Monday, April 6, 2026

Listening Against the Grain: Heart, Consciousness, and the Political Economy of Attention in Contemporary India

 From Inner Silence to Ideological Control: A Marxist Re-reading of Listening

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

Listening is often imagined as a passive, almost incidental human faculty, an automatic accompaniment to speech. Yet such an understanding conceals the deeper truth that listening is historically produced, socially structured, and politically mediated. To listen “with the heart,” as the opening proposition suggests, is not merely to feel more deeply but to inhabit a radically different mode of attention—one that suspends judgment, interrupts comparison, and resists the impulse to categorize. This essay situates such listening within the material and ideological conditions of contemporary India, arguing that the erosion of attentive presence is inseparable from the expansion of capitalist relations, the consolidation of political power, and the commodification of consciousness itself. Drawing upon Marxist theory, social reproduction frameworks, and empirical evidence on inequality, labour, and media concentration, it interrogates the constructed divide between heart and mind, revealing it as an ideological formation that privileges technocratic rationality while marginalizing ethical awareness. In reclaiming listening as a form of radical attention, the essay proposes it as a necessary condition for any meaningful democratic and social transformation.

Key Words

Attention, Listening, Marxism, Ideology, Social Reproduction, Inequality, India, Bourgeoisie, Consciousness, Rationality

I. Introduction: Listening as Praxis

To listen without comparison, without the quiet intrusion of acceptance or rejection, is to enter a space that is at once intimate and unsettling. It requires a suspension of the self as an evaluative center, a temporary relinquishing of the frameworks through which we habitually interpret the world. Such listening, often described metaphorically as listening “with the heart,” appears deceptively simple. Yet its rarity in contemporary life suggests that it is neither natural nor easily sustained.

Listening, in this deeper sense, cannot be understood as a purely interpersonal act. It is shaped by the conditions in which subjects are formed, by the hierarchies that organize social life, and by the ideological structures that define what counts as meaningful speech. In a society marked by inequality, the ability to listen—and to be listened to—is unevenly distributed. Some voices resonate effortlessly across institutional and media spaces, while others struggle to be heard even within their immediate surroundings. Listening, therefore, must be approached as praxis: a lived activity embedded within relations of power, production, and consciousness.

“In a stratified society, listening is never neutral—it is structured by power, mediated by ideology, and constrained by material conditions.”

II. Marxist Framework: Attention in the Age of Capital

The Marxist tradition offers a powerful lens through which to examine the transformation of attention under capitalism. When Karl Marx, in his early manuscripts, described the worker’s alienation from the product of labour, from the process of production, and ultimately from their own species-being, he was tracing a fragmentation that extended beyond the economic sphere into the very texture of human experience. In late capitalism, this fragmentation deepens into the realm of attention itself.

The contemporary economy does not merely organize labour; it organizes perception. Attention, once a precondition for meaningful engagement with the world, is increasingly drawn into circuits of accumulation. Digital platforms convert moments of focus into data, emotions into metrics, and engagement into profit. In India, where hundreds of millions have come online within a relatively short historical period, this transformation has unfolded with particular intensity. The proliferation of screens has not only expanded access to information but has also reconfigured the rhythms of thought, compressing time into a series of rapid, discontinuous stimuli.

In such a context, attention becomes both scarce and contested. The individual is pulled simultaneously in multiple directions, their capacity for sustained presence eroded by the constant demand to respond, to scroll, to react. What is lost in this process is precisely the quality of attention that makes deep listening possible—the ability to remain with another’s words without immediately subsuming them under pre-existing categories.

“Capital no longer extracts only labour—it extracts attention, emotion, and consciousness itself.”

III. Indian Political Economy: Inequality and Voice

The transformation of attention cannot be separated from the broader political economy in which it is embedded. Contemporary India presents a striking case of increasing economic concentration alongside expanding communicative infrastructures. The data on inequality is by now well established: the top fraction of the population commands a disproportionate share of wealth, while vast segments remain precariously positioned within informal and unstable forms of labour. Yet the implications of this concentration extend beyond material deprivation. They shape the very conditions under which voices circulate, are amplified, or are silenced.

Control over economic resources translates, in subtle but decisive ways, into control over narrative production. Media institutions, increasingly consolidated within a limited set of corporate entities, play a central role in structuring public discourse. What appears as a diversity of opinions often operates within a narrower field of permissible articulation. Certain perspectives are foregrounded, repeated, and normalized, while others remain peripheral or are framed in ways that undermine their legitimacy.

Listening, within such a landscape, is not simply an individual capacity but a socially organized phenomenon. It is mediated by access to platforms, by the credibility assigned to different speakers, and by the ideological filters through which speech is received. The question of who is heard becomes inseparable from the question of who holds power.

