The Seen and the Unseen - hosted by Amit Varma

Ep 440: Ram and Friends

13 snips
Mar 23, 2026
Ramachandra Guha, historian and public intellectual known for India After Gandhi, reflects on friendships that shaped his life. He talks about slowing down, music and later creativity. He traces mentors like Dharma Kumar, Shekhar Pathak and D.R. Nagaraj. He also explores intellectual ecosystems, the decline of print, and the value of intergenerational bonds.
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INSIGHT

Different Fields Age Differently

  • Creative fields age differently: some peak early (musicians, mathematicians) while historians and philosophers often reach depth later.
  • Guha argues India After Gandhi required midlife maturity and could not have been written earlier.
ANECDOTE

How Dharma Kumar Became A Guiding Mentor

  • Dharma Kumar was both a close relative and mentor who embodied principled liberalism and intellectual independence.
  • Guha describes her upbringing, cosmopolitan Bombay years, Cambridge stint, and later role at the Delhi School of Economics shaping young scholars.
ADVICE

Enforce No Personal Remarks In Scholarship

  • Maintain rigorous editorial standards: ban personal insinuations and insist reviews remain scholarly.
  • Guha recounts Dharma Kumar enforcing 'no personal remarks' at the Indian Economic and Social History Review to protect scholarly integrity.
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