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| Vol. 4, Issue 5 May 2012 |
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Books |
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Review |
How Do you Write When You
Write About India?
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| The impossibility of explaining
gargantuan nations to a popular readership |
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Published : 1 February 2011 |
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| F |
EW PLACES MAKE ME HAPPIER than
a bookshop. I could spend hours each
week—and I often have—lingering in the
aisles, looking for new writers or thumbing
through old favourites. I tend to hover near the
shelves devoted to non-fiction, where I am often
struck by the growing number of 'country
books'—those titles, often written by journalists
or |
novelists, that aim to describe and explain an entire nation to a popular audience.
If you’re standing in a bookstore in New York
or London, most of these books will be about
foreign countries. (In a bookshop here, most are
about India, but we’ll come to that in a moment.)
Zones of conflict are always big business, especially
if the country in question is home to contingents of American and British soldiers, so one
finds innumerable books about the countries of
the Middle East, alongside a growing tally of
reports from the world’s rising economies, like
India, Russia and China.
In American bookshops, the so-called ‘China
book’ is in a category all its own—thanks, perhaps,
to the size and complexity of the subject
and the growing sense that Beijing presents the
only remaining rival to Washington. But the
challenge facing a non-fiction writer whose subject
is 'China'—or 'India,' for that matter—is a
tall one. How do you capture the reality of such
enormous countries? How do you write about
politics, society, economics, ambition, justice
and all the other major questions that any writer
wants to tackle, without leaving anything out?
And how do you fit the results in a single book?
The first wave of China books tried to tackle
the rise of China; they were broad in scale, often
making major pronouncements on the future
success or failure of the country and its political
system. Two prominent examples of this sort of
‘Big China Book’ were the neoconservative writer
Gordon G Chang’s The Coming Collapse of China,
which predicted in 2001 that the Communist
Party would soon fall from power; and the British
former editor-in-chief of The Observer Will
Hutton’s The Writing on the Wall: China and the
West in the 21st Century (2007), which argued that
China’s ascendance would be rudely interrupted
unless it embraced “the economic and political
pluralism of the West.” China, of course, strode
merrily along, proving wrong tome after tome by
academics, journalists and analysts.
The Big China Book hasn’t gone away, but
it has been joined by a new wave of titles that
eschew sweeping vistas and bold pronouncements
in favour of a more granular view; works
of intellectual journalism that employ a more
diverse range of tools, whether intensive interviews,
ethnography and oral history, or archival
research, to provide richer and more detailed
accounts of smaller slices of Chinese life. These
have included Washington Post reporter Philip
Pan’s extraordinary investigation of how power
works in China, Out of Mao’s Shadow: The Struggle
for the Soul of a New China (2008); Wall Street Journal correspondent Leslie Chang’s Factory
Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China
(2008), an intimate account of rural-to-urban
migration that follows two young women working
in factory after factory in search of a better
life; Liao Yiwu’s brave and brilliant oral history
of the underprivileged, The Corpse Walker
(2008); and Will the Boat Sink the Water?: The
Life of China’s Peasants (2006), by Chen Guidi
and Wu Chuntao.
India, less mysterious and less threatening
to the West, has largely been spared the plague
of books making definitive pronouncements on
its future. Although interested readers can find
hundreds of academic titles about any aspect of
India’s present or past, the number of authors
writing general interest non-fiction about contemporary
India is still relatively small, given
the size and significance of the subject, though
their tribe is rapidly expanding. The big books
that have attempted to capture the whole of
India in a single volume in recent years could,
if crudely, be divided into three or four categories.
We have scholars and thinkers like Sunil
Khilnani (The Idea of India), Pratap Bhanu
Mehta (The Burden of Democracy) and Ramachandra
Guha (India After Gandhi); reporters and
analysts like the Financial Times correspondent
Edward Luce (In Spite of the Gods) and
Mira Kamdar (Planet India); and famous politicians
or corporate moguls turned philosopher-kings,
including Shashi Tharoor (The Elephant,
the Tiger and the Cell Phone), Gurcharan Das
(India Unbound) and Nandan Nilekani (Imagining
India).
Most of these books have been broad in scope,
but as with the second wave of China books described
above, there seems to be a new tranche
of India titles on the way, shifting the focus from
the general to the particular and yet still aiming
at a general audience. To name just a few: William
Dalrymple’s Nine Lives, published last year,
investigated religious experience; Siddhartha
Deb’s forthcoming The Beautiful and the Damned
will explore wealth and poverty in the new India;
Palash Krishna Mehrotra’s upcoming The Butterfly Generation will focus on young urban Indians.
| JUSTINE STODDART |
 |

Patrick French: Writing the tangled story of contemporary India. |
As its title might suggest, Patrick French’s India: A Portrait—An Intimate Biography of 1.2
Billion People takes the form of a broad survey,
but its most powerful sections come when it
shifts from a wide canvas to the detailed stories
of individual Indians. The heart of French’s
book is the tangled story of India’s contemporary
politics and the country’s rapid economic
transformation in the past two decades.
One of the main critiques of economic liberalisation
in India has been that although the
reforms provided economic opportunities to
millions and created a new middle class and a
new elite, hundreds of millions remained left
behind. The most visible sign of this incomplete
economic miracle has been the crisis in the agricultural
sector, painfully visible in the shocking
epidemic of farmer suicides (now immortalised
in the figure of Natha, the protagonist in Anusha Rizvi’s Peepli Live). The indisputable
scale of the crisis led the government to introduce
the landmark National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act—one of the most laudable applications
of John Maynard Keynes’ idea of government
spending as a force for economic stimulus.
