A layered argument on kingship, royal
power and its use of violence also includes voices who critiqued the
state
Indian historiography is not especially
rich in the history of idea. This is even more true for the history
of India’s ancient past than for more recent epochs.
Thus Upinder
Singh’s new book, intended as a foray into the history of political
ideas in ancient India, is a pioneering attempt.
It seeks to puncture
the myth perpetrated by leaders like Gandhi and Nehru in their
various writings that non-violence was embedded in Indian tradition
and culture.
Singh’s book is also an essay to
analyse political processes that provided the context for an enduring
and rich discourse on political violence between 600 BCE and 600 CE.
She draws on a corpus of texts — inscriptions, literary and
discursive texts — to illuminate and substantiate her arguments.
The result is a book with a layered and complex argument which will
make readers rethink their views about ancient India, its political
praxis and the project to theorise that praxis.
Shattering myths
A large degree of force and coercion —
read violence — is embedded in the functioning of any State, be it
a kingdom or a republic.
Between 600 BCE and 200 BCE, as kingdoms and
empires emerged in parts of India, the necessary presence of force in
a state was recognised, but these texts also discussed how this
necessity could be measured, justified and mitigated.
Singh
emphasises that in these discussions there was one consistent voice
that championed non-violence as a way of life for a king and other
lesser human beings. This was, of course, the voice of Ashoka.
But
even that remarkable monarch, as Singh points out, warned the forest
people that violence could be used against them; he refused to
abolish capital punishment; and did not disband his army even after
his epiphany following the conquest of Kalinga.
During the period 200 BCE to 300 CE,
continuities from the previous period notwithstanding, there was a
greater engagement with the idea of royal power, and kingship and
governance came to be discussed from a variety of perspectives.
An
important element in these new discussions was ‘a new equation of
the king with the religious domain’ as was noticeable in coins and
inscriptions. But this growing association only facilitated the
justification and the ‘masking’ of the violence embedded in
kingship and the exercise of royal power.
The middle of the first millennium saw
the discourse on political violence become more nuanced. One view
held that for the survival and the furthering of royal power, force
was necessary. Singh calls this the artha view. Another argued that
force was required to secure the king’s glory and fame.
This is the
dharma view. There existed in some texts intermediate views that
advocate greater caution and sensitivity towards political violence.
Though the discourse on political violence was largely tilted in
favour of justifying it, Singh is careful to draw out elements of
doubt and dissent — and indeed of critique — that remained and
refused to be silenced.
Read the Original article on: The Hindu
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