The Mountain Man and the Politics of Pain

Dalit Personhood, the Caste System and 'Scar Cultures'

Authors

  • Christoph Singer

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.57974/Re:visit_2023_2.04

Keywords:

trauma-narrative, borders, caste, Dalit, (cultural) identity, pain, compassion

Abstract

Ketan Mehta’s 2015-film Manjhi: The Mountain Man tells the story of Dashrath Manjhi, a Dalit from a small village in Bihar, India. The villagers’ access to the closest hospital in Wazirgani, the nearest town is blocked by a nameless mountain, resulting in the death of the protagonist’s wife, Phaguniya. Phaguniya’s grieving husband copes with this loss by spending twenty-two years to single-handedly cut a road through the mountain.

In this paper, I will discuss Mehta’s film – which is based on real events – as an expression of what Pramod Nayar calls ‘scar cultures’. Here the mountain symbolises the protagonist’s grief and becomes a spatial signifier for India’s traumatic, post-colonial upheavals in general, and the realities of the caste system in particular. Mehta refuses to transform this tale of man versus mountain into a heroic biopic. While Manjhi’s struggles and the attendant goal exceed the ordinary, this character still appears marginalised and is used to shed a light on the pain on the Dalit community around him. He becomes a vehicle of representing those caught in the shadow of the caste pyramid. More importantly, The Mountain Mantells a painful narrative and depicts dissolving identities, cultural fragmentations, and social disruptions.

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Published

2023-11-30

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