Business Standard
Friday, Jun 01, 2012
Sponsored by  
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
|||||Opinion|||| 
 Section Home | Editorials | Compass | BS People | Columnists | Lunch with BS
Home > Opinion & Analysis Live Markets | Commodities
 

Sunil Sethi: The long and short of journeys
Mumbai is now a city held hostage to what its teachers may teach or its students read
Sunil Sethi / New Delhi Oct 30, 2010, 00:12 IST

The dropping of Rohinton Mistry’s novel Such A Long Journey from the undergraduate syllabus of Mumbai University is actually the story of two new, rather short journeys: the first being the opening salvo of third-generation scion of the Shiv Sena dynasty Aditya Thackeray’s political anointing; and the second, the equally inauspicious start of Rajan Welukar’s takeover as vice-chancellor of a distinguished university that once had a hallowed department of English literature.

Aditya Thackeray, an arts undergraduate himself at one of the university’s prestigious colleges, says that references to Maharashtrians in Mistry’s book were bad “enough to cause goose bumps”. He is obviously a slow, erratic reader because the book has been part of the curriculum for a decade till he discovered it. His political brethren — including the ruling NCP-Congress alliance in Maharashtra — clearly haven’t opened a book in years, given the way they are flashing highlighted photocopies of the novel everywhere. Chief Minister Ashok Chavan, Home Minister R R Patil and others have strongly endorsed the Shiv Sena stand that the book should be chucked.

Rajan Welukar’s recent appointment as vice-chancellor is in itself dodgy. A statistician by training, his name was nowhere on the first shortlist for the post submitted by the expert committee to the Maharashtra governor; it only materialised on a second shortlist, which was promptly challenged in court by Rajasthan University’s vice-chancellor (and a former pro-vice-chancellor of Mumbai University) on grounds of Welukar’s inadequate qualifications. It is widely suggested that Welukar got the job because he is considered close to NCP boss and Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar.

This also raises the inescapable hypocrisy of the Congress party with its projected liberal, secular image and its loathing of the Shiv Sena. Top Congress leaders have not come out to condemn the book’s dismissal. The prime minister, whose reputation as professor and public intellectual was built on books and academic excellence, has apparently nothing to say on political parties dictating university curricula; HRD Minister Kapil Sibal, whose ministry, by way of the University Grants Commission, disburses taxpayers’ money to subsidise higher education at universities such as Mumbai University, is quiet; other leaders are silent because taking a position means losing ground to the Shiv Sena.

Politicians of all hues are increasingly brazen and bellicose in deciding what the Indian public should read or not, from Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses to James Laine’s biography of Shivaji. Henceforth, they will also decide the literary merit of what students should read. It has happened to school textbooks, learning of history, biography and art. Fiction, the one category that belongs to the realm of a writer’s imagination, had gone relatively unscathed. But no longer. To score points, the Shiv Sena recommends adding The Red Saree, a thinly-disguised fictional biography of Sonia Gandhi, to the syllabus.

The decline of Mumbai University is yet another nail in the reputation of the once free-spirited, cosmopolitan and multicultural metropolis — it’s now a city held hostage to what its teachers may teach or its students read. Therefore, it’s unsurprising that state Home Minister R R Patil is the same morality chieftain whose vociferous campaign in 2005 led to the closure of dance bars, driving 75,000 bar dancers into underground sex work, and raised manifold complaints of extortion and harassment against the city’s police force. This dark, dangerous story is told in Sonia Faliero’s remarkable new book Beautiful Thing: Inside the Secret World of Bombay’s Dance Bars.

One glance at Patil’s blog should help fill in the picture: “I am fondly called Aaba by friends and well-wishers... When it comes to speaking about me, I become very conscious. As I talk about my experiences through my blog, the feeling of diffidence engulfs me... Under (Sharadchandraji Pawar’s) guidance I am trying to inculcate fearlessness and faith in people of Maharashtra through my police force... I love to talk to simple, downtrodden people, talk about their sorrows and happiness... etc.”

If politicians had their way, this is probably the kind of glutinous prose that university students should be reading in their course of study.

New Ipad Application :Business Standard's all new IPad App
Click here to download for free
Arrow Other Stories     
- Markets post worst May performace since 2006
- Kavveri Telecom Q4 net declines over 6%
- Wall Street opens flat on economy worries
- RIM to set up first BlackBerry innovation zone in India
- Rajaratnam bragged about sources of inside info: Gupta lawyers
  Read Business news in 
- Help a Child Achieve her. Click to know more
- Benefits Upto Rs. 2.36 Lakhs on the Fully Loaded TJet Petrol.
- Watch The Film Here. Click here to know more..
- 1 billion in saving for Unilever without any tangles.
- A Brand New Server at a Price That Fits Your Budget. Click here
- One Partnership Endless Possibilities. Click here to know more
- Which is the best plan for your daughter
- Check out the TRUE COLOURS of your Stocks, Now for FREE!
- One of the leading business schools in the world.Know More
- Invest in Real Estate. Villas in Bangalore starting @ Rs.66 lacs
Sorry, comments to this story are closed
Latest Messages
Table for Two
  Now available at Special price
  Rs.280/- Only

  Buy Now
BS POLL
UPA 2 has completed three years. How do you rate its performance?  Read the story
  Good
  Average
  Bad
Submit
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Slowdown gets worse, GDP growth sinks to 9-year low
- India to be $2-trn economy by FY13-end?
- India Inc ready to shift to other side of the dot on www
- Bharat Bandh sussessful in Chhattisgarh
- IIT alumni to move court on changes in JEE
 
 More  
Tax Shastra
  Now available at Special price
  Rs. 360/- Only

  Buy Now
  Hot Searches  
 
Apalya |  Air India |  GAAR |  Agni  |  Solar eclipse |  Satyamev Jayate |  SRK |  Aamir Khan |  IPL |  Ertiga |  Sarfaesi Act |  Vodafone |  JP Morgan |  Transfer pricing |  Rupee |  Kingfisher Airlines |  Silver |  Provident Fund |  income tax refund |  iPhone |  Reliance Industries |  SEBI |  BSNL |  BSE |  NSE |  Mukesh Ambani |  Anil Ambani |  Infosys |  Pranab Mukherjee |  Sonia Gandhi |  Rahul Gandhi |  New Pension Scheme |  Reliance |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  B-School |  Sensex |  Tax calculator |  Home Loan |  Personal Finance |  inflation |  oil prices |  Barack Obama |   
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring BS Books
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World | General News
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Contact Us