Understanding Sarkar
The
Indian Episteme, Macrohistory and Transformative Knowledge
by
Sohail Inayatullah
Sohail Inayatullah takes us on a journey through Indian
philosophy, grand theory and macrohistory. We understand and
appreciate Indian cyclical and spiral theories of history, and
their epistemological context. From other civilizations, we
explore the stages and mechanisms of social change as developed by
seminal thinkers such as Ssu-Ma Ch’ien, Ibn Khaldun,
Giambattista Vico, George Wilhelm Friedrick Hegel, Oswald Spengler,
Pitirim Sorokin, Michel Foucault and many others. They are invited
to a multi-civilizational dialog on the nature of agency and
structure, and the escape ways from the patterns of history.
But
the journey is centered on P.R. Sarkar, the controversial Indian
philosopher, guru and activist. While Sarkar passed away in 1990,
his work, his social movements, his vision of the future remains
ever alive. Inayatullah brings us closer to the heart and head of
this giant luminary. Through Understanding
Sarkar, we gain insight into Indian philosophy, comparative
social theory, and the ways in which knowledge can transform and
liberate.
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Comments on Understanding Sarkar
The next generation of South Asians will consider
themselves fortunate that scholars like Sohail Inayatullah have
helped to keep open a humane and plural vision of the future for
them.
Dr. Ashis Nandy, Director, Center of the Study of
Developing Societies, Delhi. Author of The
Intimate Enemy and Traditions,
Tyranny and Utopias.
A
superb book. Deeply inspiring and provocative. The
Sarkar-Inayatullah combination makes very good reading indeed.
Inayatullah introduces the fascinating world – in time, in
space, and in social space – of P.R. Sarkar.
Johan Galtung, President of Transcend: A
Peace and Development Network and author of over seventy books
on peace studies, futures studies, international relations,
Gandhi, and social theory. Formerly, Professor of Peace, Political
Science and Sociology at the Universities of Bern, Saarland,
Hawaii and Witten-Herdecke,
Dr. Sohail
Inayatullah is the leading example of a new generation of global
thinkers, actors and visionaries.
While firmly attached to and informed by the culture into
which he was born, and passionately and yet rationally committed
to facilitating the future of South Asia, Sohail Inayatullah is
also a global --
it is not too much to say, cosmic --
figure as well, carrying in his very person the tensions and hopes
of a future which is at the same time both local and global.
James Dator, Professor of Political Science and Director of
the Hawaii Research Center for Futures Studies, University of
Hawaii. Secretary-General and President of the World Futures
Studies Federation, 1982-1990.
In addition to the service he is
rendering by bringing to a wider audience the thoughts of a very
important thinker, Sohail Inayatullah provides an extraordinary
contribution to social theory with an unusual combination of
analytic rigor and boundary challenging imagination.
Professor Michael Shapiro, University of Hawaii is
the author of numerous books on political and social
theory including, Reading
the Postmodern Polity, Reading
'Adam Smith', Violent
Cartographies and Cinematic Political Thought, For Moral
Ambiguity: National Culture and the Politics of the Family
2001.
In
this scholarly and inspiring work, Sohail Inayatullah brings to
life the contributions of the remarkable Indian visionary,
theorist, and social activist Prabhat Rainjan Sarkar. Skillfully
blending his understanding of both Eastern and Western scholarly
traditions, Inayatullah looks at history from a non-eurocentric
perspective that also takes into account the thinking of some of
the best known Western macrohistorians.
This book is not only highly instructive; it also never
loses sight of what Sarkar called neo-humanism – the
consciousness that we are part of an interconnected whole and that
a good society is one that manages to represent harmoniously the
spiritual needs of its individuals.
Riane Eisler, author of
The Chalice & The Blade, Sacred Pleasure, and Tomorrow’s
Children.
Sarkar's
writings on historical processes offer a refreshing alternative to
the orthodox interpretations of Toynbee, Hegel and Marx.
He makes Samuel Huntington's Clash of Civilizations seem
parochial in comparison. Dr.
