Vol. 3 No. 2 (2022): Special Dossier - Disobediences (jul/dec 2022)
Special Dossier

Fidelity to truth: Gandhi and the genealogy of civil disobedience

Alexander Livingston
Cornell University, Ithaca, Estados Unidos da América
Bio
Bárbara Nascimento de Lima
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brasil
Bio

Published 2023-04-18

Keywords

  • Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi,
  • civil disobedience,
  • non-violence,
  • passive resistance,
  • traveling theory

How to Cite

LIVINGSTON, A.; LIMA, B. N. de. Fidelity to truth: Gandhi and the genealogy of civil disobedience. (Des)troços: revista de pensamento radical, Belo Horizonte, v. 3, n. 2, p. 10–35, 2023. DOI: 10.53981/(des)troos.v3i2.45479. Disponível em: https://periodicos.ufmg.br/index.php/revistadestrocos/article/view/45479. Acesso em: 17 jul. 2024.

Abstract

Mohandas Gandhi is civil disobedience’s most original theorist and most influential mythmaker. As a newspaper editor in South Africa, he chronicled his experiments with satyagraha by drawing parallels to ennobling historical precedents. Most enduring of these were Socrates and Henry David Thoreau. The genealogy Gandhi invented in these years has become a cornerstone of contemporary liberal narratives of civil disobedience as a continuous tradition of conscientious appeal ranging from Socrates to King to Rawls. One consequence of this contemporary canonization of Gandhi’s narrative, however, has been to obscure the radical critique of violence that originally motivated it. This essay draws on Edward Said’s account of travelling theory to unsettle the myth of doctrine that has formed around civil disobedience. By placing Gandhi’s genealogy in the context of his critique of modern civilization, as well as his formative but often-overlooked encounter with the British women’s suffrage movement, it reconstructs Gandhi’s paradoxical notion that sacrificial political action is the fullest expression of self-rule. For Gandhi, Socrates and Thoreau exemplify civil disobedience as a fearless practice of fidelity to truth profoundly at odds with liberal conceptions of disobedience as fidelity to law.

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