“When capital controls communication, listening becomes an act of ideological absorption rather than critical engagement.”

IV. Social Reproduction and the Silencing of the Marginalized

The invisibility of certain forms of labour provides another crucial dimension to the politics of listening. Social reproduction theory, particularly as articulated by Silvia Federici, draws attention to the ways in which the labour necessary to sustain life—care work, domestic work, emotional labour—is systematically devalued under capitalism. In India, this invisibility is starkly reflected in the disproportionate burden of unpaid work carried by women, whose contributions remain largely unrecognized within formal economic frameworks.

This material marginalization is mirrored in the realm of speech. Voices associated with care, with vulnerability, with everyday survival are often dismissed as lacking in authority. The gendered coding of emotion as irrational further compounds this exclusion, reinforcing the separation between “serious” discourse and the lived realities of those who sustain the social fabric.

Caste adds another layer to this silencing. Historical hierarchies continue to shape whose experiences are considered credible, whose testimonies are acknowledged, and whose suffering is rendered visible. The act of listening, in such a context, becomes inseparable from the struggle for recognition. To listen to marginalized voices is not merely to hear them but to confront the structures that have long denied them a platform.

“What is unheard is not always silent; it is often systematically excluded from the field of listening.”

V. Rationality as Ideology: The Heart-Mind Divide

The privileging of certain forms of speech over others is closely tied to the construction of rationality itself. Modern social thought has tended to elevate the mind as the site of reason, calculation, and objectivity, while relegating the heart to the domain of emotion, intuition, and subjectivity. This division, often presented as natural, is in fact historically produced and ideologically sustained.

By associating rationality with detachment, it legitimizes modes of decision-making that prioritize efficiency over empathy, abstraction over lived experience. The “heart,” in this schema, is rendered suspect—an unreliable guide in matters of governance, economics, or policy. Yet this exclusion serves a clear function. It allows systems of power to operate without being held accountable to the ethical dimensions of their actions.

The intervention of thinkers like B.R. Ambedkar complicates this narrative. His insistence that political democracy must rest upon a foundation of social democracy foregrounds the importance of recognition, dignity, and mutual respect—qualities that cannot be reduced to instrumental rationality. The capacity to listen, in this sense, becomes central to the project of democracy itself.

“The separation of heart and mind is not natural—it is an ideological tool that legitimizes domination.”

VI. The Political Landscape: When Listening Becomes Impossible

To understand the crisis of listening in contemporary India, one must move beyond the surface of events and enter the deeper structure of how power organizes speech, silence, and attention. What appears, at first glance, as a breakdown of dialogue is in fact something more systemic—a gradual reconfiguration of the very conditions under which listening is possible.

Over the past decade, political authority has acquired a distinctly centralized character, not merely in institutional terms but in the symbolic domain as well. Power increasingly speaks in a singular voice, amplified through an expansive media apparatus that privileges repetition over reflection. The effect is not simply the dominance of one narrative over others, but the narrowing of the space in which alternative voices might even emerge. Listening, in such a climate, is no longer an open-ended engagement; it becomes a managed experience, pre-structured by the limits of what can be said and what is allowed to be heard.

This transformation is inseparable from the erosion of deliberative spaces. Institutions that once functioned—however imperfectly—as sites of negotiation and contestation now appear increasingly hollowed out. Debate gives way to declaration, and dialogue is replaced by a performance of certainty. In this environment, listening loses its reciprocal character. It is no longer about encountering the other but about reinforcing what is already known, already believed, already sanctioned.

What fills this vacuum is spectacle. Public discourse is staged less as a process of understanding and more as an arena of display, where the objective is not to persuade through reasoned engagement but to capture attention through intensity. Television debates, digital platforms, and political rallies operate within this logic of amplification, where speed and volume displace depth and nuance. The listener, in such a setting, is not invited to reflect but to react. Attention is continually pulled outward, fragmented into fleeting moments of outrage, affirmation, or fear.

The consequences of this shift are profound. As discourse becomes increasingly polarized, the possibility of listening across difference begins to erode. Positions harden, identities solidify, and every utterance is immediately sorted into pre-existing categories of allegiance or opposition. Complexity is treated as suspicion, ambiguity as weakness. What remains is a simplified moral landscape in which the act of listening itself is rendered unnecessary, even undesirable. Why listen, after all, if one already knows?

Yet this apparent certainty is not a sign of strength but of closure. It reflects a deeper transformation in the relationship between subject and world, where individuals are no longer encouraged to encounter reality in its fullness but to process it through ready-made frameworks. Emotional responses are not diminished in this process; on the contrary, they are intensified and strategically mobilized. Anger, pride, fear—these become the currencies of public discourse, circulating rapidly and attaching themselves to carefully constructed narratives. But these emotions are rarely accompanied by the stillness required for genuine attention. They propel action, but not understanding.

