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Transcript of Essays on Indias Working Class (EPW)
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BOOK REVIEW
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Essays on Indias Working Class
Kanchana Mahadevan
Working Class Movement in
India in the Wake of Globaliza-
tionis an anthology edited and
written by academics and activists Jose
George, Manoj Kumar and Dharmendra
Ojha mapping the evolution of the work-
ing-class movement in India. An outcomeof a seminar that was conducted in Sep-
tember 2009 by the Department of Civics
and Politics, University of Mumbai, the
book is dedicated to the eminent commu-
nist leader M K Pandhe (who passed
away in August 2011). Pandhe has con-
tributed a foreword and an article.
The books unique position of being
between the worlds of academia and
activism enables it to track the concept of
class as a point of departure for organ-
ised resistance from the period of its
emergence in colonial India to its devel-
opment in post-Independence India. It
also engages with the challenges con-
fronting such resistance in the era of
globalisation, characterised by privati-
sation and weak labour unions.
Some of the essays in the book also take
a critical look at some of the paradoxes
generated by organised labour in an era
that is dominated by informal, flexible
and contractual work. It engages with themethodological challenges for quantita-
tive research posed by taking class as an
analytical category in the social sciences.
It roots its empirical findings in the theo-retical insights of the Marxist legacy and
presents the reader with an alternative
reading of Indian history from the point
of view of peoples struggles.
The books introduction situates the
various articles against the backdrop of
the neo-liberal challenges facing the
working-class movement in India such
as contract work, voluntary retirement
schemes, declining organised labour and
welfare. It examines these specific issues
against the larger canvas of neo-liberal
states and globalisation in the post-
Soviet world.
In keeping with the link between the
global and the local, the introduction
shows how workers agitations in the
erstwhile Bombay Presidency arose
alongside the agitations against the
Tsars in Russia. Industrialisation in India
occurred during the colonial period
when factories of jute, cement and sugar
were set up in cities such as Bombay.Further, labour from the de-peasantised
rural areas entered the cities through
exploitative colonial policies to serve in
these factories. The working class also
bore the brunt of caste oppression.
Workers resisted low wages, long work-
ing hours and formed a collective soli-
darity by overcoming differences of reli-
gion, caste, region and language. These
organisations in turn forged the All India
Trade Union Congress (AITUC). Most of
the trade unions were dominated by
communists, though with resistance,
others also tried to acquire union posi-
tions. The essay delineates the increasingmomentum of this movement from the
1920sto the 1980s, as well as its waning
in the 1990swith the structural adjust-
ment programmes through the World
Trade Organisation, the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
The introduction thus covers some of
the key issues over 100 years of Indian
history through the lens of the working
class, which are followed through in the
rest of the five sections of the book.
A Wide Range of Issues
Part I deals with the emergence and
growth of the working-class movement in
India. In Part II, it takes a more theoretical
look at the ideological underpinnings of
the peoples movement in India. Part III
narrates the experiences of the working
class in the urban industrial sector. Part IV
is titled The Growth and Struggles
of the Working Class in Rural Areas,
while Part V is The Status of WorkingClass during Liberalization, Globaliza-
tion and Privatization.
Working Class Movement in India in the Wakeof Globalization edited by Jose George, Manoj Kumarand Dharmendra Ojha (New Delhi: Manohar), 2012;pp 470, Rs 1,295.
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This review discusses only a few of the
essays, though all the essays are note-
worthy. The essay by M K Pandhe analyses
the emergence of the trade union move-
ment in India from its origins in the unity
of the working class, to its fragmentation
in the contemporary globalised world.
V B Athreyas paper Workers Strugglesand Challenges Ahead elaborates the
relationship between the workers move-
ment and nationalist struggles. It also
examines its presence during the crises in
economic growth in 1960sand the 1970s.
In her paper in Part II, Working Class
and Insecurity Hypothesis, Anuradha
Kalhan examines the impact of flexi-
bility of work in the labour market with
special reference to countries under the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD), which include
the US, UKand India (where such flexi-
bility is the highest).
