Devanura Mahadeva has adopted a unique distribution strategy of allowing multiple publishers to publish the book in different regions of Karnataka, without expecting any royalty. As many as six Kannada publishers — big and small — are already distributing these books across the state, with more joining the bandwagon given the overwhelming demand for the book. Although only the Kannada original is out for sale, Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Hindi, and English translations are underway.
Who is Devanura Mahadeva and why is his book rattling the state’s right-wing ecosystem? There are a few reasons. Mahadeva may be a relatively unknown name elsewhere, but he is a household name in Karnataka. Through his path-breaking novels like Kusuma Baale and Odalala (for which he won the State and Central Sahitya Academy awards), he was among the first of the subversive writers in modern Kannada literature. Unlike the wordy and Sanskritised writings consumed by the largely upper-caste Kannada literati, Mahadeva’s USP was his colloquial prose without the Brahminical gaze. A Dalit writer, he became one of the most important figures of the Bandaya literary movement, that was kicked off in the 1970s by emerging Dalit writers who used prose as well as poetry to both articulate and resist all forms of social injustice. In recent years, as the state has increasingly slipped into the hands of the right-wing ecosystem, Mahadeva remains one of the few critical voices of reason, always taking an outspoken stand against acts of oppression. His voice has the power to reach a segment that lives beyond the agraharas of Bengaluru, Mysuru, Mangaluru, and Dharwad. The same book written by another political commentator would perhaps not have carried the same weight or have reached the same audience.
The book is also short and accessible. It is a 64-page booklet that does not overwhelm the reader with complex jargon, and can be read in one sitting. It has been written keeping in mind a reader whose politics have likely been shaped by right-wing propaganda. But because he is Devanura Mahadeva, a man of and from the masses, he manages to educate the reader sans the paternalistic tone that comes naturally to most elite progressives.
In the second part, he contextualises these agendas by covering a range of contemporary developments — from GST to privatisation, from ban on hijab to passing of the CAA and anti-conversion laws — and explaining how each of them takes the RSS closer to realising its core and subsidiary agendas.
He talks to the oppressed — women, Dalits, Bahujans, minorities — and urges them to see how rights earned for the first time in history through our constitutional reforms are being reversed, effectively pushing them back to their colonial and pre-colonial status, while the RSS-BJP distracts and pits them against each other by raking up emotional issues at its whim.
At a time when the RSS-BJP seems to be mastering its social engineering strategy by gaining popular support among all sections of the society, conveying a comprehensive critique of its ideology to the people is important. This is undeniably the most powerful contribution of the book, and its potential impact is not lost on the right-wing ecosystem.
Disclaimer: The author is a researcher working at the intersection of data, economics, finance, and policy with a not-for-profit. The opinions are his own and do not reflect those of the employer or the publication.
(With inputs from Guruprasad DN and Anusha Bhat)