In such a landscape, listening is not simply neglected—it is actively displaced. Reaction takes its place, immediate and unreflective, closing off the space that listening would otherwise open. The distinction is crucial. Reaction is always oriented toward closure; it seeks to resolve, to judge, to conclude. Listening, by contrast, is an act of suspension. It holds open the possibility that one’s understanding may change, that the other may reveal something not yet known.

The events surrounding the farmers’ protests offer a revealing illustration of this dynamic. What was striking was not merely the content of the grievances, but the manner in which they were initially received—or rather, not received. The protests were, for a significant period, framed through narratives that questioned their legitimacy, their origins, even their authenticity. The voices of those involved were filtered through layers of interpretation before they could be heard on their own terms. Listening, in the deeper sense, was deferred.

And yet, it is precisely here that the question of listening returns with renewed urgency. If the present moment is characterized by noise, speed, and reaction, then the act of listening acquires a different significance. It becomes a quiet form of resistance—a refusal to be entirely absorbed into the rhythms of spectacle and immediacy.

VII. Psychological and Neuroscientific Insights

The philosophical and political dimensions of listening find resonance within psychological and neuroscientific research, which underscores the depth of attention as a cognitive and emotional process. Studies on active listening, particularly those influenced by Carl Rogers, suggest that the act of fully attending to another without interruption or evaluation fosters not only empathy but also transformation within both listener and speaker. Listening, in this sense, is not passive reception but an active reconfiguration of relational space.

Neuroscientific research further indicates that attentive engagement activates regions of the brain associated with emotional processing and social cognition. Yet these capacities are not fixed; they are shaped by habitual patterns of engagement. The constant fragmentation of attention, characteristic of digital environments, has been shown to reduce the ability to sustain focus, thereby undermining the very conditions necessary for deep listening.

What emerges from these studies is a convergence with the broader argument of this essay: that listening is not merely an individual skill but a capacity shaped—and often constrained—by the environments in which individuals are situated.

VIII. Reclaiming Listening as Resistance

If listening has been eroded by the combined forces of capital, ideology, and political control, its recovery cannot be understood as a purely personal endeavor. It must be situated within a broader effort to reclaim attention from the structures that seek to commodify and direct it. To listen with the heart is to resist the impulse toward immediate judgment, to remain present in the face of complexity, and to acknowledge the other as a subject rather than an object of interpretation.

Such listening carries an ethical weight. It demands not only openness but also a willingness to confront the discomfort that arises when established beliefs are unsettled. It requires an attentiveness to the conditions that shape speech, an awareness that what is being said is inseparable from the circumstances in which it is spoken.

“To listen deeply is to refuse the violence of indifference.”

IX. Integrating Heart and Mind

The critique of the heart-mind divide does not imply a rejection of rationality but a reconfiguration of its terms. Rationality, detached from ethical consideration, risks becoming an instrument of domination. Yet when informed by attentiveness, by the capacity to listen without immediate closure, it can become a tool for understanding rather than control.

The integration of heart and mind thus points toward a more expansive conception of consciousness, one in which thought and feeling are not opposed but intertwined. Such a consciousness does not abandon analysis but grounds it within a deeper awareness of human interdependence.

“A society that listens only with its mind becomes efficient but unjust; one that listens with its heart becomes humane.”

X. Conclusion

To listen with the heart is to enter a space where the usual operations of comparison, acceptance, and rejection are momentarily suspended. It is to encounter the other not as an object to be evaluated but as a presence to be understood. In contemporary India, where the structures of power increasingly shape what can be said and heard, such listening acquires a political significance that cannot be ignored.

The crisis of listening is, in many ways, a crisis of democracy itself. When voices are systematically excluded, when attention is continuously fragmented, and when discourse is reduced to reaction, the possibility of genuine engagement diminishes. Reclaiming listening, therefore, is not simply about improving communication; it is about restoring the conditions for recognition, for dialogue, and ultimately, for transformation.

Footnotes

1. Marx, Karl (1844). Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts.

2. Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), 2023.

3. World Inequality Report, 2022.

4. Federici, Silvia (2012). Revolution at Point Zero.

5. NSSO Time Use Survey, 2019.

6. Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS), 2023.

