Courtesy Pradip Kumar Dutta © Devi Chakrabarti, India, 2018 The joys of Durga Puja as a celebratory space are intricately tied to the cultural celebration of difference. Growing up in the Bengal of the 1970s and 1980s, this syncretic philosophy of Bengali culture was best reflected in the Red Book stalls that would be put up right in front of the Durga Puja pandals. You could pick up your Bengali translation of Marx or an essay collection of Nabanita Deb Sen or a collection of plays by the icon of the Left, Utpal Dutt, just as you wrapped up offering your tributes to the Goddess. The dialectical tensions that were opened by these diverse cultural symbols formed the spaces for progressive dialogues, bringing in critique, interrogating the casteism of Durga Puja practices, and turning to ideas of culture as progressive inclusion. Progressivism as a cultural value in Bengal upheld the fundamental commitments to equality, justice, and inclusion through the practices of celebrati...
This blog offers Mohan Dutta's reflections on the theoretical framework of the culture-centered approach, examining the interplays among Structure, Culture, and Agency in shaping marginalisation and the ways in which communities at the margins challenge structures. Writings on the blog are continually being revised to reflect the organic analysis of structure and agency.