Vivek Monteiro looks at the experiences
of the unorganised sector to show how
they question the basic premises of neo-
liberalism. He opens up an important topic
in methodology through his critique of
the second National Labour Commission
study of the workforce, and suggests a
way of documenting labour in a scientific
manner so that the organisation of theunorganised sector becomes possible.
In Part III, one of the essays by Jose
George and Manoj Kumar takes stock
of the Kamani experiment of workers
participating in industrial management.
K Srinivasalu examines the challenges
faced by the handloom industry (and
the textile industry) in Andhra Pradesh
to keep itself going in the light of neo-
liberalism. P N Samant looks at the pos-
sibility of autonomy in trade unions, which
emerged as the face of political parties.
It refers to Datta Samants Kamgar
Aghadi as an instance of such autonomy
to a partial extent. M A Hussain and
C Nagaraja Rao delineate the resistance
of municipal workers engaged in scav-
enging jobs in Andhra Pradesh, against
their deplorable conditions of existence.
In Part V, the paper Trade Unions at
the Crossroads by B Venugopal takes
a critical look at trade unions (with
special reference to Kerala) during theneo-liberal period. He points out that in
recent times they have abdicated their
earlier constructive role and grass-roots
mobilisation to even oppose the struggles
waged by social movements such as
those of displaced communities for land.
He observes that in this the trade unions
play a pro-state role by viewing such
eviction as necessary for development.
Venugopal suggests a more comprehen-sive approach for trade unions in colla-
boration with social movements and the
unorganised sector.
Resistance of Labour
This book contributes in several ways
to the understanding of the complex
mechanism(s) of capitalism at local and
global levels, as well as labours resist-
ance. It situates its various studies of
working-class movements in India within
the global canvas from colonisation to
the neo-liberal post-Soviet world. It
meticulously shows the emergence of
left-wing trade unions in different parts of
India, such as Pondicherry, Bihar, Kerala
and Maharashtra through which one
can draw out the notion of a national
left culture.
Some of the essays elucidate the over-
lap between class and caste, which has
not been given prominence in theoreti-
cal discussions of the working class. Forinstance, Athreya points out how divisive
forces of caste and religion splinter the
working class and obstruct its political
consciousness (p 104); neo-liberalism
has thrived on such divisiveness. He sug-
gests that such obscurantism be rooted
out through education, which is one of the
tasks of a democratic movement (p 104).
K K Theckedaths essay, which revisits the
vibrant teachers movement in Bombay,
highlights how this movement has been
an ally (and can continue to be so) of
the labour movement through solidarity
with their struggles and through the
consciousness-raising activities by intel-
lectuals. He points to how education can
open up the possibility of an interface
between the Marxist approach and that
of Ambedkar (p 203).
Several contributions in the book ad-
dress other aspects of social life that
have not received adequate attention
from the left such as culture and ecology.Rural left mobilisation is effectively arti-
culated in terms of its difference with its
Gandhian counterpart. This is especially
important in the Indian context, where
the left has been perceived as indifferent
to and even antithetical to these aspects
of human life. By discussing the rela-
tionship between the left and other so-
cial movements, this book also touches
upon the extent to which trade unionpolitics in India can be insulated from
other political formations. Indeed, the
book indicates that it is precisely because
of the absence of such insulation that
the trade union movement itself has
been partially hijacked by the extreme
right. Moreover, it also takes a critical
look at the complacency and the pro-
establishment tone adopted by estab-
lished trade unions, which then have the
tendency to become anti-democratic.
This book illustrates how even seem-
ing intangibles such as knowledge(s),
psychologies and cultures are mediated
through the social relations generated
by capital. It shows that to comprehend
these intangibles one has to adopt the
Marxist framework. Consequently, this
anthology is an instance of how qualita-
tive research can be scientific or objec-
tive despite adopting a theoretical frame-
work and it shows the way for a huma-
nities curriculum that could integratetheory and practice.