7. Ambedkar, B.R. (1949). Constituent Assembly Debates.

8. Rogers, Carl (1957). Active Listening Theory.

9. Siegel, Daniel (2012). The Developing Mind.

 

Imperial War and the Political Economy of Destruction: Reading the Iran Conflict from the Global South

From “Trump wants to reshape Iran” to the Reshaping of the World Order: A Critique of War, Capital, and India’s Strategic Drift

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

The ongoing US–Israel military campaign against Iran, as reflected in his utterance “Trump wants to reshape Iran,” marks a decisive moment in the evolution of late-capitalist imperialism. This essay situates the conflict within a Marxist framework, arguing that the war is not merely geopolitical but deeply embedded in the logic of capital accumulation, resource control, and systemic domination. It interrogates the deliberate targeting of civilian and industrial infrastructure as a strategy of long-term economic subjugation, while also examining the ideological contradictions within the United States and the erosion of India’s non-aligned foreign policy. The essay further explores the cascading consequences on global energy markets, supply chains, and the everyday life of the Indian proletariat, particularly through rising LPG prices and industrial distress. Ultimately, it argues that the war signals a restructuring of global power that threatens to deepen inequalities and destabilize economies across the Global South.

The article offers a timely entry point into understanding a war that is far more than a military confrontation. It is, in essence, a laboratory of late-capitalist imperialism—where war is not an aberration but a method, not a failure of diplomacy but its logical extension under conditions of global capital.

When Donald Trump threatens to push Iran “back to the Stone Age,” the statement must be read beyond its rhetorical excess. It signals a doctrine that legitimizes the destruction of a society’s productive capacity as a means of control. Steel plants, pharmaceutical factories, energy grids, and civilian settlements are not incidental targets; they constitute the material foundation of sovereignty. Their destruction is, therefore, an act of economic deconstruction—what may be termed “infrastructural warfare.”

From a commie standpoint, this reflects the classical insight of Karl Marx that the control over the means of production determines the structure of power. In this case, the war seeks to dismantle Iran’s productive base, ensuring that its future reconstruction remains dependent on external capital and geopolitical concessions. War thus becomes a mechanism of primitive accumulation—violently reorganizing economic relations in favour of imperial centers.

The absurdity of the war lies precisely in its shifting objectives. What began as a show of force has devolved into a prolonged campaign with no clear endpoint. The contradiction within Trump’s own statements—declaring both the achievement and continuation of “core objectives”—reveals a deeper crisis of imperial strategy. It is not victory that is being pursued, but dominance; not resolution, but perpetual leverage.

At the same time, the human cost is staggering. Reports of civilian casualties, including mass deaths among women and children, expose the brutal underside of what is often sanitized as “precision warfare.” The proletariat, as always, becomes the expendable subject of history. Their suffering is neither accidental nor collateral—it is structurally embedded in a system that prioritizes capital over life.

Yet, this war is not without resistance. Within the United States itself, growing public dissent signals a fracture between the ruling elite and the working masses. Protests against militarism reflect what conflict theory identifies as the contradiction between the interests of capital and those of labour. While the state pursues imperial expansion, ordinary citizens bear the costs—through taxation, inflation, and the erosion of democratic accountability.

For India, the implications are immediate and profound. The country’s dependence on Middle Eastern energy makes it particularly vulnerable to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Rising LPG prices, fuel shortages, and supply chain disruptions are already placing immense strain on households and small industries. The kitchen, as a site of social reproduction, becomes a critical arena where the effects of global conflict are most acutely felt. Women, who disproportionately bear the burden of managing household resources, are pushed into deeper precarity.

This brings us to the question of India’s foreign policy. Under Narendra Modi, there appears to be a marked shift away from the principles of non-alignment that once defined India’s global stance. Instead, there is a perceptible alignment with the US–Israel axis, raising concerns about the erosion of strategic autonomy. From a Marxist perspective, this shift can be interpreted as the integration of India’s ruling class into the circuits of global capital, where geopolitical decisions are increasingly aligned with the interests of transnational elites rather than domestic welfare.

The global economic consequences of the war further underscore its significance. With a substantial portion of the world’s oil supply passing through the conflict zone, disruptions have triggered inflationary pressures and heightened the risk of recession. The International Monetary Fund has already warned of potential economic downturns. This is not merely a cyclical crisis but a structural one—reflecting the inherent instability of a system that relies on continuous expansion and periodic destruction.

Geopolitically, the war is reshaping alliances and exposing the limits of diplomacy. Mediation efforts have largely failed, as both sides remain entrenched in maximalist positions. Iran’s demand for complete cessation and compensation, and the US’s continued escalation, suggest a protracted conflict with far-reaching consequences. In this context, the war functions as a site of global reordering—where new hierarchies are forged and old ones contested.

The comparison of Trump’s rhetoric with that of Adolf Hitler, while provocative, is not entirely misplaced. It highlights the dangers of a political culture that normalizes aggression, centralizes authority, and reduces complex realities to simplistic narratives. Such tendencies, when combined with military power, pose a grave threat to global stability.

Ultimately, the war against Iran must be understood as a symptom of a deeper crisis within global capitalism. It reflects a system that is unable to sustain itself without resorting to violence, that seeks to resolve its contradictions through destruction rather than transformation. For countries like India, the challenge lies in navigating this turbulent landscape without sacrificing sovereignty or social welfare.