French uses Keynes’ personal engagement
with India—including his stint at the India Office in London, his early writings on India and
the effects of his ideas on India’s first generation
of policymakers—to tell the backstory of
the nation’s economy. Jawaharlal Nehru and
other leaders of independent India believed,
with good reason, that the draining of India’s
resources by the colonial administration had
impoverished India. “They disliked the way that for nearly a century India had been importing
large quantities of foreign manufactured goods
rather than making them indigenously,” French
writes, “and Nehru himself thought that international
trade was a ‘whirlpool of economic imperialism’.”
But after two decades of independence,
India’s economic problems were not going
away: the new order evolved into a labyrinthine
and corrupt bureaucracy, and even the most
ambitious state-run enterprises were making
colossal losses.
French brings alive C Rajagopalachari’s infamous
phrase, ‘licence- and permit-raj’, as he tells
the story of the Madras-based scooter manufacturer,
TV Sundram Iyengar. The industrialist’s
grandson regales French with tales of frustration
from the company’s dealings with the Indian
bureaucracy prior to liberalisation. “For foreign
collaboration,” he says, “we had to prove it
was justified: how much it would cost, how long
it would last, whether expatriates were needed,
then how much they would be paid. Each stage—
each permission—took us from six months to a
year. We had to set up an office in Delhi to apply
to the ministries and my father would visit Delhi from Madras twice every month.”
The beginnings of the country’s economic
transformation came at a tumultuous moment
for India: Rajiv Gandhi had been assassinated;
the first Gulf War had displaced thousands of
Indians working in Kuwait and interrupted
their remittances home; oil prices had risen;
India’s foreign exchange reserves had plummeted,
and the country was close to bankruptcy.
French quotes Manmohan Singh, whose chance
appointment as finance minister was key to the
passage of the reforms, looking back on the accomplishment:
“We got the government off the
backs of the people of India, particularly off the
backs of India’s entrepreneurs.”
Though the economic boom has filled the pages
of daily newspapers with cheerleading coverage
of the captains of Indian industry, there
are surprisingly few detailed accounts of Indian
business. The most-read book on big business in
India—unavailable here until recently, thanks
to legal threats from its subject—was Hamish
McDonald’s volume on the rise of Dhirubhai
Ambani, The Polyester Prince. (It has now been
updated, very badly re-titled—as Ambani &
Sons—and finally published by Roli Books.) But
the Ambanis and the Tatas represent the old
elite. They have grown immeasurably wealthier
in the past two decades, to be sure, but the tales
of the country’s latter-day Carnegies and Rockefellers—
its younger robber barons—are yet to
be properly told. Everyone cites figures from
Forbes that describe our bumper crop of billionaires,
but how much do we really know about
these new oligarchs?
French deploys his prodigious skills as a biographer
to tell the story of new money in India,
particularly in his excellent portrait of Sunil
Bharti Mittal, the owner of Airtel and one of
India’s 69 billionaires. French shows us a man
from a small town in Punjab with a small-town
college degree who began his career making
bicycle parts in the 1970s with an initial investment
of 70,000 rupees. Mittal began importing
portable generators from Japan in the early
1980s, and then chanced on an early model of a
push-button phone at a Taipei business exhibition
and began importing them to India as well;
in 1995, he launched Bharti Airtel, now worth
some 8 billion dollars. To be sure, Mittal’s father
was a member of Parliament, and that would
certainly have helped obtain those generator
licences. But the scale of his enterprise and success
could only have been possible after 1991.
Yet, despite the opening up of new worlds, old
barriers and injustices remain throughout India.
Although a person like Manmohan Singh, who
arrived in India as a Partition refugee, lived in poverty for much of his early life and found himself
in Cambridge only with the help of a scholarship,
could eventually rise to be the prime
minister of the country, the most visible and
the youngest faces in the Indian Parliament are
still men and women whose parents, in-laws or
other family members were, or are, politicians.
French’s detailed statistical survey of Parliament
finds that 37.5 percent of Congress MPs
have a family connection; the figure for the opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party is 11.2 percent,
despite the party’s shorter history. “India’s next
general election was likely to return not a Lok
Sabha, a house of [the] people, but a Vansh Sabha,
a house of dynasty,” French laments.
Then there are the troubles of the people
whom these electoral princes represent. For every
success story like Mittal’s, there are many, many
more tales of despair. The crushing inequalities
among the rich and the poor remain. According
to a group of researchers at Oxford University
who prepared a new measurement of global
poverty for the United Nations Development
Programme, eight north Indian states—including
Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and West
Bengal—are home to 420 million people living
in “acute poverty,” more than in the 26 poorest
African nations combined. To this less-than-encouraging
picture could be added the conflicts
that have cost thousands of lives and still refuse
to go away: the Maoist rebellion, the struggle in
Kashmir, the insurgency in the Northeast, and
a number of less explosive but equally serious
social and political problems ranging from overpopulated
cities to the poor state of education
and healthcare—and scores of little-known but
important movements of citizens seeking justice
and equal citizenship.
Sociologists, economists, historians and anthropologists
have been telling these stories, but
this scholarly literature doesn’t exactly reach a
wide readership. The rise of a new and more immersive
journalism, which concentrates its attention
on these “smaller” slices of the pie—the
issues and conflicts that affect millions of people
but are consigned to the margins in the big-picture
accounts—holds out the potential to provide
a richer and sharper picture of the country.
May a hundred new books bloom.
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