the compartment. Bathed in the dim glow of the blue reading lamp, a white man sat in the berth facing him, drinking whisky. The moment he notices Kundu, he barks: ‗You there! Get out and leave me alone! I refuse to travel with a nigger‘.

Indians, if properly dressed, had always been permitted to travel first class. Moreover, if you had reserved a first class compartment, you got the Railway staff to eject anyone else who might be sitting in it.  

Kundu had never fully believed stories of British mistreatment of Indians during the Raj and he finds it incredible that he was being called a nigger by an Englishman on Indian soil in 1970. But maybe, he thinks, it was only because the man was drunk, and calmly points out to him that India had been independent for twenty-five years and Englishmen were now expected to address Indians politely.6 Exploding in laughter, his co-passenger asks when India became free. Upon hearing the date, he whips out a revolver and, introducing himself as Major Davenport, rages: ‘You‘re not just a nigger, you‘re insane. Do you know what year this is?     ?1932. That loincloth-clad leader of yours is trying to cause trouble, but no matter how much you lot dream of independence, it will never become reality‘.

Actually,  it could have become reality in 1924. In 1931, the Prime Minister clarified that Dominion status was what the Round Table Conferences were working toward. 

Cowering in a corner, Kundu muses that if only his hot-tempered, patriotic friend Pulakesh had been with him, he would surely have taught this crazy Englishman a lesson, gun or no gun. He also recalls a story he had heard long ago of an army man, also named Major Davenport, who, in the days of the Raj, had actually been killed by a ‗native‘ whom he had tried to evict from his compartment. But Kundu lacks that kind of courage and finds himself promising Davenport that he will get out at the next station. Davenport drinks on, occasionally muttering ‗dirty nigger, dirty nigger‘, but Kundu, exhausted by the encounter and inured to the abuse, dozes off. When he wakes, it‘s daytime and the compartment is empty. Kundu breathes a deep sigh of relief, assuming that his tormentor had been a ghost – maybe of that same Davenport who had been killed years ago, perhaps in that very same compartment. Returning to Calcutta, Kundu keeps mum about his terrifying experience but his friends gradually notice that he had lost much of his fondness for the British Raj. Ten years go by and finally, one evening Kundu tells his patriotic friend Pulakesh about the incident. The latter reveals with a chuckle that the whole thing had been a practical joke conceived to liberate Kundu from his delusions about the British. Upon seeing the old first-class compartment and also recalling the story of Major Davenport, Pulakesh had immediately thought of the trick and claiming to be unable to travel with his friend, had got into the adjoining compartment. The moustache had been a bit of cotton wool from his first-aid box, the whisky was borrowed from a 23 fellow-passenger and the gun was a toy belonging to that passenger‘s child. The rest, he says, was done by the dim blue light and Kundu‘s imagination.

If a Bengali is your friend, you have no need for an enemy. I suppose that's the reason Bengalis want to be ruled by foreigners from distant lands.  

Once again, the narrator is as apparently neutral as the narrator of Kanchanjangha. Kundu‘s reasons for missing the Raj are far from irrational and listed without the slightest sarcasm. The nationalist side, represented by Pulakesh Sarkar, wins the debate not by listing the ‗fruits of independence‘ but by physically staging a particular aspect of life during the Raj.

No. It stages a fantasy.  

The practical joke demonstrates that one does not need to evaluate the achievements of independent India to oppose the Raj:

Why oppose something which ceased to exist long ago?  

all the clean cities or firm governance in the world cannot make up for the absence of freedom and dignity.

Nor can freedom & dignity make up for the entire place smelling like shit.  

Beyond Mainstream Nationalism Despite such statements on colonialism, Ray, during this period, could not regain his old Nehruvian faith in the nation.

You can't regain what you never had.  

Nor, however, could he find a better alternative until his very last film Agantuk (The Stranger, 1991). The film was based on one of Ray‘s own stories for children, albeit greatly expanded and embellished.

Bibhuti's Apu goes on adventures to far-away lands. His Rider Haggard like stories set in Africa have been turned into box office hits. Ray does not get that it is places the anthropologist has visited which are interesting. His returning to Bengal to scold everybody is not interesting at all. His family thinks he has returned to make sort of property claim.  

