There are
very few books that fill you with a sense of urgency to write something on them
before it’s too late. Amitav Ghosh’s The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable, which marks the
author’s return to nonfiction after a long while, is one such book. The Great
Derangement…delves into history (literary and political), analyses contemporary
practices, our choices and preferences...and tells us how they are collectively
responsible for forcing the nature to unleash destructive forces - like earth
swallowing floods, monstrous earth quakes, gales with never-heard-of speed and
ferocity – and have brought us to the edge from where a return journey is not
possible unless we immediately stop the ‘march of modernity’.
The book
blames several things for the climate challenges we are faced with – one is
history, another is indifference of serious fiction towards climactic matters,
another is the apathy of governments to climactic concerns, still another is
our lack of awareness about the havoc climate change can wreak in our lives
although there is no dearth of evidence around us.
Ghosh is
most morbid about the middle class when it comes to suffering from impact of
climate change. He says the rich will fly away in airplanes, the poor will go
away to their villages, but where will the middle class go given the fact that
they have built their lives in cities? In other words, Ghosh says cities are
most vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
And
particularly those that are close to sea or other forms of water bodies, like
Mumbai, Hong Kong, Singapore, Calcutta. Most of these cities were built in
colonial period to act as good trade and commerce centers because of their
proximity to water. And somehow this preference for proximity with water has
crept into the elites of these cities, who tend to build their settlements
close to water. The richer the closer.
This love of
the rich for staying close to water makes the sea-facing locations most coveted
real estate pieces. And, Ghosh observes, this desirability of these locations as
real estate properties, anywhere around the world, makes it difficult for
governments (or municipal bodies) to create awareness about the perils of
staying close to water bodies, thanks to the political clout the real estate
practitioners enjoy everywhere.
For Ghosh the
peril of this proximity was best exemplified when he travelled to Andaman and
Nicobar islands to report on the impact of tsunami. He visited an army settlement located close
to the sea. He noticed two things: a) the higher the rank of the occupant, the
closer his dwelling was to the sea leading to the highest rank holder staying
closest to the sea (and vice versa); b) those closest to the sea were affected
the most by tsunami.
Ghosh
observes that in the pre-colonial period people lived away from water, but with
the city-building projects the colonial masters took up, the preference slowly
reversed.
One of the most original points Ghosh makes in Derangement is
the indifference of literary fiction to the concerns of climate change.
According to Ghosh, some of the practitioners of serious fiction in the 19th
century consciously moved away from using fantastical elements – like flying
carpets or a rising sea gulping a landscape – as a means to tell stories, in
order to focus on more prosaic day-to-day affairs of life. This prosaic-ity
fulfilled the requirements of serious fiction. So describing minor details of
landscape and how people lived their lives became fashionable. Amitav Ghosh
says this shift from writing about fantastical occurrences to more mundane
motions of life had to do with the emphasis of the Industrial Revolution on
betterment of human lives.
This shift made the fury of nature, like floods, cyclones
etc., an untouchable terrain for serous fiction – because, as Ghosh observes,
the gigantic scale of these furies of nature lends them a fantasy-like
incredulity not to be dealt with in the type of fiction which swears by
credulity.
Writing on furies of nature fell to less-respected a form of
fiction, genre fiction. And, Ghosh rues, it continues to this day. That is why
thrillers and science fiction have addressed climactic concerns; but sadly, the
author says, because genre fictions hardly receive any serious literary award,
the issues they address don’t receive the attention they deserve.
One of the things responsible for pushing us to the brink is
replacement of coal with petrol as a fuel. Petrol is a more versatile fuel than
coal but that is not the only thing which explains why petrol usurped coal’s position
as a primary fuel: the reason is petrol is a politically safer fuel than coal –
and what makes coal a politically volatile fuel is the highly visible mining
process involved in it unlike the refinement process of petrol which is very
opaque.
Remember the blackened face of the 20th century coal
miner melancholically looking at you from a black and white photo? This
visibility of the plight of coal miners is responsible for the revolutions that
coal mining has led to unlike the plight of petroleum refinery workers which
suffers in obscurity. And the political elite of the Anglosphere the Churchills
and Roosevelts of this world knew about this disadvantage of coal mining, Europe
having experienced many of the coal-triggered revolutions, and ensured that
coal was replaced by petroleum as a primary fuel.
But as
always Ghosh’s favorite whipping horse is once again colonialism. He says
Britain made sure that the benefits of the industrial revolution were denied to
its colonies – and that’s the kind of development that took place in the
Western world didn’t take start in Asia until the 1950s when the colonies
started getting independence. But, according to the author, the earth can’t
withstand the rigor of another round of Western-style development.
That’s why,
in climate negotiations taking place among nations, the Western nations insist
the poorer nations to take a different route to development.
Ghosh says governments
across the world, particularly the democratic ones, come to power on the
promise of fulfilling people’s aspirations – and therefore are ill-placed to
ask their citizenry to view their actions in the light of their moral
responsibility towards saving the earth from going over the edge. It’s only
religious groups that can do that. And Ghosh praises the book Laudato Si
written by pope Francis in this regard and does a comparative study between the
papal book on climate and another important treatise concerning the same
subject, The Paris Agreement - and concludes that Laudato Si is much more lucid
and readable of the two.
You can take The Great Derangement in many ways – as a book
which preaches, prophesises, disparages - by asking us to happily forgo the
type of modern development the Western nations have taken for granted. And I am
afraid seeing the book in any of these ways will obscure you to its merit as a
well-researched book which forcefully holds a brief for climate and makes some
unique points along the way. But it does so not without occasionally sliding into ideological
slots avoiding which would have ensured a wider acceptability of its views which are certainly worthy of attention.