The Colonial Roots of India’s Strategic Paralysis How Hindutva’s Mimicry of White Supremacist Hierarchies Undermines New Delhi’s Global Ambitions Mohan Jyoti Dutta THE STAGE AND ITS SCRIPTURE The scene deserves close reading. At the Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi last week—India’s flagship geopolitical forum, co-organized by the Ministry of External Affairs and the Observer Research Foundation—U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau sat on stage before a large screen bearing the conference’s Sanskrit theme: Saṁskāra. Beneath it, three English words arranged like a catechism: Assertion, Accommodation, Advancement. The organizers’ framing was aspirational. Saṁskāra, they explained, is a civilizational inheritance of identity that enables societies to assert who they are, accommodate difference, and advance through refinement. The language gestured toward sovereignty, toward a post-Western order in which India’s civilizational depth would finally be recognized as a form of ...
Mohan Dutta: Culture-Centered Approach
This blog offers Mohan Dutta's reflections on the theoretical framework of the culture-centered approach, examining the interplays among culture, communication and marginalisation. It also explores resistance, the ways in which communities at the margins challenge structures. Writings on the blog are updated to reflect the organic analysis of structure and agency. These analyses are offered on a personal capacity and do not reflect the views of Prof. Dutta's employer.