A mysterious man suddenly visits a middleclass Bengali family, claiming to be an uncle who had disappeared long ago. Having travelled the world and made a reputation as an anthropologist, he has now returned home for a brief halt before moving on again. Unsure about his identity and motivations, his relatives treat him with suspicion and after an unpleasant confrontation with a family friend, the uncle goes away to Santiniketan, where he is followed by his embarrassed relatives. They find him, not in Tagore‘s university, nor in the middle-class neighbourhoods around the university, but in a nearby village, consorting with Santal tribals and drinking their home-brewed liquor, hanriya.

Sadly, a 'Santal tribal' is now President of India. Mamta & Mahua are not pleased.  

Instead of expatiating on the simplicity or the primitive charm of the tribals, he lectures his niece and her husband on their patriotism.

Bengalis live to scold.  

The ultimate distinction of the Santals, for him, is that they fought the British long before anybody else in India. The allusion, of course, is to the great ‗Santal Rebellion‘ of 1855-56 against oppressive and corrupt Hindu (usually Bengali) moneylenders and traders but also, subsidiarily, the British government.

The Santhals had arrived in the Parganas from 1790 to 1820. They were good fighters and were able to assert property rights in the lands to which they had recently immigrated (after a big famine in their own ancestral land). The Brits had promoted their migration into Birbhum etc. Thus the Santhals in Shantiniketan had only arrived circa 1800.  

Although the Santal insurrection was far from exclusively anti-British

It was a struggle for land. They won. Get over it.  

and pervaded, moreover, by millenarian and supernatural elements that Ray would have disdained in his early years, the anthropologist uncle is convinced that it was India‘s first war of independence.

Because he is as stupid as shit. The fact is the Santhal ancestral Chota Nagpur area only came under direct British control in the 1830s. There was considerable reform in response to disaffection amongst the indigenous people.  

Although supposedly ‗uncivilized‘, the santals‘ patriotism was worth far more to him than the modernist nationalism of urban Indians.

Santhals speak a Munda language. Clearly, this gives them first right to territory traditionally Bengali speaking.  

As Prathama Banerjee has demonstrated, the Santals have traditionally been used by the Bengali middle classes as ‗primitive‘ foils against whom they have constructed their self-image as ‗advanced‘, an image that was in part born of their own subjugation by the even more ‗advanced‘ British.

Santhals, like Britishers, looked down on the feeble Bengali. Brahmins like Mamta & Mahua are telling President Murmu to fuck off back where she came from.  

In his final film, Ray sought to dismantle this ‗politics of time‘, portraying the ‗primitives‘, who had gained the least from the creation of the modern Indian state, as the earliest and most genuine patriots, whilst ‗civilized‘ Calcuttans were presented as shallow, smug and narrowminded.

Anything and anyone is better than a Bengali. The whole Universe was only created as a stick for Bengalis to beat Bengalis with.  

Interestingly, the Santals were not portrayed in Agantuk with any of the eroticized exoticism so characteristic of modernist primitivism and which, indeed, had been prominent in Ray‘s own earlier film Aranyer DinRatri.

Birsa Munda was the big Santhal hero. The state of Jharkhand was created on his birth anniversary.  

There was a whole new tendency in Ray‘s final film to question the value of ‗civilization‘, ‗science‘ and ‗progress‘ that revealed how far the director had outgrown his early Nehruvian tendencies.

He understood that he wasn't the Indian Bergman. He was a primitive ethnographer with a side-line in scolding.  

Had he, however, moved beyond Rabindranath Tagore, to whom he was supposedly linked by profound intellectual, ideological and emotional bonds?

His Uncle directed Tagore's only venture into film. Then, Nitin Bose invented play-back singing thus giving Indian Cinema its killer app. In the South, 'Reel Society' took over 'Real Society'. In Bengal, Cinema turned to shit.  

The very theme of the film – the meaning and value of civilization – echoes Tagore‘s famous address on the occasion of his eightieth birthday, ‗Sabhhyatar Sankat‘ (Crisis in Civilization) but the Tagoreanism of Agantuk is not the conventional Tagoreanism of the Bengali middle classes.

Fuck would stupid Bengalis know about civilization? If you aren't productive & can't defend yourself, you aren't a civilization. You are some sort of parasitic entity.  