The stakes are high. If the conflict continues, it threatens not only regional stability but the very foundations of the global economy. For the ordinary Indian citizen, the consequences will be measured not in abstract geopolitical terms but in the rising cost of living, the shrinking of opportunities, and the intensification of everyday struggles.

In this sense, the war is not distant—it is intimately connected to the lives of millions. And it is precisely this connection that demands critical engagement, political accountability, and a reassertion of values that prioritize human dignity over imperial ambition.

Footnotes

1. Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. I — Concept of primitive accumulation and control over means of production.

2. Vladimir Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism — Analysis of imperial expansion as a function of monopoly capital.

3. Silvia Federici, Caliban and the Witch — Social reproduction and the gendered burden of economic crises.

4. International Monetary Fund reports on global recession risks linked to energy disruptions.

5. Public statements by Donald Trump on Iran conflict escalation (April 2026).

 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Quiet Architecture of Conformity: Alienation, Discipline, and the Politics of Inner Life

 From Silent Subjects to Critical Selves in Late Capitalism

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

This paper examines the internalization of silence, restraint, and self-discipline in contemporary capitalist society through a Marxist lens. Moving beyond classical formulations of alienation confined to labour, it argues that late capitalism reorganizes subjectivity itself—producing individuals who regulate their own desires, emotions, and aspirations in accordance with systemic imperatives. Drawing on the works of Karl Marx, Antonio Gramsci, Silvia Federici, Michel Foucault, and B.R. Ambedkar, the paper situates “inner silence” as a socio-historical construct rather than a purely psychological condition. It further contends that the reclamation of selfhood constitutes a form of praxis—an incipient resistance to hegemonic structures that rely on compliance, emotional regulation, and ideological consent.

Keywords

Alienation; False Consciousness; Social Reproduction; Hegemony; Emotional Labour; Internalized Discipline; Subjectivity; Resistance; Capitalism; Praxis

I. Introduction: Silence as Social Condition

Modern life presents a paradox: unprecedented expansion of individual freedoms alongside a deepening sense of internal constraint. Individuals increasingly experience a disjunction between their inner capacities and their lived expressions. This paper seeks to interrogate that disjunction—not as an incidental psychological phenomenon, but as a structural condition embedded within capitalist modernity.

Silence, in this context, is neither neutral nor accidental. It is produced—through institutions, ideologies, and everyday practices that shape what can be said, felt, and even imagined. The subject who appears autonomous is, in fact, historically conditioned.

“What appears as self-restraint is often the social order speaking through the individual.”

II. Marx and the Expansion of Alienation

Karl Marx’s theory of alienation, articulated in the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, provides the foundational framework for understanding estrangement under capitalism. While Marx identified four dimensions of alienation—alienation from the product, process, species-being, and other workers—contemporary conditions necessitate an expansion of this framework.

In late capitalism, alienation extends beyond labour into subjectivity itself. The individual becomes estranged from their own emotional and imaginative capacities. This is not merely the loss of control over production, but the gradual erosion of spontaneity, desire, and self-expression.

“Alienation today is not only what we do not own, but what we no longer dare to feel.”

This shift reflects a transformation in capitalism’s mode of operation—from external coercion to internal regulation.

III. Gramsci and the Manufacture of Consent

Antonio Gramsci’s concept of hegemony is crucial in understanding how such internalization occurs. For Gramsci, ruling classes maintain dominance not merely through force, but through the production of consent—by shaping cultural norms, values, and beliefs.

Under hegemonic conditions, individuals come to accept limitations as natural and necessary. Restraint is valorized as maturity; compliance is framed as responsibility. The result is a form of domination that is rarely experienced as such.

“The most enduring power is that which no longer appears as power.”

The silencing of the self, therefore, is not imposed from above; it is reproduced from within.

IV. Social Reproduction and the Discipline of Desire (Federici)

Silvia Federici’s work on social reproduction expands Marxist analysis into the realm of everyday life, particularly the regulation of bodies, emotions, and relationships. Capitalism, she argues, depends not only on waged labour, but on the reproduction of disciplined, predictable subjects.

From early childhood, individuals are socialized into patterns of self-regulation:

· to suppress disruptive emotions,

· to prioritize stability over risk,

· to align personal aspirations with socially sanctioned norms. 

This process extends into intimate life, where emotional expression itself becomes regulated.

“Capitalism survives not only by organizing work, but by organizing the soul.”

Thus, silence becomes habitual—not because individuals are forced into it, but because they have learned to inhabit it.

V. Foucault and Internalized Surveillance

Michel Foucault’s analysis of disciplinary power further illuminates the mechanisms of internalization. In Discipline and Punish, Foucault introduces the concept of the panopticon—a structure in which individuals regulate their behavior because they believe they are being watched.