However, despite these strengths this
book contains some oversights in its ana-
lyses of the relationship between working-
class movements and those striving for
social democracy such as womens strug-
gles, eradication of caste and those for
ecological balance. These oversights
range from glaring omissions to inade-
quate analyses. This anthology tends
to either assimilate all social relations
under class or compartmentalise them.
The challenges that have been posed by
movements of gender, caste and ecology
to class in the Indian context need to be
adequately engaged with.
What of the Womens Movements?
Womens contribution to the labour
movement is conspicuous by its absence
in this anthology. India is rife with
examples of womens active participa-
tion in the struggle for economic, socialand political rights from the colonial
times to the present. For instance, rural
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BOOK REVIEW
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and urban women have contributed to
the labour movement through leader-
ship and mass participation in the textile
industry, railways and agrarian work from
the colonial period to the present.
Labour movements have also contri-
buted to the struggle for womens rights.
Thus, womens participation in produc-tive labour in the public sphere and
reproductive labour in the domestic
domain has been pivotal to the labouring
classes and their struggle for freedom
and equality. Yet, the womens move-
ment also emerged as a struggle inde-
pendent of labour only because the latter
tended to emphasise the contribution of
men at the expense of women. Hence,
considering that the womens movement
is a social movement, its similarities,
differences and the affinities with the
labour movement need to be analysed in
an anthology such as this.
One of the most contentious issues that
the left movement needs to engage with is
the feminist critique of the class-oriented
approach as patriarchal (Hartmann 1997).
This critique is borne out by the decline
of women in leadership positions in left
unions and the lack of acknowledge-
ment of their contribution to labour.
Feminists have observed that this is
because labour is typically understood
as productive labour in the public sphere,
at the cost of domestic reproductive labour
(ibid). Alongside such a problematic
status given to women in the labourmovement, neo-liberalism continues to
target women and exploit the sexual di-
vision of labour to reinforce itself. Marxist
theory itself has not been indifferent to
gender issues, as the critique of the
bourgeois family by Marx and Engels
(1959: 24) or that of bourgeois feminism
by Luxemburg (1971: 216-22) reveals. A
discussion of the relationship between
the womens movement and the left
movement in this anthology could have
opened up these complexities.
What of Caste and Class?
The relationship between caste and
labour has been touched upon in some
of the essays (Athreya and Theckedath).
The contribution of dalits to the labour
movement in Kerala (Ramakumar) and
in Bihar (Kumar) have been brought out
at length. However, these essays assume
that caste relations conceal those of class
(Ramakumar: 340). The problem of caste
hierarchies persisting among working-
class people, despite the equality of class,
has not been adequately problematised.
Caste hierarchy is rooted in oppressive
Hindu religious and social practices, butit is not merely ideological as it has a
material dimension as well. Labouring
activities in India have been and continue
to be performed by those belonging to
underprivileged castes. An exclusive focus
on class tends to obscure this central
dimension of Indian social reality.
Moreover, despite their contribution
to labour and labour movements, dalit
voices are not heard adequately in these
contexts. Further, as the experiences of
many from underprivileged castes reveal,
the acquisition of economic rights has not
necessarily freed society from the scourge
of caste. Hence, one cannot assume that
class consciousness will automatically rid
society of caste discrimination, or that
the struggle against exploitative class
relations is identical to a similar struggle
for removal of caste inequality. Indeed,
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Recasting CasteFrom the Sacred to the ProfaneEdited byHira Singh
Recasting Casteexamines the intersectionof economic, political, and ideologicalcomponents of the caste system in historicalperspective, demonstrating that the castesystem is actually grounded in a hierarchy ofland rights and political power supported byreligious and secular ideology. The volumealso shows that mainstream sociologistsfocus on ritual homogeneity and drawattention away from intra-caste inequality,
thus portraying castes as internally undifferentiated. Singh illuminates intra-caste differentiation by locating the roots of caste in economic and politicalhierarchy. A significant finding of this book is that members of a castefail to unite for collective mobilization if their class interests diverge, whilemembers of different castes or sub-caste groups unite politically if theirclass interests converge.Such patterns of action dispel the misconceptionthat, in India, caste consciousness trumps class consciousness.
