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Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
Institute for New Global Politics
24 episodes
4 months ago
As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.
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All content for Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy is the property of Institute for New Global Politics and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.
Show more...
Courses
Education,
Society & Culture,
News,
Politics
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E | EQUALITY
Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
1 hour 3 minutes 29 seconds
9 months ago
E | EQUALITY
We have so far traversed almost two dozen concepts at Mutant. And yet every word thought and spoken in these dialogues, it might be said, is about one humane dream: equality. Every episode in which we have spoken of caste, of the figure of the migrant, of the logics of segregation, of thinkers of the Black radical tradition; every reckoning we have made with our neodemocratic condition, with its cruelty and the decomposition of the human, and with our abandonment of the social contract, has returned us to the strange absence of moral and political equality on our planet. And yet it is freedom today that animates our rhetoric and galvanizes democratic politics worldwide, while equality—foundational to the very compact we make to recognize each other as human—remains ambiguous, even opaque. “Democracy is consumed by the question of freedom,” says @realaishwarykumar. “But politics is the expression of freedom, not the problem that politics seeks to solve. To what end, after all, do we seek, as Hannah Arendt might say, the freedom to be free? The problem that modern democratic politics seeks to solve is of equality.” Therein lies its fundamental paradox. For the grounds of our equality do not exist. Human beings are born unequal, sometimes unbearably so. They bear the brunt of earth—its water and fire—unequally. And they form unequal societies to maintain this disparity, slyly mocking the state of nature from which they claim to have emerged. “There is nothing radical about evil, Hannah Arendt would later concede,” Aishwary reminds us. “It is equality that is radical, precisely because it's so elusive, and because it can be understood only as an act of faith, one whose pursuit requires both political trust in our institutions and the moral courage to disobey them. Equality will require what Ambedkar calls force. A force that ends inequality.” “Like gravity, this force—the desire for equality—might already be in us, weak but irreducible, even if we remain unsure what an equal earth would look like.” Image from Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes (1651)
Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.