In contemporary society, surveillance is no longer merely external; it is internalized. Individuals monitor themselves, anticipating judgment and correcting behavior preemptively.

This internal surveillance extends to thought and emotion:

· certain desires are curtailed before they fully emerge,

· certain expressions are edited before articulation,

· certain risks are abandoned before consideration.

“The most complete form of control is when the subject becomes both prisoner and guard.”

Silence, in this framework, is the product of continuous self-surveillance.

VI. Ambedkar and the Moral Order of Constraint

B.R. Ambedkar’s critique of caste offers a vital extension to Marxist analysis, particularly in the Indian context. For Ambedkar, systems of domination endure not only through economic exploitation, but through moral and social codes that regulate behavior.

Caste operates by prescribing limits—on association, aspiration, and self-conception. These limits are internalized, producing subjects who participate in their own subordination.

While caste and capitalism are distinct systems, they intersect in their reliance on internalized discipline. Both produce hierarchies that appear natural, and both demand forms of silence.

“Where hierarchy is moralized, resistance must begin with the refusal to accept one’s prescribed place.”

Thus, the silencing of the self is also shaped by historically specific structures of inequality.

VII. Emotional Labour and the Commodification of Affect

Contemporary capitalism increasingly demands emotional labour—the management of feelings in accordance with institutional expectations. Individuals are required to perform composure, enthusiasm, and resilience, regardless of their internal state.

This commodification of affect leads to a reconfiguration of inner life:

· emotions are filtered through norms of appropriateness,

· intensity is moderated to ensure functionality,

· vulnerability is suppressed to maintain productivity.

Over time, this performance becomes internalized, blurring the distinction between authentic feeling and regulated expression.

“When emotions are managed for survival, authenticity becomes a risk.”

VIII. Residual Selfhood and the Possibility of Resistance

Despite pervasive internalization, the subject is never fully subsumed. There remains a residual dimension of selfhood—what Marx termed species-being—that resists complete assimilation.

This residual self manifests as:

· dissatisfaction that cannot be fully rationalized,

· longing that exceeds available explanations,

· moments of refusal that disrupt habitual compliance.

These fragments are politically significant. They represent the limits of hegemony and the persistence of human potential.

“What persists within us is not merely memory, but the refusal to be entirely shaped.”

IX. Praxis: Reclaiming the Self as Political Act

The recognition of internalized constraint must lead to praxis—the conscious effort to transform one’s relation to the structures of domination.

Such transformation is rarely immediate or total. It often begins with small, deliberate acts:

· articulating suppressed thoughts,

· embracing uncertainty,

· resisting normalized patterns of self-censorship.

These acts, while seemingly individual, carry broader implications. They disrupt the internal mechanisms that sustain systemic control.

“Every act of self-reclamation is a fracture in the logic of domination.”

X. Conclusion: Toward a Politics of Inner Freedom

The silencing of the self is not a personal deficiency; it is a social production. It reflects a broader system that prioritizes order over expression, predictability over possibility.

Yet, within this system lies its own contradiction: the persistence of a self that resists complete assimilation.

To reclaim that self is not merely to seek personal fulfillment—it is to challenge the conditions that made such reclamation necessary. Inner freedom, in this sense, is inseparable from social critique.

“The return to oneself is not an escape from the world, but a confrontation with it.”

References

1. Marx, Karl. Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844. 

2. Gramsci, Antonio. Selections from the Prison Notebooks. 

3. Federici, Silvia. Caliban and the Witch. 

4. Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish. 

5. Ambedkar, B.R. Annihilation of Caste. 

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

From Communal Liberty to the Domestic Cage: The Metamorphosis of Marriage and the Modern Paradox of Choice

 -Ramphal Kataria

The history of man-woman relations is a narrative of shifting power, moving from the fluid communalism of pre-history to the rigid, property-oriented structures of the modern age. Today, as India grapples with the rise of live-in relationships and judicial interpretations of personal liberty, we find ourselves at a crossroads. We must ask: does modern "freedom" offer true liberation, or does it merely provide a new vocabulary for old patterns of abandonment and subjugation?

I. The Genesis: Fluidity and the Age of "Mother-Right"

In the dawn of human social organization, the concept of a "husband" or "wife" was non-existent. Anthropologists like Lewis Henry Morgan and sociologists like Friedrich Engels, in his seminal work The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State, argue that early human groupings were defined by primitive communalism.

In these societies, kinship was traced through the female line—a system known as matriliny. Because sexual relations were fluid and communal, paternity was often uncertain and, more importantly, irrelevant. Women were not "protected" because they were not "owned." As primary gatherers, they provided the bulk of the caloric intake for the tribe, ensuring their economic autonomy.