Inayatullah skillfully weaves Sarkar's comprehensive overview of
cultural life-cycles into a coherent whole, through which the full
sweep and scope of the fundamental forces that shape history can
be rendered. Despite
the magnitude of the canvas upon he paints, his is a work of
systematic and focused scholarship.
This book should be required reading for anyone looking to
understand macrotheories of social change from an non-eurocentric,
holistic, and synergistic perspective.
Dr. Tim Dolan, Associate
Professor of Political Science at Southern Oregon University and
Director of the Master in Management Program.
Sohail
Inayatullah is the world's leading scholar of Sarkar's thought.
His latest book, Understanding Sarkar, is sweeping in scope -
quite literally a philosophical
tour de force. By contrasting Sarkar's ideas to some of the
greatest minds in human history, Inayatullah has achieved a
remarkable philosophical
integration that is both breathtaking in its vision and
relevant in its possibilities for creating societal change.
Indeed, if you want a
better grasp of Sarkar's comprehensive worldview, I can think of
no better source than
Inayatullah. Brilliant.
Roar Bjonnes, writer and former editor of Prout
Journal and Common Future
Dr.
Sohail Inayatullah’s book offers an excellent entry point for
those wanting to explore the fascinating and challenging
ideas of P. R. Sarkar.
At the same time Understanding Sarkar
provides those who have studied Sarkar with wonderful new ways of
seeing and connecting the vast expanses of his works.
We owe much to Dr. Inayatullah for this splendid effort.
Craig Runde, Director of New Program Development, Eckerd
College, St. Petersburg, Florida
In
a time when "global" is equated with
"western", Sohail Inayatullah takes us through the door
of Indian thinking to a world view that is global in the true
sense of the word. Going beyond naive Western idolization of Asian
philosophies and avoiding the pitfalls of dogmatic, sometimes
fanatic, adherence to tradition faith characteristic to many
Eastern mentalities Inayatullah examines P.R. Sarkar's world in
pursuit of a universality that is yet to be realized within the
potential of human civilization. Those, wishing freedom from
culturally ingrained mental habits, should consider this work as
essential reading.
Dr. Partow Izadi, senior scientist in evolutionary futures,
global education and systems theory, University of Lapland,
Finland.
This
is a companion volume to Inayatullah and Galtung's masterly
synthesis of macrohistory and macrohistorians, that includes P R
Sarkar. Here the
practice as well as the theory of Sarkar enters the grand sweep,
enriching and legitimating the story.
Their respective models have elements in common but few
contain all Sarkar's elements of spiritual practice, humanity, and
humility - even if potentially ferocious.
He lived, fought and spread his theory into a movement.
Isolated perhaps from the writings of the other great
minds, Sarkar seems to have an uncanny understanding of the
emerging insights of genetics on our social behavior (evolutionary
psychology or neo-Darwinism) and of social construction
Alan Fricker, President, Sustainable Futures Trust,
Wellington, New Zealand
Previously, Dr. Inayatullah's co-authored Macrohistory and
Macrohistorians wove the warp and weft of philosophical
perspectives throughout the course of history. Now, Sohail
Inayatullah provides a provocative look at macrohistorical
trends from the standpoint of a renowned Eastern philosopher and
social critic, P.R. Sarkar, whose impassioned views emote
feelings of the forgotten masses.
Sarkar's wide-ranging views, aptly portrayed by the author, tend
to force reconsideration of Western, capitalistic,
entrepreneurial, materialistic, secular, scientific and
political engrained mindsets. Dr. Inayatullah's
presentation piques realization of the self-centered and smug
arrogance that often underpins Western views. Sarkar's
wisdom of the Eastern philosophical perspective, will send minds
racing. Grasping the salience of diverse views is certain
to regird a searching of the readers' own consciousness.
Readers may begin pondering engrained cultural mindsets, guiding
philosophies, and the Great Issues posed by the book. In
the process, readers may come to
better know themselves.
Graham Molitor, President, Public Policy
Forecasting, and Vice President and Legal Counsel, World Future
Society
An impressive tour de force, clearly enabling an
appreciation of a significant but completely non-Western
worldview in several dimensions
Michael Marien, Future Survey, February 2002.
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