Language, Purity, and the Logic of Democracy

Article Type

Research Article

Publication Title

Economic and Political Weekly

Abstract

It is argued here that the 1648 "Peace of Westphalia," inaugurating the "secular state," substituted language for religion as the basis for the state's project of affectively unifying the nation. Working to build a truly neutral state, equally available to all its citizens, involves ensuring the freedom of critical discourse to question the proto-hegemonic narrative associated with every primordial (religious or linguistic) affi liation. The Westphalian-style sanctifi cation of these affi liations becomes pathological in a society that worships purity and hierarchy. Peggy Mohan, it is argued, provides a cogent characterisation of language on the basis of which one can overcome such pathologies and work towards a chauvinism-free model of democracy.

First Page

38

Last Page

42

Publication Date

4-2-2022

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