"The first class oppression coincides with that of the female sex by the male." — Friedrich Engels

During this epoch, women moved with a degree of physical and sexual freeness that would be unrecognizable to the modern patriarchal world. There was no "four-walled" domesticity; the world was the home, and the tribe was the family.

II. The Great Defeat: Agriculture, Property, and the Walls of Marriage

The transition from nomadic gathering to settled agriculture marked the "world-historic defeat of the female sex." As humans began to produce a surplus, the concept of private property emerged. For the first time, men had wealth—herds, land, and tools—that they wished to pass on to their biological heirs.

To ensure the legitimacy of these heirs, the wandering desire of the past had to be shackled. Marriage was "invented" not as a celebration of love, but as a regulatory contract of paternity.

The Evolution of the Institution:

Initial Loose Arrangements: Early marriage was often "pairing" where either party could leave easily.

Institutionalization: As states and religions grew, marriage became a "sacrament" (indissoluble) or a "legal bond" (contractual), primarily to manage the transfer of property.

Subjugation: The woman was transformed from a co-producer into a "domestic slave." Her primary value was redirected toward her womb—producing the next generation of property holders.

III. Variations in the Marital Theme: Matriarchy vs. Patriarchy

Marriage has never been a monolith. In India, we see two starkly different philosophies:

The Patriarchal Model (The Dominant Norm): Here, the woman is "given away" (Kanyadaan). She leaves her natal home, her identity, and often her name, to enter the husband’s household. She becomes a guest in her own life, dependent on the male lineage for survival.

The Matrilocal Counterpoint: In systems like the Khasi of Meghalaya or the traditional Nair tharavads of Kerala, the man walks into the woman’s home. In these societies, women retain ancestral property, and the stigma of "illegitimacy" is largely absent.

However, the patriarchal model became the engine of the Indian social order, specifically because it intersected with Caste.

 IV. The Ideology of Love: Masking Exploitation

    How does such a system sustain itself without constant revolt?

    Through ideology.

    Love, duty, sacrifice—these are not merely emotions; they are ideological constructs that                         naturalize exploitation.

    Simone de Beauvoir exposes how woman is constructed as the “Other”—a being whose purpose             is relational, not autonomous.

    Marriage transforms labor into affection.

    Cooking becomes “care.”

    Cleaning becomes “devotion.”

    Motherhood becomes “fulfillment.”

    What disappears is the recognition that these are forms of labor—necessary, exhausting, and                     systematically appropriated.

 V. Endogamy: The Prison of Caste and Religion

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar identified that the survival of the Caste system depended entirely on the control of women. In his work Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development, he argued that Endogamy (marrying within one's group) is the essence of Caste.

To maintain "purity," women’s choices had to be strictly policed. Inter-caste or inter-religious love became a threat to the entire social fabric. Consequently, women lost their voices; they became "gates" that had to be guarded. Marriage was no longer about two individuals, but about the preservation of economic spheres and religious boundaries.

VI. The Reformist Turn: Ambedkar and the Hindu Code Bill

Post-independence, the battle for women’s dignity moved to the Parliament. Dr. Ambedkar’s resignation as Law Minister was fueled by the resistance to the Hindu Code Bill.

Ambedkar realized that Hindu women were trapped by sacramental laws that forbade divorce and denied inheritance. He sought to turn marriage into a civil contract, granting women:

The right to divorce.

The right to inherit property.

The abolition of polygamy.

While other religions had different paths—Islam providing for Mehr (dower) as a financial safeguard, and Christianity moving toward the recognition of civil breakdown—the Hindu Code Bill was the most significant leap toward viewing the Indian woman as an individual rather than an appendage.

 VII. Neoliberalism and the Commodification of Intimacy

    Under neoliberal capitalism, the family undergoes transformation—but not abolition.

    Marriage loses its rigidity; relationships become fluid.

    The live-in relationship emerges as a symbol of freedom.

    But this “freedom” mirrors the logic of the market:

    Flexibility replaces commitment

    Mobility replaces stability

    Exit replaces responsibility

    Intimacy becomes commodified.

    Partners become consumable.

    And once again, the burden of this flexibility is gendered.

    Women, who continue to bear the disproportionate burden of reproductive labor, face heightened             precarity in the absence of institutional safeguards.

    What appears as liberation is, in fact, the informalization of exploitation.

 VIII. The Legal Form and Its Discontents

    The law attempts to regulate this shifting terrain:

    Recognizing live-in relationships

    Extending protection against domestic violence

    Criminalizing certain forms of abandonment

    Yet, it remains trapped in contradiction.

    Cases framed as “false promise of marriage” reveal the inadequacy of civil remedies.

    The decriminalization of adultery in Joseph Shine v. Union of India expands liberty but does not             address material inequality.

    The legal system oscillates:

    Between protection and punishment

    Between autonomy and morality

    What it cannot resolve is the underlying economic asymmetry.

