HomeNewsTrendsCurrent AffairsIs Pankaj Mishra oblivion to new India?

Is Pankaj Mishra oblivion to new India?

The real issue is not Modi, but a western fear that India, may, after all, start rising on the world stage. Mishra's views are intended to pander to western fears of their inevitable decline as China, and now India, offer signs of revival.

October 27, 2014 / 16:56 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

One has to hand it to The New York Times. If you can’t be overtly racist and negative on India, the next best thing to do is to get a disgruntled Indian intellectual, someone cut off from his roots, to do the job. No one can then accuse you of racism.

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This, in short, is the story of Pankaj Mishra, the much-acclaimed author and general hater-in-chief of anything Indian. In a recent article in the NYT, Mishra, while noting (correctly, in my opinion) the typical Indian envy of the west while simultaneously craving western approval, completely loses it and says the rise of Narendra Modi and the traditional right is something more dangerous than ISIS. He writes: "Largely subterranean until it erupts, this ressentiment of the West among thwarted elites can assume a more treacherous form than the simple hatred and rejectionism of outfits such as Al Qaeda, the Islamic State and the Taliban.”

One is not planning to discuss all of Mishra’s rants here (for that, read here and here), but two points are worth making.