Author:Achuthan M Kandyil
ISBN:818560472X/2009/HB/8.5”x5.5”/465pp/
Price:650/$21.00
Publisher:Stree Samya-Kolkata
About the Book
The comprehensive history of India, from ancient to modern times, presents an alternative, even iconoclastic, view. Arguing that the history written by professional historians has been strongly influenced by their concept of Hinduism, caste and its implications, or by an over-dependence on Marxism, and their upper caste status, Achuthan M. Kandyil urges that it is time that the counter view of the lower caste be considered. Declaring that he is not a historian, the author also states that he has not used primary sources. A major reason for the perpetuation of the caste system, he suggests, was identified by the Mandal Commission Report, 1987: the unquestioning adherence to irrational, anachronistic ideas and beliefs that conditioned the consciousness of the lower caste in accepting their inferior status in the ritual hierarchy as a part of the natural order of things. Achuthan deconstructs the intellectual labour of iconic scholars and personalities like S. Radhakrishnan, M.N. Srinivas, Swami Vivekananda and Mahatma Gandhi, among others, to show how they supported the caste system, albeit condemning its excesses. Arguing against the prevalent distortions, the author talks of how the destruction of non –brahmanic literature has been the key to wrongful interpretations of ancient India, and to the way Dravidian culture was undervalued until the discovery of the Indus Valley civilization in the early twentieth century. Similarly, Buddhism had flourished for a millennium, BC 250-AD 800. Yet this has not received its due; instead the glories of a golden age that mirrored Buddhism’s decline at the hands of a violent resurgent Bhahminism were emphasized. The latter with its rigid caste system and orthodoxy led to India’s long term decline, its absence of unity, its vulnerability to invasions and its loss of creativity. The first glimmers of modernity based on equality before the law with attendant social reforms appeared only under British rule. Challenging orthodox interpretations and more radical ones, Achuthan raises many key questions on what is history and how it is written.
About the Author
Achuthan M Kandyil was an engineer with All India Radio for 18years until 1972 when he joined the faculty at Grambling State University, USA. He lives in the USA.