 IX. From Patriarchy to Neoliberal Patriarchy

    If classical patriarchy confined women within marriage, neoliberal patriarchy disperses that         control across multiple, informal relations.

    The result is not freedom, but fragmentation.

    Men gain mobility; women absorb risk.

    The ability to move between relationships without accountability is a form of power—one             rooted in economic asymmetry.

    This is not the end of patriarchy.

    It is its mutation.

 X. Toward the De-Privatization of Reproduction

    This requires:

Wages for housework (recognizing reproductive labor as productive)

Socialization of care (public childcare, healthcare, community kitchens)

Universal economic security (decoupling survival from marital status)

Legal accountability across all forms of intimacy 

As Silvia Federici argues, the struggle is not merely for equality within the family, but against the family as a site of exploitation.

XI. The Modern Frontier: Live-in Relationships and Informal Unions

The "live-in" relationship is often decried as a Western import, but Indian history is replete with informal unions. Even within the political echelons, figures like Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, and George Fernandes were known to have unconventional, long-term companionships that bypassed the traditional wedding fire.

In contemporary India, the live-in relationship represents a rejection of the "Domestic Cage." It is a claim to personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution.

The Legal Shield and the Criminal Sword:

The law has attempted to protect women in these unions through the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, treating "relationships in the nature of marriage" as deserving of maintenance.

However, a disturbing trend has emerged:

Criminalization of the Male: When these relationships break down, they often result in FIRs for rape under the guise of "false promise of marriage."

Vulnerability of the Female: Without the formal status of a "wife," women often face sudden abandonment without the structural safety nets of marriage.

XII. The Allahabad High Court and the Paradox of Adultery

Recent judicial pronouncements have added a layer of complexity. In Kiran Rawat and Anr. v. State of UP (2023) and subsequent 2024 observations, the Allahabad High Court has navigated the thin line between morality and legality.

The Case of the Subsisting Marriage

In a landmark and controversial vein, the Court has encountered cases where a man or woman enters a live-in relationship without dissolving their previous marriage.

While the Supreme Court decriminalized adultery (Joseph Shine v. Union of India), the Allahabad High Court has recently cautioned that "personal liberty" cannot be used to sanctify "socially chaotic" behavior. In some instances, the Court refused to grant protection to couples where one partner was still legally married, noting that such a relationship may infringe upon the rights of the "legally wedded spouse."

"The right to choice and liberty does not mean one can trample upon the dignity and legal rights of a spouse left behind."

XIII. A Liberal Critique: Liberty Without Responsibility?

From a liberal standpoint, the freedom to choose one's partner is paramount. However, a "liberalism" that ignores the economic and emotional wreckage of a discarded spouse is merely a return to the monarchic whims of the past.

In the era of Kings, a monarch could bring any woman into the palace, declaring her a queen while the previous wives languished in the shadows. If a modern man enters a live-in relationship without dissolving his marriage, he is effectively practicing a form of informal polygamy.

The Woman Left Behind

The "progressive" narrative often focuses on the couple in the live-in relationship. But what of the woman who stayed within the marriage, performed the domestic labor, and adhered to the "contract"?

If the marriage is not dissolved, she has no closure.

She is left in a legal limbo where she is neither a wife nor a divorcee.

Her dignity is sacrificed at the altar of the man’s "new freedom."

XIV. Conclusion: Toward a Framework of Dignified Freedom

The journey from the fluid relations of the prehistoric age to the modern live-in relationship has come full circle, but the power dynamics remain skewed. To ensure justice in the changing scenario of India, we must move toward a Balanced Framework:

Mandatory Dissolution: Personal liberty must be harmonized with legal responsibility. A new union should legally necessitate the formal closing of the old one to ensure the first spouse's rights to alimony and dignity.

Compensatory Mechanisms: We need clear laws for "palimony" in live-in breakups, preventing the leap to "rape" charges while ensuring women are not left destitute.

De-stigmatization of Exit: Marriage must be easy to enter and, when it fails, dignified to exit.

Freedom of choice is a hollow victory if it is built on the abandonment of another. The evolution of man-woman relations must lead us not back to the chaos of the powerful, but forward to a society where every individual—the wife, the companion, and the husband—is treated as an end in themselves, and never merely as a means to an end.

Footnotes 

1. ¹ Kiran Rawat and Another v. State of U.P. and Others (2023) - The Court emphasized that "social fabric" cannot be ignored in the name of live-in relationships.

2. ² Asha Devi and Another v. State of U.P. (2021/2024 trends) - Addressing the illegality of live-in relations when a spouse is living.

3. Engels, F. (1884). The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State.

4. Ambedkar, B.R. (1916). Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development. 

5. de Beauvoir, S. (1949). The Second Sex.