Pankaj Mishra Quotes

Powerful Pankaj Mishra for Daily Growth

In a typically contradictory move, globalisation, while promoting economic integration among elites, has exacerbated sectarianism everywhere else.

- Pankaj Mishra

Promoting, Sectarianism, Contradictory

Indonesia's diversity is formidable: some thirteen and a half thousand islands, two hundred and fifty million people, around three hundred and sixty ethnic groups, and more than seven hundred languages.

- Pankaj Mishra

Sixty, Some, Hundred, Formidable

The onslaught of new and complex information, the academic and thinktank cults of expertise, not to mention the impossibility of bohemia in the age of high rents, have conspired to assassinate the public intellectual.

- Pankaj Mishra

New, Impossibility, Bohemia

The British Empire passed quickly and with less humiliation than its French and Dutch counterparts, but decades later, the vicious politics of partition still seems to define India and Pakistan.

- Pankaj Mishra

Politics, Still, Vicious

In 1853, American warships bullied Japan out of centuries of virtual isolation and into the modern world. The threat of force compelled Japan, like India and China before it, to accept trade agreements that were economically ruinous and eroded national sovereignty.

- Pankaj Mishra

Virtual, Before, Japan, Eroded

The Indonesian nationalists, mainly Javanese, who threw the Dutch out - in 1949, after a four-year struggle - were keen to preserve their inheritance and emulated the coercion, deceit, and bribery of the colonial rulers.

- Pankaj Mishra

Inheritance, Threw, Bribery, Coercion

I think the presence of caste in India, how the villages are geographically structured on caste lines, is very different from China. The presence of an egalitarian culture is striking in a Chinese village.

- Pankaj Mishra

Think, I Think, Very, Caste

No Muslim country has ever done as much as Turkey to make itself over in the image of a European nation-state; the country's westernised elite brutally imposed secularism, among other things, on its devout population of peasants.

- Pankaj Mishra

Country, Over, Image, Devout

The advocates of retaliatory wars will continue to assume a much simpler reality with their hoary oppositions: Religious and secular, backward and enlightened, free and unfree. But if we are to admit how deeply and irrevocably interconnected our world is, then we must find new ways to break the cycle of counter-productive violence.

- Pankaj Mishra

Religious, Interconnected, Simpler

Though blessed with many able administrators, the British found India just too large and diverse to handle. Many of their decisions stoked Hindu-Muslim tensions, imposing sharp new religious-political identities on Indians.

- Pankaj Mishra

New, Imposing, Though, Stoked

Local markets for literary fiction remain underdeveloped; the metropolis often holds out the only real possibility of a professional writing career.

- Pankaj Mishra

Career, Fiction, Remain, Metropolis

Living in a cultural milieu where the foreign writers most widely available and admired were Russian, I came very late to postwar American writers, and I had great trouble with the canonically exalted white male writers I tried first.

- Pankaj Mishra

American, Very, Available, Postwar

After the oil crisis of 1973, many European countries tightened restrictions on immigrants. By then, millions of Muslims had decided to settle in Europe, preferring the social segregation and racial discrimination they found in the West to political and economic turmoil at home.

- Pankaj Mishra

Political, Settle, Had, Turmoil

Countries that managed to rebuild commanding state structures after popular nationalist revolutions - such as China, Vietnam, and Iran - look stable and cohesive when compared with a traditional monarchy such as Thailand or wholly artificial nation-states like Iraq and Syria.

- Pankaj Mishra

Wholly, Cohesive, Commanding, Thailand

Political elites look increasingly interchangeable: Blair, Brown, and Cameron have all tried to provide cover for the surrender of sovereignty to foreign investors with invocations of 'British' values, and, more opportunistically, anti-immigrant rhetoric.

- Pankaj Mishra

More, Increasingly, Cameron, Sovereignty

German writers in the late 18th century were the first to uphold a prickly, literary nationalism, in reaction to the then dominance and prestige of French literature.

- Pankaj Mishra

French Literature, German, 18th Century

Though there are laws against blasphemy and insult to religion in many European countries, France has institutionalised its anti-clerical past by proscribing religion from public life.

- Pankaj Mishra

Against, Laws, Though, Public Life

It turns out that globalisation, while promising sameness through brand-name consumption, was fostering, through uneven economic growth, an intense feeling of difference.

- Pankaj Mishra

Feeling, Through, Fostering, Consumption

Like the Britain of Beaverbrook and Kipling, Japan in the early twentieth century was a jingoistic nation, subduing weaker countries with the help of populist politicians and sensationalist journalism.

- Pankaj Mishra

Like, Japan, Britain, Weaker

As an Indian, you feel easily connected with certain histories in places like Indonesia, where one sees, because of the presence of the Hindu-Buddhist past, Hindus still living there or Muslims performing rituals that are instantly familiar.

- Pankaj Mishra

Feel, Instantly, Easily, Hindus

Economic disasters or foolish wars are hardly guaranteed to bring about large-scale individual self-examination or renew the appeal of truly participatory democracy.

- Pankaj Mishra

Bring, Individual, Disasters, Foolish

Shallowness and ignorance have been our lot in the mass consumer societies we inhabit, where we were too distracted to act politically, apart from periodically deputing political elites to take life-and-death decisions on our behalf.

- Pankaj Mishra

Political, Been, Mass, Decisions

Ineptitude and negligence directed British policies in India more than any cynical desire to divide and rule, but the British were not above exploiting rivalries.

- Pankaj Mishra

Desire, More, Directed, Negligence

Basically, I think of fiction and non-fiction as different ways of engaging with the world. You reach a point where you feel you have said all you possibly can, in reportage or a review essay or a reflection on history, which 'From the Ruins of Empire' was.

- Pankaj Mishra

Reach, Fiction, I Think, Ruins

The Turkish, Arab and Chinese nationalists who built new nation-states out of the ruins of old empires scorned their old, decrepit rulers as much as they did the foreign imperialists who imposed free trade through gunboats.

- Pankaj Mishra

Through, Free Trade, Imposed, Ruins

Many writers from the suburbs of history, such as Ireland and Argentina, produced more original work than their counterparts in the United States; they still seem to.

- Pankaj Mishra

United States, Suburbs, Argentina

Minorities within nation-states frayed by global capitalism are naturally more resentful of hollowed-out but still heavily centralised systems of political and economic domination.

- Pankaj Mishra

Within, Still, Domination, Resentful

Obama was expected to restore an ethical sheen to post-9/11 foreign policy, but he has intensified drone warfare in Yemen and Pakistan, pursued whistle-blowers, and failed to close down Guantanamo.

- Pankaj Mishra

Restore, Expected, Obama, Intensified

I started out as a novelist and wrote several novels before deciding to publish one, and I fully intend to go back to the form.

- Pankaj Mishra

Before, Wrote, Several, Intend

As the years passed in my village, I witnessed poorly educated young men leaving to seek the greater comforts and liberations of big cities. I would see them on my visits to Delhi.

- Pankaj Mishra

Big, Witnessed, Poorly, Delhi

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