Slum Acts. Veena Das

Slum Acts - Veena Das


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aspects of sovereignty to emerge. I might add in parentheses that a number of my interlocutors would evoke mythological figures, including Rama, Krishna and some minor figures from the Mahabharata or from contemporary renderings of these figures in films, to make a point during a discussion. I don’t dwell much on this strand of my ethnography in the following analysis but it gives me some confidence in making my arguments through the use of mythological figures (see especially Singh 2015).

      In their book, A thousand plateaus, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari (1987) make an interesting intervention through Dumézil’s text on Mitra-Varuna, drawing attention to the fact that sovereignty includes the despot and the legislator; the fearsome and the regulated; the bond and the pact. But there is something in sovereignty, they say, that exceeds the Mitra-Varuna function, in that the Indra function stands for notions of unlimited cruelty and unlimited compassion, violence and justice, that are imagined outside the apparatus of the state. I don’t stand by every strand of interpretation of the Mitra-Varuna functions in either Dumézil or in Deleuze and Guattari, but that they open certain doors for thinking of sovereignty outside the political theories inherited from Christian theology is not in question for me. I will indicate some of the difficulties when it comes to the specificity of these Vedic gods or their relation to the characters in the Mahabharata on whom Dumézil later tries to map these functions. For now, I am interested in the way these ideas on sovereignty have been absorbed in the work of some anthropologists.

      All these components of Dumézil’s formulation on the Vedic gods as figures of thought on sovereignty serve very well to complicate sovereignty beyond the notion of the sovereign having the right to declare the exception, but what if we were to take the gaps and puzzles that remain if we were to delve deeper into the relation between the Vedic gods and the resonances with the stories of the Mahabharata on which Dumézil drew famously to formulate his theory of the tripartite division of functions?6 Nicholas Allen (1999) has argued for a functional equivalence between Indra and Arjun (in the Mahabharata) since both stand for the warrior function, but one could very well argue that it is Krishna who is the real agent of the war and is recognized as such by Gandhari, the mother of the Kaurava brothers, when she curses Krishna for having enabled the war to happen in which all her sons perish?7 Second, and from my point of view, an even greater difficulty arises when we consider the goddess figures (particularly war goddesses, or goddesses of fire) in the Indo-Aryan pantheon. Dumézil was inclined to think of the trivalent heroine or the goddess as coming either from the second, warrior function, or from the third function of fertility and prosperity. However, given the difficulties of assigning gender to some Indo-Aryan figures of divinity and the propensity of goddesses to disguise themselves with male names, it would seem that the relation between sovereignty and sexuality needs considerable work if alternate genealogies of sovereignty are to be developed further.8

      I leave this as a marker of work to come, but I am convinced that we could tell the story of sovereignty and state by drawing on the potential of these stories just as Singh’s interlocutors do when they redistribute the different mythological elements in new configurations.

       Knowledge That Wounds


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