Rajesh Rajamani’s New Film Fixes the Gaze on the Self-Congratulatory, Liberal Savarna

‘The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas’ takes aim at the liberal and progressive upper castes who speak out about anti-caste solidarity but are far less forthcoming about their privileges.

Rajesh Rajamani’s newly released short-film The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas, with its Luis Buñuel-touch to the title, takes aim at a specific sub-group of upper-castes and Brahmins – the liberals and progressives, who speak out about anti-caste solidarity but are far less forthcoming about their privileges or the consequences of their do-gooding.

Rajamani is both a film critic, primarily covering Tamil cinema, and a filmmaker. He has often written critically on how he believes the Savarna-gaze informs the stories that are told.

As a director and scriptwriter, even in his first short film, that was all of two minutes, he desisted from making his story about violence or oppression. Instead, in Lovers in the Afternoon, a young man makes amends with his irate partner by cooking her beef for lunch. This declaration that a meal of beef is a gesture of affection, that it means warmth, belonging and shared joy, quietly cautioned what was under threat if one didn’t vote wisely. Without referencing lynch-mobs or saffron terror in other parts of the country, it reclaimed beef on screen for its significance to Tamil culture. The film was produced by Pa. Ranjith and released days before Tamil Nadu went to polls during last year’s general elections.

In The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas, Rajamani falls back to satire, a form he is familiar with as the creator of the popular Facebook pages ‘Inedible India‘ (political jokes repurposing Ravi Varma and Kalighat paintings and Mughal miniatures) and ‘Fictional Subtitles‘. His resolve while writing the script, was simple he says; “deflecting the Savarna-gaze back at them.”

The protagonists, Dilip, Aruna and Swaminathan, a trio of independent filmmakers, look for a last-minute replacement to their nameless “Dalit character”. Shot entirely in English, the film lambasts the privileged, upper-class, urban liberal world they so clearly come from. They squabble about political correctness, quote Angela Davis with ease, decide on a whim that a female-led film may be just as good as a male-led one, but befuddled by her looks, tell a Dalit woman that she’s too beautiful for the role.

They keep up a cascade of similar absurd conversations; their panic mounts as the deadline approaches and they grudgingly settle on an actor. Their film gets made. It’s plainly on caste. It’s shown at Goethe Zentrum. Suffused in the post-screening debates by cultural elites, they accept the adulation for the “boldness” of their casting-choice without self-examination.

Rajamani tells me why he felt the need to ridicule this group of Savarnas in particular:

“There’s not much to achieve in mocking those who assert caste hierarchies through open violence. There’s nothing to satirise there. With progressive or liberal upper-castes and Brahmins, there’s a damage they do, that is far-reaching. A Brahmin who speaks out about caste oppression, becomes a super-Brahmin. They’re elevated above their casteist communities, because they are known for being Brahmin and outspoken.”

The consequences, according to him, are that “they take up cultural and academic spaces and claim their positions amplify the cause. They’re rewarded for their actions, but they will also continue to amass the advantages of the castes they are born into. Their anti-caste solidarity gives them credentials. Their radicalism affords them popularity.”

This happens at the cost of edging out of Dalit, Adivasi and Bahujan voices and is distressing Rajamani explains; it creates a narrative in which the word caste itself becomes synonymous with communities that face discrimination. “It’s a very convenient position to focus on atrocities. Savarnas who do that can then occupy a moral high-ground. They’ve talked about the ‘the oppressed’. Why do they never examine instead, the people who actually keep the system of caste running?”

By dedicating, cultural and academic spaces that address caste, to spectacles of oppression, Rajamani tells me, that Savarnas end-up becoming upholders of the caste structure themselves. The comic incongruities that he throws into his film demonstrate the vast expanse between the world of Savarna liberals and progressives and the one they repeatedly declare solidarity with. This disparity becomes evident, in his view, particularly in cultural and academic circles where caste is discussed extensively.

Also Read: The Anti-Caste Film in English Is a Genre in the Making

Caste, hierarchy and violence

“Why does talking about caste, like in cinema for example, always mean talking about manual scavenging, honour-killings, sexual assault on Dalit and Adivasi women, without focusing on the communities that enforce this violent hierarchy. Hierarchies are enforced by those higher up, so the gaze should be on them,” says Rajamani, adding that he wanted his film to symbolise the people who endorse such a skewed picture; one that is too often self-congratulatory, and moulded by the vocabulary of upper-caste radicalism.

These are hard-hitting concerns that he tempers with farce in his film. Dilip – who is obsessed with African-American writers Toni Morrison, Ta-Nehisi Coates, James Baldwin – languidly extols: “How he [Baldwin] shaped the social alienation of the protagonist” in Giovanni’s Room, but grumbles in his cab about traffic jams and “fringe-groups”, oblivious to the Ambedkar Jayanti celebrations on the streets.