The climactic scenes of the film occur near Santiniketan but not in it, and its protagonists are the Santals, not the refined Bengalis who come to study at Tagore‘s university or the aging Calcuttans who come to spend their retirement near it. At the end of his career, the denizens of the poverty-stricken villages of tribal India

relatively recent immigrants. 

seemed to Ray to be better representatives of Tagorean values than the comfortable bourgeoisie of Calcutta, or, for that matter, the power-brokers of Delhi.

We get it. Tagorean values are shit. If your life is shitty- that's what you have.  

But on the fundamental point of Indian independence, Ray remained unmoved and he became increasingly bitter in his final years about the contemporary West‘s pornographic interest in Indian poverty.

The West had a pornographic interest in people with hot bods & huge wangs. Some may have pretended that they cared about starving darkies but they didn't really.  

This bitterness was probably reinforced by allegations by film-star Nargis Dutt and others in the 1980s that Ray had built his international career by peddling images of Indian poverty. Ray‘s response to this controversy involved making as stark a film on Indian poverty and social oppression as Sadgati (Deliverance, 1981)

Which was shit. 

and simultaneously opposing Western, neo-colonial attempts to exploit those same subjects. It is well-known, for instance, that Ray opposed the film City of Joy (1992), which, directed by Roland Joffé and based on a Dominique Lapierre novel, depicted the brutalization of the poor in Calcutta.

It was shit despite starring Patrick Swayze.  More porn, less poverty is what the box office said. 

 Such Western attempts to ‗sell‘ Indian poverty

Louis Malle's 'Phantom India'? It didn't make a lot of money.  

were at the heart of Robertsoner Ruby (Robertson‘s Ruby), Ray‘s final story about detective Prodosh Chandra Mitra (known to all as Feluda), which was published posthumously in 1992.

Strangely, Ray wasn't dead when he wrote it. 

Feluda, his cousin Tapes (Topshe) and the mystery writer Lalmohan Ganguly, are on their way to Birbhum for a vacation

because Hell was sold out- right? 

and run into two British friends who have come to visit India. One, Peter Robertson, has come to India to return an enormous ruby that an ancestor of his had looted from a nawab‘s palace during the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857.

He could have handed it over to the Indian High Commission in Aldwych. 

His friend, Tom Maxwell, is a photographer descended from an indigo-planter who, in the nineteenth century, had owned a factory near today‘s Santiniketan and whose brutality toward Indians was legendary at the time.

It was legendary because it wasn't true.  

In the course of conversation, Feluda finds that whilst Robertson genuinely likes India, Maxwell is interested only in the country‘s poverty. ‗Poverty‘, he declares, ‗is more photogenic than prosperity‘.

Only in the sense that turds are more photogenic than pictures of cake.  

In Birbhum, he almost gets into trouble with some rough youths when, without seeking anybody‘s permission, he tries to take photographs of corpses being cremated. He is saved by Feluda but when a police inspector warns him to be more respectful of Indian customs, Maxwell furiously responds: In these two days, I have seen how backward your country is. You haven‘t progressed an inch in these forty-five years. You still plough your fields with bullocks, human beings pull rickshaws in a city like Calcutta, entire families live on the pavements – you call these civilized? You may want to hide these things from the world but I am not going to play along. I shall expose the reality of independent India with my photographs.

Genuine British people actually talk like that. I recall meeting Nicholas Maugham- 14th Earl of Maughamshire. He said 'you faltu desis are chewing paan only. Why you not spitting also? Viceroy Curzon tried to teach you spitting but you budhoos not learning. I exposes it to whole world by uploading video to Youtube.'  

75 Not cowed by Maxwell‘s rant, the inspector responds: ‗Aren‘t you going to note the many areas in which our nation has progressed?‘ The list he goes on to provide is naïve, even banal. ‗We are capable of building spacecraft‘, asserts the inspector. ‗You must have noticed the profusion of consumer goods being  made in our country. Clothes, medicines, cosmetics, electronic equipment – India is producing it all. Why do you want to see only the poverty? Is there nothing deserving of criticism in your country?

Yes. There are too many darkies milling around the place. Look at Rishi Sunak! 