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Hindu SiritualitandVirtue PoliticsVasanthi Srinivasan
Hindu Sriritualit and Virtue Politicsanalyzes the writings of four thinkersS Radhakrishnan, Vinoba Bhave, CRajagopalachari and A K Coomaraswamy. Ithighlights their notions of Hindu spiritualityand its relationship to politics. The authorargues that there are two different visions
of how Hindu spirituality is linked to modernliberal politics.The volume examines thealternative vision that is present in all these
writers. Drawing upon myths, symbols and epics rather than the abstracttheology of Vedanta, it explores a subtler and realistic fit between spiritualityand politics. The book shows that spirituality goes beyond morality tometaphysics in a manner that can deepen contemporary critiques of politics.Vinoba and Rajaji understood the value of Hindu spiritual traditions infostering civic virtues such as liberality, trust, hard work and friendship. WithCoomaraswamy, the book shows that spirituality goes beyond morality tometaphysics in a manner that can deepen contemporary critiques of politics.
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there is a need to reflect on the converse
aspect of whether caste consciousness
can lead to class consciousness.
To what extent are the social relations
of caste and class distinct? In what ways
do they intersect? What is the impact of
globalisation on the disenfranchised
underprivileged caste groups of India?What are the specific ways in which glo-
balisation reinforces the caste system?
How does the contribution of dalits to
labour offer a critical perspective on views
that celebrate globalisation as emanci-
patory for dalits (Omvedt 2001)? These
questions are critical for the future of
emancipatory politics in India, which can
combine the legacies of Ambedkar and
Marx. Ambedkar was critical of both
casteism and liberal economism in his
endorsement of class equality (Ambedkar
2002a, 2002b; Teltumbde 2011). Thus,
according to him, the Brahmin enslaves
the mind and the Bania enslaves the body
(Ambedkar 2002a:148). But Ambedkar
was clear that material equality alone will
not guarantee freedom or fraternity
(2002b:189); the latter requires an eradi-
cation of caste as well. There is a need to
engage with his critique and also examine
the complex relationship (as well as an
absence of the same) between the labourmovements and social movements for
the removal of caste.
Other Issues
The ecological destruction caused by
capitalism is also brought out in a full-
length discussion in this anthology
(Thampatty: 301-08). It points to the
contribution of the environmental move-
ment against the pollution by Grasim
Industries in Mavoor, Kozhikode, Kerala.
However, there could be a further dis-
cussion of whether this movement also
struggled on behalf of the exploited
workers of Grasim industries. Further,
the extent to which the workers strug-
gle in this context created the awareness
of the ecological crisis could also be dis-
cussed by bringing in Marxist theoreti-
cal tools (building on insights from
Foster (2000) in the Indian context).
Such a discussion is especially impor-
tant in India, where the mainstreamapproach perceives ecological concerns as
either autonomous or as inevitably tied
to Gandhian ideology. The association
between workers struggles and ecologi-
cal movements needs to be spelled out
with greater clarity and emphasis.
The book importantly also discusses the
extreme rights usurpation of the trade
union movement (Ojha: 171-81), its ab-
sence (Singh: 309-14) and the anti-workertendency in some trade unions (Venu-
gopal: 425-38) to put aside uncritical
trade-union optimism (Luxemburg
1971: 263). However, this very crucial
point in the contemporary globalised
world needs to be expanded properly
from a theoretical perspective. The frag-
mentation of the working class cannot
vaguely be attributed to regionalism or
ruling class conspiracy without discuss-
ing these in historical detail.
