Abstract

Abstract The idea with which Rabindranath Tagore established Visva-Bharati is different from that of the grounding of Immanuel Kant's “university with condition” or that of Jacques Derrida's “university without condition.” The thinking that finally materialized into Visva-Bharati, or rather the “fore-thinking,” is an uncanny complex of aesthetics, politics, topolitics, pedagogy, and Tagorean philosophy of the “home” and the “world.” There is neither the “conflict” of Kant's essay The Conflict of the Faculties nor Derrida's absolute radicality and radical absoluteness: there is neither Kant's “freedom of the Enlightenment” nor Derrida's “freedom from the Enlightenment.” Ranjan Ghosh captures this so-called dichotomy engrossingly in his book Aesthetics, Politics, Pedagogy and Tagore. In Tagore's idea of university, we find a “traffic,” an exchange of some sort, between nativism and cosmopolitanism, colonial and postcolonial, singularity and plurality, root and rootlessness. Ghosh not only controls the “traffic” in his work but also gives his close reading of the institution and, most importantly, the underlying principle that led to the establishment of the institution. Visva-Bharati was not built upon the principles of a modern university. It did not have the moral responsibility of following the already established norms and regulations or the society at large but had what Ghosh calls a sense of “no-responsibility.” Tagore's idea of university was thus built upon the “no-responsibility” toward the old Eurocentric model of pedagogy and the “responsibility” toward creating a new and more reflective model. He employed one set of responsibilities to “counter” another set of responsibilities. This article in a way is a reimagining, a commentary on Ghosh's work on the pedagogical aspects of Visva-Bharati.

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