×

Contact Us

A.R. Desai’s Marxist Approach to Indian Society: A Dialectical and Historical Materialist Analysis

A.R. Desai (1915–1994) was a pioneering Indian sociologist who applied a Marxist framework — rooted in dialectical and historical materialism — to analyze the structures of class, caste, and state in India. His work offered a radical critique of colonialism, capitalism, and class struggle.

1. Core Themes in Desai’s Marxist Approach

(A) Critique of Structural-Functionalism and Bourgeois Sociology

(B) Colonialism and the Distortion of Indian Development

(C) Class Struggle and the Postcolonial State

(D) Peasant and Working-Class Movements

2. Dialectical and Historical Materialist Foundations

(A) Dialectical Contradictions in Indian Society

(B) Historical Materialism: Indian Development Stages

  1. Pre-colonial feudal society → caste hierarchy, self-sufficiency
  2. Colonialism → blocked full capitalist transformation
  3. Postcolonial bourgeois democracy → preserves exploitation

This diverges from Stalinist stageism and aligns with Trotsky’s permanent revolution.

3. Trotskyist Parallels

Trotskyist Concept Desai’s Equivalent
Permanent Revolution Weak bourgeoisie; workers must lead democratic revolution
Uneven & Combined Development Mixed colonial economy: feudal + modern traits
Critique of Bourgeois Nationalism Congress preserved elite and landlord interests

4. Criticisms

5. Legacy

Conclusion: Desai as a Dialectical Marxist

A.R. Desai provided one of the most rigorous Marxist critiques of Indian society, showing how semi-feudalism, colonialism, and a weak bourgeoisie prevented genuine transformation. His analysis mirrors key Trotskyist themes, though without explicitly calling for a revolution—making his work a critical bridge between classical Marxism and postcolonial critique.

← Back to Articles

Email Verification