Further, the specific differences be-
tween rightist unions and their left-led
counterparts need to be brought out
through a comparative lens. The weak-
ening of left-wing trade unions is exacer-
bated with the influx of those with
a right-wing and extremist ideology.
There is a need to analyse this influx and
examine the factors that are leading a
significant mass of labouring classes
towards them. Luxemburgs analysis of
trade unions is relevant at this juncture.The increasing emphasis on bargaining
leadership, short-term gains and bureau-
cratisation have contributed to trade
unions perceiving themselves as inde-
pendent of or neutral to social and politi-
cal relations (Luxemburg 1971: 265).
Indeed, she saw such autonomy as only
apparent and as the outcome of reaction-
ary and autocratic state politics (ibid).
This autonomy has made them vulne-
able to being taken over by extremist
forces serving neo-liberal goals. Only
such analyses will allow for perceiving
the openings for a prospective revitali-
sation of left-wing trade unions. Such
analysis needs to turn to Luxemburgs
critique of the autonomy of trade unions,
which have a reformist agenda and are
severed from mass movements for radi-
cal change through social democracy.
Treating trade unions as independent
entities has the danger of degenerating
to reactionary politics. The alternativeto this quandary is rightly suggested by
Luxemburg as the cohesion and unity
between trade unions and social demo-
cratic movements (p 261).
Valuable Contribution
Despite these limitations, this book is a
valuable and unique contribution to un-
derstanding the role of trade unions in
the creation of peoples movements. AijazAhmed (2001: 20) has remarked that Marx
and Engels have the resources for think-
ing about the relationship between
socialism, caste eradication and resistance
to imperialism. One can add gender and
ecology to this list. This books merit is
that it provokes one to think about these
aspects of the Marxist legacy, both
in empirical and philosophical terms,
in the context of the challenges posed
by globalisation to organised labour.
Working Class Movement in India in the
Wake of Globalizationwill be a valuable
resource for courses in social sciences
that engage with the Marxism in politi-
cal science, philosophy and history. It
can also serve as an impetus for evolving
a course with special focus on the work-
ing-class movement itself.
Kanchana Mahadevan (kanchamaha@
hotmail.com) teaches at the Department of
Philosophy, University of Mumbai.
References
Ahmad, Aijaz (2001): Introduction in Aijaz Ahmed(ed.), On the National and Colonial QuestionsSelected Writings by Karl Marx and Frederick
Engels(New Delhi: Lef tWord Books).
Ambedkar, B R (2002a): Class, Caste and Democ-racy in Valerian Rodrigues(ed.), The EssentialWritings of B R Ambedkar(New Delhi: OxfordUniversity Press).
(2002b): Buddha or Karl Marx in ValerianRodrigues (ed.), The Essential Writings of
B R Ambedkar(New Delh i: Oxford UniversityPress).
Foster, John Bellamy (2000):Marxs Ecology: Mate-rialism and Nature (New York: Monthly
Review Press).Hartmann, Heidi (1997): The Unhappy Marriageof Marxism and Feminism: Towards a MoreProgressive Union in Linda Nicholson (ed.),The Second Wave: A Reader in Feminist Theory(New York and London: Routledge), 97-102.
Harvey, David (2010): The Enigma of Capital(Oxfordand New York: Oxford University Press).
Luxemburg, Rosa (1971): Selected Political Writings(London: Monthly Review Press).
Marx, Karl and Friedrich Engels (1959): Manifestoof the Communist Party in Lewis S Feuer(ed.),Basic Writings on Politic s and Philosophy(New York: Anchor Books), 1-46.
Omvedt, Gail (2001): Globalization and IndianTradition, The Hindu,http://www.hindu.com/2001/02/06/stories/05062523.htm
Teltumbde, Anand (2011): Dalit Capitalism andPseudo Dalitism, CounterCurrents, 7 March,viewed on 7 October 2013, ht tp://www.coun-tercurrents.org/teltumbde070311.htm