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HomeElections 2024Lok Sabha Election 2024West BengalCulture goes out of politics: Disintegration of bhadralok in Bengal

Culture goes out of politics: Disintegration of bhadralok in Bengal

Today, instead of writers and commentators, it is television hosts and sportspersons who are in the forefront of politics in West Bengal.

May 17, 2024 / 11:47 IST
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Voters standing in queue in West Bengal (Representative)

Bengal’s famed bhadralok have gone silent; they are now without a voice, if they haven’t disappeared altogether. This section of the urban gentry who moved to cities after selling off their land and became writers, artists, teachers, and lawyers, wielded disproportionate influence on civil society and politics for most of the last century. When they spoke, everyone lent an ear. More than in any other part of India, the floating intelligentsia wielded enormous clout in Bengal. But not anymore.

With roots in the old landed gentry, this section of the intelligentsia, drawn mostly from the educated upper castes, was synonymous with Bengal’s social reforms, and progressive politics. They dominated the leadership of both the Congress and the Left. They commanded respect and ordinary people deferred to them. But the political mobilisation of the poor and the rise of the subaltern classes, which they themselves aided, slowly pushed them into irrelevance.

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Today, instead of writers and commentators, it is television hosts and sportspersons who are in the forefront. Behind the woman celebrities propped up by both the Trinamool and the BJP are muscle men with money power. Indeed, they form the organisational backbone of all parties.

“My feeling is that there is no homogenous bhadralok culture anymore,” says Neel Bhattacharya, a film critic. “The so called bhadralok samaj is divided not only politically, but also ideologically.”