INDIAN LITERATURE : EVOLUTION, DIVERSITY, AND CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE
Description
Abstract: This paper offers a critical and interpretive reading of Mir Rezaul Karim’s essay ‘Shirshendu Babuder Prati Galpara Prosange’ (published in Drishti, 1 October 2025). The article reflects a profound engagement with the crisis of secular democracy, state ethics, and communal sensitivity in contemporary India. Karim’s essay transcends journalistic commentary to reach a philosophical level of inquiry, examining how state power, religious identity, and moral responsibility intersect in the modern sociopolitical sphere. This critique evaluates his approach from both affirmative and critical standpoints within an MLA academic framework. Keywords: Secularism, Communalism, Justice, Minority Rights, State Power, Social Consciousness, Intellectual Resistance. Introduction: Mir Rezaul Karim, Professor of Bengali at Aliah University, is known for his penetrating analyses of contemporary Bengali society. His essay ‘Shirshendu Babuder Prati Galpara Prosange’ (Regarding the insults towards Shirshendu Babu)(Karim 2025) challenges the complacency of the Indian state’s secular ideal and examines the moral fissures underlying political authority. Through a combination of journalistic urgency and philosophical depth, Karim interrogates the concept of freedom in postcolonial India — a freedom that remains incomplete when social justice and minority dignity are compromised.
Files
Steps to reproduce
Conclusion: Mir Rezaul Karim’s ‘Shirshendu Babuder Prati Galpara Prosange’ (Regarding the insults towards Shirshendu Babu) stands as a powerful act of intellectual resistance. It interrogates the contradictions of democracy, challenges communal politics, and defends the moral foundations of citizenship. Karim’s voice is not that of an ideologue but of a moral philosopher who insists that dissent is integral to democracy. By blending historical consciousness, political critique, and humanist ethics, Karim’s essay transforms journalism into a form of civic philosophy. It reminds us that freedom, when detached from compassion, becomes hollow—and that the duty of the scholar is not silence but moral witness. Works Cited: • Karim, Mir Rezaul. ‘Shirshendu Babuder Prati Galpara Prosange.’ ‘Drishti’, vol. 2, no. 9, 1 Oct. 2025, pp. 1–3. • Fanon, Frantz. ‘The Wretched of the Earth’. Translated by Richard Philcox, Grove Press, 2004. • Foucault, Michel. ‘ Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison’. Translated by Alan Sheridan, Vintage Books, 1995. • Said, Edward W. ‘Representations of the Intellectual’. Vintage, 1996. • Sen, Amartya. ‘Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny’. Penguin Books, 2006. • Tagore, Rabindranath. ‘Nationalism’. Macmillan, 1917.
Institutions
- Bangabasi Morning College