10/11/2023
Here's more about 1 of our 6 Pecha Kucha micro-presentations for the evening, 'Cow, Union Buster!' by Parashar Kulkarni (Yale-NUS).
Did the spread of the cow protection movement in colonial and postcolonial India encourage identitarianism and erode working class solidarity? Reviewing the situation in and around industrial cotton mills from the onset of the industrial revolution in India to the 1990s, Parashar Kulkarni’s micro-presentation discusses how the cow, a sacred symbol in Hinduism, was appropriated and weaponised in the anti-labour strategies of mill owners, political leaders, and pro-capitalist governments, becoming symbolic of new collusions between religion, politics and capital.
Parashar Kulkarni is an author, documentary filmmaker and an assistant professor working at the intersections of religion, history and material culture at Yale-NUS. He has published in literary and academic journals such as Granta, The Sociological Review, Boston Review, Social Science History, and the British Journal of Political Science. His writing has received several prizes including the British Academy’s Brian Barry Prize, Boston Review Aura Estrada Prize, and the Commonwealth Writers Short Story Prize. His first novel, Cow and Company, published by Penguin Random House Viking, is about the interactions of religion and capitalism under colonialism.