Aruna is so stricken by her fervour for political correctness, it verges on fanaticism. Yet she unfazedly wonders aloud if her friend at TISS “doing his research on Dalits, may know a Dalit?”

Their film – only the poster of which we get to see featuring the “Dalit character” in brownface – is titled Mahanagar Din Ki Ratri. The laborious double-reference to Satyajit Ray seems a snide remark on the ways lived-experiences of caste are feverishly intellectualised in some spaces. And how disengaged such academic rigours are.

Rajesh Rajamani. Photo: By arrangement

On the decision to respond to these concerns with biting comedy, Rajamani says, “The little discourse there is, is always grim. Why not satirise the problem, instead?” Given the 200-odd comic panels he’s made for his Inedible India Facebook page, its influence has seeped into his scriptwriting, he admits, both in tone and in the choice of whom he chose to mock. The posts for Inedible India were not only about the Narendra Modi-regime. “It’s futile beyond a point to make fun of the right-wing. They’re already a joke. Even with Inedible India, I wanted to question how those who project themselves as having progressive views reacted to caste. This is the same reason I did not make the film about upper-caste conservatives.”

The comic form is also what he became comfortable with, for making characters talk to each other and respond to a situation. When it came to writing the script for The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas, he actually began by putting the story together as comic-panels.

Savarna gaze and misinterpretation

A few reviewers have misinterpreted The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas as a comment on stereotypical representations of Dalit people in popular culture. “The film couldn’t be more explicit in declaring whom it is about,” laughs Rajamani. “Almost all of the screen-time is taken up by these upper-caste/Brahmin characters. That caste is equal to Dalit is ingrained in the Savarna gaze, in the narratives that are constantly spun to establish this equation, so even contrary to the indications on the screen, that’s all they can see.”

The response to the film in general has been overwhelmingly positive, and this has surprised him. “I was expecting more polarised reactions, but maybe since the film is a humorous take on a serious concern, with its light-hearted music, it seems to have resonated with the people it ridicules, at least those who are trying to understand their own roles in caste hierarchies. I don’t know if those who would strongly disagree with the politics of the film have watched it, so I wonder what they’d have to say, if they do,” Rajamani says.

The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas released on September 26 and is available for viewing on the web-channel Neelam Social and is a Neelam Productions film, both initiatives founded and led by film director Pa. Ranjith.

Bharathy Singaravel is a culture reporter and interested in the overlaps between Tamil cinema, protest music and politics.

The Anti-Caste Film in English Is a Genre in the Making

Both ‘The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas’ and ‘Mr. Misunderstanding’ warn us of caste travelling and dominating through liberal-progressive Savarnas – locally and globally.

Two films released this year mark the beginning of an anti-caste genre in English language Indian films. In the past few years, we have seen anti-caste movies making waves in Hindi, Tamil and Marathi, and we now have a reflection of this in English as well. The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas, a short film by Rajesh Rajamani and Mr. Misunderstanding by Muralidharan Chinniah are both noteworthy and impactful examples of this trend.

Savarna – Avarna

Rajesh Rajamani makes his directorial debut with the dashing 20-minute short, The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas (TDCS). The film about three Savarna, or ‘upper’ caste, characters looking for a “Dalit” to act in their movie unravels the embodiment of caste amongst the Savarnas. Sophisticated, subtle and sarcastic in its exploration of caste amongst liberal-urbane and artistic Savarnas, TDCS shows how Savarnas are crippled by caste and cannot imagine a Dalit as elegant, confident, beautiful or intelligent.

Also Read: Pa. Ranjith: My Courage Comes From Babasaheb Ambedkar

The story is about the socially closed worlds of Dilip, Aruna and Swami, who have no access to Dalit worlds but are desperate to find a ‘Dalit-looking’ character for their movie. Dilip reads the best of world literature, Aruna is an assertive feminist, while Swami is a director who believes that a Dalit actor and an actor playing a Dalit are two different things. Their search for a “real Dalit person” only points to their casteless-casteness. TDCS explores the normality of deep prejudice through subtlety, showing how the selfhood of liberal and progressive westernised Savarnas reeks of caste prejudice.

A Dalit has to be reduced to pathos and cannot have universal possibilities or claims. She cannot speak for non-Dalits or even ‘look’ like non-Dalits and if she does speak in universal language, she has to look or feel like a Dalit. And, of course, only Savarnas know what exactly all of this means. This is what Rajesh Rajamani calls their discreet charm.

In the last scene, when they find a Dalit woman, one of the Savarna characters actually blurts out, ‘You are a little too pretty.’ With the following track playing in the background, the irony almost turns into melancholia.

I am gonna find you and make you the face of the nation.
I have been told where I can find you.
I have been told about your caste and creed.
I am gonna find you and make you face of the nation.
Where are you now come tell me your stories.
Where are you now come show me your scars.