But Maxwell is not to be persuaded. ‗Don‘t compare the two‘, he fumes. ‗India‘s independence is a hoax. I shall prove that with my camera. You need to be ruled today exactly in the ways our forefathers ruled you fifty years ago‘.

Also, you stupid desis are not talking Bengali properly. I teaching you Shuddho Bangla Bhasha.  

On a hot night, Maxwell tells the inspector, his great-great grandfather had woken up in a sweat, discovering that his punkah-puller had fallen asleep on the job. The servant was duly kicked to death and this, says the younger Maxwell, was the right way to treat Indians.

Also, if police inspector turns up, he should be thoroughly sodomized.  

Further on in the story, Maxwell is beaten up and the ruby, which was in his keeping, is stolen – it was the inspector who turns out to have been responsible. It is also revealed that the servant killed by Maxwell‘s ancestor had been the inspector‘s own greatgrandfather. Having uncovered it all, Feluda does not, however, pursue the case. In a significant departure from the strict moral norms that Ray always maintained in his detective stories, Feluda tells the inspector: ‗I would have done the same in your situation … you are innocent‘.

So, Ray was a shithead. He didn't care if Bengalis knew this. It was only Whites he was trying to bamboozle. The only reason he didn't make blockbuster movies like RRR (2022) or Devil: The British Secret Agent (2023) was because he thought it a sin to make an entertaining film. 

Whether in Kanchanjangha or in ‗First Class Kamra‘, the debates did not turn on what free India had achieved or failed to achieve; they turned on the unconditional value of freedom. Ray‘s stance in those works remind one of what the one-time revolutionary M N Roy had written in 1950: ‗Freedom is not an instrumental value. It is not a means to something; it is an end in itself‘.

So is Slavery or taking it up the arse from all and sundry.  

By the time of Agantuk and Robertsoner Ruby, however, Ray was

dying 

trying to evolve a new rhetoric that would retain his old anti-colonialism but be more specifically rooted in the reality of independent India.

being dead may indeed be considered a new rhetoric- thinks nobody at all.  

That quest for a new rhetoric, however, led Ray to a defence of the achievements of the  Indian state in Robertsoner Ruby,

Ray's new rhetoric had to do with scolding Whitey as well as Bengalis.  

which, apart from being banal, was far from compatible with the reconsideration of patriotism, modernity and nationalism in his last film.

Sadly, Thirty years later, Brahmin ladies like Mahua & Mamta are scolding Santhal ladies.  

‘Critical Openness’ and National Improvement Ray‘s consistently anti-colonial stance never interfered with his cultural cosmopolitanism or his readiness to criticize various aspects of indigenous life and culture. He never saw much worth emulating in Indian cinema, for instance, and often declared that he had learnt much more from the work of European and American filmmakers.

Only in so far as they made boring shite.  

This was entirely in line with family tradition.

No. Nitin Bose made plenty of Bombay blockbusters.  

Upendrakishore as well as Sukumar Ray had supported the swadeshi movement but rejected the idea that Indian artists should practise a swadeshi art that eschewed European naturalism. The rules of art, they argued, were universal and particular styles did not belong exclusively to particular nations or races. Sukumar Ray declared that ‗true artists created art to satisfy their inner artistic compulsion, not to produce ―Indian art‖, ―Greek art‖, etc‘.

Films are part of the entertainment business- not the being boring & stupid business.  

Indians had every right to practise naturalistic, supposedly Western art – indeed, it was a national duty to learn from Western techniques when they were genuinely superior.

The Brits had set up an Art College in Calcutta.  E.B. Havell championed an indigenous style exemplified by Abanindranath Tagore. It was through Havell, Abanindranath & Okakura that Will Rothenstein got to know Tagore. Incidentally, he also helped Uday Shanker (elder brother of Ravi) get his start as a dancer & impressario. 

This cultural cosmopolitanism has often been misinterpreted as simple anglophilia. Ashis Nandy, for example, has declared that the Rays were ‗proud of their British connection‘ and ‗played the civilizing role demanded of them by the modern institutions introduced by the Raj into the country‘.

Nothing wrong in that.  

The cosmopolitanism of the Ray family, although capacious, was far more rooted in an Indian identity than Nandy appreciates.

Nandy was a Christian. Ray's family were Brahmo or Hindu.  

