https://www.heraldgoa.in/Cafe/Anjali-Arondekar%E2%80%99s-experiments-with-abundance/210942

It is only now, six long decades after decolonization, that some of the
inconvenient truths about Goa’s complicated histories - which pose
continual, and indeed often insuperable challenges to the prevailing
simplistic, majoritarian or nationalist readings - are being analyzed with
the close attention they’ve always merited. With her brilliantly
conceived *Abundance:
Sexuality’s History (*https://orientblackswan.com/details?id=9789354424540),
Professor Anjali Arondekar (who teaches Feminist Studies at the University
of California at Santa Cruz, where she is the Founding Director of the
Center for South Asian Studies) has reset the bar very high, with one of
the best, richest and most important books of Indian historiography ever
written. It’s a huge achievement, with even huger implications for how we
assess and think about our collective past.

Although not yet well known in her ancestral homeland, Arondekar has been
an academic rockstar for a long time. Born in 1968, she left India at 17
after being awarded a scholarship to represent India at the Armand Hammer
United World College in New Mexico, then received her undergraduate degree
as a college scholar (reserved for students of “exceptional academic
promise”) at Cornell University, and went on to earn her PhD at the
University of Pennsylvania. Her debut monograph For the Record: On
Sexuality and the Colonial Archive in India (Duke University Press, 2009)
won the Alan Bray Memorial Book Award for the best book in lesbian, gay or
queer studies in literature and cultural studies from the Modern Language
Association. Now, her UCSC page says that “broadly speaking, I read and
write within established disciplines (history, literature, law) and field
formations (area studies, queer/sexuality studies), mobilizing South Asia
through its multilingual and divergent colonial and national formations.”

There is an additional crucial biographical twist here, however, which
imbues much of Arondekar’s work with incandescent urgency. That is,
*Abundance* is not only an intellectual tour-de-force, but also an
insider’s presentation. As the author herself puts it, her book “The past
is not only usable here but always somewhere close at hand. I grew up
within the bawdy, colorful and expansive lower-caste politics of the
Gomantak Maratha/Kalavant Samaj, and it is those familial genealogies that
first opened me up to the urgencies of archives and politics. My questions
thus emanate from those intimacies; they are of them, but not about them.
Contravening the protocols of data collection (be they of collectivity,
family, caste, music) was not just a familiar feature of my Samaj life, but
a profoundly political matter. One’s history was not a place of capture; it
was a compositional lexicon of self-making, to be continuously taught,
modulated, inhabited and shed. I can do no better than to tell that story.”

For abiding by her task with such determined verve and vigour, backed by
over 400 sources (with some 50 pages of footnotes an absolute treasure in
themselves), we owe an immense debt of gratitude to Arondekar’s ongoing
lifetime of toil. The result is any number of profound and game-changing
insights, because the relentless making and unmaking of selves that is the
story of the Gomantak Maratha Samaj – once admiringly referred to as
Bharatil ek Aggressor Samaj– is at the heart of modern Goan identity as
well. I especially liked how this was put: “Unlike oft-circulated histories
of devadasis in South Asia that lament the disappearance or erasure of
devadasis, the history of the Samaj offers no telos of loss and recovery.
Instead, the Samaj, from its inception, has maintained a continuous,
copious and accessible archive of its own emergence, embracing rather than
disavowing its past and present attachments to sexuality.”

*Abundance* is the sum of Arondekar’s highly impressive engagement with
that all-important Samaj archive, and it would be a mistake to summarize
too much further from this instant classic now that it is easily available
in India. But I did email the author at her home in California to ask some
questions, including how to best categorize this elegant, beautifully
produced book (about which my initial reaction was to think of Susan
Sontag, and then Teju Cole). Her response: “Less than antecedents, I draw
inspiration from the many scholars and activists who have been working on
caste, gender and sexuality in South Asia— all of them have pushed back
against the mandates of conventional history, and demanded we seek new
vernaculars for carving out our lives and futures. This book is very much
in conversation with that struggle.”

How did she manage to navigate all her personal entanglements in this
subject matter? Arondekar said that “as a minority scholar, I don’t think
one ever eludes the burden and/or responsibility of representation. All one
can do (as I have tried to here) is to temper and attenuate the force of
those expectations. I always tell my students and anyone else who wants to
listen that biography cannot be an obdurate exemplar or an uncomplicated
place of expertise; it must always be a place of un/learning and a site of
knowledge. I say very clearly in my introduction that this book is of the
Samaj but not about the Samaj at the same time. So, while the book engages
robustly with the GMS, it is not a hagiography of the Samaj either.
Instead, I work with the Samaj as an archive that allows us to ask
difficult and necessary questions about our past and our desires for a
simple and redemptive history. What that means is that there will be many
members of the Samaj who disagree with the claims of the book, even as
there will be many who celebrate its place in the world. When I began
archival research on this project, I published a general letter in our
monthly Samaj newsletter, asking for permission to begin this research, and
for the most part, received great support and encouragement.”

In our exchanges, it was easy to see this stellar America-based academic
was particularly keen that her new book should be read, understood and
assimilated in India’s smallest state. When I asked her directly about
this, Arondekar responded with palpable emotion: “my fierce Aai was born in
Shiroda, and I grew up within a community of strong female elders who
always thought of Goa as home. Konkani was a familial language as were
annual trips to Goa. So, Goa has always been my second home, indeed a place
of sanctuary and resistance in our checkered Samaj history. What has always
surprised me is the pride that Goans take in claiming kalavants such as
Amonkar, Mangeshkar and Kurdikar as their own, and how prickly we are about
engaging the histories of sexuality that undergird the emergence of these
kalavants. Similarly, the rise and impact of Dayanand Bandodkar is
rightfully lauded and celebrated, even as his connections to a Devadasi
samaj are relegated to the backyard of Goan history. As I repeatedly note,
the Samaj’s uplift was made possible through the labor (coercive and
otherwise) of hundreds of Goan devadasis who made it possible for someone
like me to do the work I do today. To cover over that story is to reproduce
the violence of caste-oppression, and to once again, not see the abundance
founding our histories. That is sexuality’s history, that is Goa’s history.”

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