CAT 2019 Slot 2VARC Question 11

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Answer the following question based on the information given below.

British colonial policy . . . went through two policy phases, or at least there were two strategies between which its policies actually oscillated, sometimes to its great advantage. At first, the new colonial apparatus exercised caution, and occupied India by a mix of military power and subtle diplomacy, the high ground in the middle of the circle of circles. This, however, pushed them into contradictions. For, whatever their sense of the strangeness of the country and the thinness of colonial presence, the British colonial state represented the great conquering discourse of Enlightenment rationalism, entering India precisely at the moment of its greatest unchecked arrogance. As inheritors and representatives of this discourse, which carried everything before it, this colonial state could hardly adopt for long such a self-denying attitude. It had restructured everything in Europe—the productive system, the political regimes, the moral and cognitive orders—and would do the same in India, particularly as some empirically inclined theorists of that generation considered the colonies a massive laboratory of utilitarian or other theoretical experiments. Consequently, the colonial state could not settle simply for eminence at the cost of its marginality; it began to take initiatives to introduce the logic of modernity into Indian society. But this modernity did not enter a passive society. Sometimes, its initiatives were resisted by pre-existing structural forms. At times, there was a more direct form of collective resistance. Therefore the map of continuity and discontinuity that this state left behind at the time of independence was rather complex and has to be traced with care.
Most significantly, of course, initiatives for . . . modernity came to assume an external character. The acceptance of modernity came to be connected, ineradicably, with subjection. This again points to two different problems, one theoretical, the other political. Theoretically, because modernity was externally introduced, it is explanatorily unhelpful to apply the logical format of the ‘transition process’ to this pattern of change. Such a logical format would be wrong on two counts. First, however subtly, it would imply that what was proposed to be built was something like European capitalism. (And, in any case, historians have forcefully argued that what it was to replace was not like feudalism, with or without modificatory adjectives.)
But, more fundamentally, the logical structure of endogenous change does not apply here. Here transformation agendas attack as an external force. This externality is not something that can be casually mentioned and forgotten. It is inscribed on every move, every object, every proposal, every legislative act, each line of causality. It comes to be marked on the epoch itself. This repetitive emphasis on externality should not be seen as a nationalist initiative that is so well rehearsed in Indian social science. . . .
Quite apart from the externality of the entire historical proposal of modernity, some of its contents were remarkable. . . . Economic reforms, or rather alterations . . . did not foreshadow the construction of a classical capitalist economy, with its necessary emphasis on extractive and transport sectors. What happened was the creation of a degenerate version of capitalism —what early dependency theorists called the ‘development of underdevelopment’.

“Consequently, the colonial state could not settle simply for eminence at the cost of its marginality; it began to take initiatives to introduce the logic of modernity into Indian society.” Which of the following best captures the sense of this statement?

Answer & solution

  • A

    The colonial enterprise was a costly one; so to justify the cost it began to take initiatives to introduce the logic of modernity into Indian society

  • B

    The cost of the colonial state’s eminence was not settled; therefore, it took the initiative of introducing modernity into Indian society.

  • C

    The colonial state’s eminence was unsettled by its marginal position; therefore, it developed Indian society by modernising it.

  • The colonial state felt marginalised from Indian society because of its own modernity; therefore, it sought to address that marginalisation by bringing its modernity to change Indian society.

Solution

Easy

Unpack the sentence with its context. The colonial state was a thin, peripheral (“marginal”) presence, yet it carried the “great conquering discourse of Enlightenment rationalism.” Being the bearer of modernity, it could not stay content with mere prominence while remaining cut off from Indian society — so it began imposing its modernity on India to overcome that distance.

A

Costly enterprise, so it modernised to justify the cost. — Wrong. “Cost” here is figurative (“eminence at the cost of its marginality”), not financial expense. Nothing links modernising to recouping money.

B

The cost of eminence was not settled, so it introduced modernity. — Wrong. This misreads “could not settle for” (= could not be content with) as a bill left unpaid. It mangles the meaning.

C

Its eminence was unsettled by its marginality, so it developed Indian society. — Wrong. Close, but the aim was to introduce the logic of modernity, not benevolently to “develop” India; and the passage later calls the result “the development of underdevelopment.” “Developed Indian society” misstates the purpose and outcome.

D

It felt marginalised because of its own modernity, so it brought that modernity to change India. — Correct. The state was marginal/peripheral to Indian society precisely because it embodied an alien Enlightenment modernity. Unwilling to remain a marginal eminence, it tried to close the gap by imposing its modernity on Indian society. This captures both the cause (its own modernity made it marginal) and the response (spread that modernity to transform India).

Correct answer: Option D — it best preserves both the meaning of “marginality” and the move from marginal eminence to actively imposing modernity.

CAT 2019 Slot 2 VARC Q11: “Consequently, the colonial state could not settle simply for eminence at the cost of its marginality; i — Solution | TheCATExam