As Upendrakishore had put it, he felt a ‗legitimate and affectionate pride in all that is noble in our national 29 life and tradition‘ but he was also filled with ‗sincere regret for our shortcomings and eagerness to remove them‘. It was his self-critical and selfimproving impulse that drove Upendrakishore to ‗advocate the study of European art as a means of improving the art of my country‘.

But this was already happening. Kipling's dad was brought to Bombay by Parsi entrepreneurs.  

Satyajit Ray would not have dissented from this view and this ‗critical openness‘, as Amartya Sen has pointed out, was also characteristic of Rabindranath Tagore.

Scolding isn't criticism.  

They were opposed to the serious asymmetry of power‘ involved in colonial rule

All rule is asymmetric. So is death. Oppose death by all means.  

but were always eager to embrace useful or valuable aspects of Western culture.

Like not being dead.  

Also, Satyajit Ray recognized that individuals differed.

Women don't have penis. Sad.  

The unpleasant British characters in his stories were usually balanced by an example or two of their decent and humane compatriots. There was a Peter Robertson for most Tom Maxwells.

Both were too stupid to have ever actually existed. If you want to return a looted treasure to a foreign country, you contact their Embassy. 

This individualism could even lead Ray to portray a colonialist with some sympathy, as with the conscience-stricken figure of General James Outram in Shatranj ke Khilari.

Outram said 'Vovi'- I have vowed- (I have Oudh) just as Napier said 'Peccavi' (I have Sindh). For Premchand, or, indeed, Sunni Muslims, the Nawabs were wastrels whose lavishing of money on Najaf & Kerbala created a problem for Iraq which continues to this day.  

But despite the humanizing touches, Outram as well as Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, whose kingdom of Awadh Governor General Lord Dalhousie was intent on grabbing, both represented negative forces for Ray. In this respect, his views had not changed significantly over the years since ‗Bilamson‘ and ‗Fossil‘. Despite Wajid and Outram being portrayed with sympathy in Shatranj, neither was considered to represent a progressive tendency.

Muslims are fucking horrible. Brits are better.  

Nor were the two chess-playing noblemen who refused to get involved in the political tussle between Wajid and the Company. The only spark of patriotism was seen in the peasant boy Kalloo, who lamented that the British had been allowed to annex Awadh without a single shot being fired and who, as critic Ujjal Chakraborty has rightly pointed out, seems to hold ‗the seed of the Great Indian Mutiny inside him‘.

It was a miserable failure.  

‗I was portraying two negative forces, feudalism and colonialism‘, Ray explained when he was accused by critics of being soft on colonialism in Shatranj. ‗You had to condemn both Wajid and Dalhousie. This was the challenge. I wanted to make this condemnation interesting by bringing in certain plus points of both the sides‘.

The plus point to Wajid was his patronage of the Arts. Shatranj should have had a dynamite song & dance numbers. The genius of Birju Maharaj was wasted. Indeed, all the actors were under-utilized.  

This remark illuminates not only the characterizations in one particular film but a key feature of Ray‘s style, especially where ideological questions are involved. Ray populated his films and stories with rounded characters who were given the freedom to speak freely to the viewer or reader, but, as in Kanchanjangha or ‗First Class Kamra‘, this liberty did not undermine the overall ideological stance of the work.

No. Ray was an auteur. Nobody had any freedom. Since Ray wanted to be a boring shithead, he produced boring shite.  

Debates and conflicts abound in Ray‘s corpus but those exchanges are not left open-ended. One side is always endorsed, albeit not necessarily to the accompaniment of fanfare, and when colonialism is in question, it is invariably the anti-colonial side. And the anti-colonial side, for Ray, is usually also the anti-feudal and, later in his career, the anti-bourgeois side.

The proletariat wouldn't watch his shite.  

It is wholly inaccurate to argue, as so many commentators have done over the years, that Ray refused to ‗take sides either with characters or ideologies‘.

He was against Hindus & anything which might make India less of a shithole.  

Some sixty years after Pather Panchali, it is time for critics to reassess Ray‘s work without relying on such simplistic, inadequate and even tendentious formulations.

No. It is time to admit Ray was stupid & made shitty films. Still, he always broke even or made a profit. That's an achievement in itself.