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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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.
When we began Mutant, we set ourselves the task of entering ordinary language. Not the magisterial or prophetic, but words, ideas and concepts so quotidian, they have paradoxically become — much like democracy — impenetrable.
Nowhere is that paradox more conspicuous than in the idea of truth.
To think about truth is to immediately hit a wall. Loaded with theological overtones on the one hand and metaphysical baggage on the other, truth is weak, uncertain, time-consuming, painstaking. It carries a high burden of proof. It demands hard work, and in the political realm, courage. It promises liberty but delivers disappointment. And so it enters the world quietly—often too late, frequently unwelcome.
What do we do with a thing like that? And what makes this thing—truth—unnatural to politics, so rare in politics, and yet so divisive a terrain of the political?
“The fundamental problem with truth is that unlike a lie, it does not serve an immediate purpose,” Aishwary points out. “A lie justifies itself. A lie has intentionality. A lie serves a political end. Truth does not come into the world as instrumentality. It does not seem to serve a purpose until that dangerous, even lethal moment, when lies and rumors have started to serve theirs.”
Truth, in other words, becomes visible to us only in its ruin. But what, in the moment of its disappearance, does truth take with it?
“In her landmark1951 work The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt delivers a startling insight when she refuses a binaristic distinction between truth and lying,” says Aishwary. “She writes instead of the fundamental importance of what she calls standards of thought.”
“The ideal subject of populist and fascistic disinformation, that is to say, the ideal subject of totalitarian rule is never a card-carrying Nazi or card-carrying communist, Arendt argues. The ideal subject of totalitarian rule are people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, truth and lying, has itself ceased to matter. For whom the paradigms of judgment have collapsed. And it is at that moment that we realize what truth-telling can do, and what its disappearance can mean for the modern democratic experiment.”
“Truth, then, is not a rule,” Aishwary proposes. “It is a commitment, a technique. It is Baldwin’s fire, King’s pilgrimage, Ambedkar’s responsibility."
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.