Also read: In ‘Cuties’, the Collision of Growing Pains, Marginalised Identity and Assimilation

A senior professor in a reputed social science institute once said to a student, ‘You are so fair, how can you be Scheduled Caste?’ Caste and race are similar only in the Aryan race-proclaiming Brahmin’s mind. TDCS engages with caste by looking at the Savarna-Avarna [untouchable] cleavage. But equalisation of caste and race is not something Rajamani is interested in; that would be rather misplaced. Caste is not just about colour and looks. What he shows us is that caste is about the impossibility of equality.

That Pa Ranjith‘s Neelam Pictures presents the film makes this short movie very special. It is a sign of anti-caste autonomy in films, something one rarely gets to see. Unlike movies such as Article 15, where the Savarna gaze requires the anti-caste protagonist to be a Savarna, Rajamani turns the gaze on the English speaking urbane and liberal Savarnas, who embody caste despite their left-liberal inclinations — making them a particularly dangerous species. Rajesh also pushes a message for Ambedkarites – to not be a Dalit who amuses Savarnas. Be autonomous, be free!

Brahmin vs Non-Brahmin

Muralidharan Chinniah’s  Mr. Misunderstanding is a comedy with no songs, dance and violence. Based in London, it is a slow-paced movie that keeps you engaged during its 80 minute duration. The story revolves around Ram (Harsh Naik), his friend Anu (Sunil Kumar) and Rosy (Catalina Caraus). While Rajamani works on the Savarna-Avarna cleavage, Chinniah makes most of the distinction and hierarchy between Brahmins and Non-Brahmins.

Ram’s non-Brahmin friend Anu may be impotent. The film begins with a scene where both are watching porn and measuring their respective sizes, with Ram mocking Anu, saying ‘You need seven to satisfy a woman’. Rosy, a white British girl, has heard from a friend who is falling out of a bad marriage, that marriage is not a bad idea and that Indian marriages last long. Rosy meets Ram in the library and love happens. Ram’s parents agree to this union as Rosy agrees to pay the dowry (a nod to Indian ‘culture’).

Their married life begins well but Ram believes Rosy has too many male friends and this leads him to doubt her ‘character’. How do we test Rosy’s character and who else could be a better man to help with this other than Anu?

Ram’s sacred thread (janeu), which he wears only occasionally, also becomes a source of contention between Ram and Rosy. Ram thinks the thread is worn because he’s a Brahmin and Brahmins are born ‘superior’ to other Indians. Rosy is not at all convinced and is both amused and irritated at the code [Manu Dharma] that justifies such unreasonable thoughts. She wants to understand non-superior/normal Indians. Ram pushes Anu into testing Rosy’s character and Anu gets closer to Rosy. But there’s a glitch: Is Anu really impotent?

Also Read: Director Neeraj Ghaywan on Why His Job Call Seeks Bahujan Talent

The movie ticks all the boxes of comedy, drama and romance. In Muralidharan Chinniah’s hands, the characters feel real and the film rings true. It tackles caste sensitively, recognising its evils beyond the seven seas, but without dramatising caste.

We live in paradoxical times. The love for religion and religious nationalism is growing and so is the appetite for anti-caste ideas. The Indian Express now runs a fortnightly column called ‘Dalitality’ – the only column in modern India where you know the caste of the writer before reading the column. The writing, of course, is excellent, but the newspaper also ends up suggesting the ‘untouchable’ voice is best confined to its own corner and its ‘own’ topics.

Also read: The Caste Dimensions of Kangana Ranaut’s Onslaught on Bollywood

Both movies warn us of caste travelling and dominating through liberal-progressive Savarnas – locally and globally. TDCS, in engaging with the Savarna-Avarna dialectic, turns the revulsion of casteless savarnas against untouchables into an opportunity for a sophisticated and humorous dig at caste. Mr. Misunderstanding explores the psyche of a global Brahmin, cosmopolitan but rooted in caste. As opposed to Ram, Arun’s cosmopolitanism is far more dialogical and appealing to Rosy.

Beyond the polarities of Savarna-Avarna and Brahmin-Non Brahmin, caste has something to do with the structure and purpose of family in India. Heteronormative family hardly constitutes a space of ethics and love. Rather, caste is prior to family and caste provides roots for  constructing a family without moral virtues; in short, caste toxicity along with disrespect for women is learnt at home. But, how do we reform the idea of [caste] family? How do we seek caste-free individuals? We desperately need many more anti-caste movies to take on the monster of caste.

Suryakant Waghmore is Associate Professor of Sociology at IIT-Bombay. He is author of Civility against Caste (Sage 2013) and his forthcoming co-edited book with Hugo Gorringe is titled Civility in Crisis (Routledge 2020). His twitter handle is @Suryakant_Waghm.