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NOTES AND RELECTIONS
INDIA’S SOFT POWER SIGNIFIERS AND GLOBAL SOUTH’S POLYPHONIC
NARRATIVE
NALINI SRIVASTAVA
nalinisriva12@gmail.com
She is currently pursuing doctorate from Gujarat National Law University, Gandhinagar (India) in
the field of political science. Her research work and publications revolves around studying Indian
Secularism through a model called ‘transcritique’. She has done her Masters in Political Science
from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Prior to this, she has completed Bachelors in
Political Science from Miranda House, University of Delhi. She has furthered these learnings by
teaching at Ahmedabad University and Amity University and has opened up possible spaces for
an amalgamation of teaching and research in Indic philosophies.
The epistemic unity in global south narratives nourished in its original habitat and attuned
to the lived reality of global south stands as an indictment to the Euro-Atlantic narrative.
However, a conspicuous absence of coherence in the language and modes of resistance
highlighted by the hallowed quarters of international community often becomes the
rationale for the dismissal of this shared sense of decoloniality. This sense has taken
upon itself the combative role to resuscitate a praxis rooted in culture which does not
only inhere from theology but also, politics. Akin to this narrative is the political
substratum of South Asian regional blocs that has nourished and sustained different
depictions of cultures coming from across the member states of this bloc. This goes
beyond the political and economic solidarity of the member nations and witnesses a
steady and concomitant decline of confrontational method of establishing supremacy or
cementing status hierarchy on the global platform. Decolonized nations have eagerly
surpassed their respective language silos and also have converged their cultural fiefdom
to find a common ground and be ruled by an independent political ethic. In this context,
this paper sets out to map the trajectory of evolution of India’s role in developing its
cultural signifiers like Yoga, Ayurveda and the festival of Mahakumbh. It will explore the
possibilities of cultural rejuvenation and the potency of India’s cultural capital while in
conversation with other nations of South Asia. It also sets out to evaluate the potential
of cultural signifiers in the making of a polyphonic narrative of the global south. This
layered cultural edifice of the global south not only validates the economic potential of
the countries independent of the west but also their essential worth in protecting the
indigenous value system that generates political stability. A sustained effort by the west
diminishing the cultural worth of countries in South East Asia had made it incumbent
upon these countries to not just rise in defiance but to cultivate strong cultural roots
which can bind varied voices signifying the diversity that is endemic to these countries.
The position that is argued in this paper is not just a reactionary viewpoint but a
proportionate response to rebalance power structures through New Diplomacy.
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Introduction
In a post-Westphalian (Newman, 2009) landscape where there is a fight for perceptibility
and acceptability of exercise of power within and outside the boundaries of nation-state,
the need for legitimacy and cultivation of global image goes beyond the traditional
exhibits of power. The conventional methods of power-display(Ilgen, 2016) at the
expense of opposition and condemnation coming from the native population and
sometimes, from the global community has renegotiated the boundary between
multilateral blocs and nation state. The emerging powers and in this case, Brazil, India,
China and Russia are trenchant critiques of the post-Westphalian setup(Rajagopalan &
Sahni, 2008) that undermines the role of nation-state as independent actors in the larger
scheme of things. The post-cold war era has seen international problems ranging from
energy crisis to health crisis and to environmental crisis, which can be resolved only with
global actors co-opting(Nye, 2023) with each other and not when they are juxtaposed
against each other. Be it territorial disputes such as seen in Africa, South-Asia, and Russia
or Climate-change issue, a unilateral formula does not carry the recipe to alleviate these
problems. The preeminence of US led peace negotiations has witnessed a steady
decline(Vanaik, 2006) with countries like Brazil, India and China asserting their
sovereignty and independence in deciding how to deal with territorial disputes with their
neighbor or any other conflict faced by them. The global dictates on liberalism and
democracy has been overturned by regional assertion with a preponderance on
independent decision-making. The culture of less developed and decolonized societies
has been largely and systematically either devalued or erased from the shared
memory(Said, 2016) of the populace residing in those regions. And, therefore the aim of
decolonization was not just the overthrow of colonial bondage but a calibrated effort to
bring back the lost culture and in effect, the respect and pride that these newly
independent countries had. The processes of colonial subjugation had a diabolical intent
to distance the individual from their shared past(Bhargava, 2010) which provided social
stability and resilience in the face of downright exploitation. This systematic obliteration
of any and every means of constituting stable political regime suffocated their chance
and opportunity to harness growth and development from the reservoir of resources
amply available to them. Such political asphyxiation was not only characteristic of colonial
times but has travelled through time cultivating the same fears and insecurity in the
psyche of the less developed nations. This has paved way for enforcing a skewed version
of democracy(Chomsky & Prashad, 2022) as if it is the universal panacea to all the ills of
the society. This narrative has to be flipped and a counter-hegemonic(Gramsci et al.,
2011) narrative ought to step in that delivers the countries to its full potential. However,
the ruling dictum globally cannot be an overriding decision. On the contrary, it has to
constantly and persistently bargain with multiple and intangible sources of power and the
said overture can in collaboration with multiple power structure reconfigure the power
structure put in place by the erstwhile regime making space for a renewed synergy
between development, defense and diplomacy. Development, defense and diplomacy
accompanied by a careful amalgamation of soft and hard power are the focal points of
global strategies to be deployed by countries in order to manufacture an image that can
sustain in the global pressure. Soft power(Nye, 2009), a powerful conceptual category
devised in the writings of Joseph Nye has brought on the international forum means and
methods to absolve and at the same time, incriminate the nations who have exhibited
military strength (hard power) to safeguard their vested interest. Imposing sanctions and
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trade tariffs on nations gone rogue was an important means deployed by the US to
streamline the ideological warfare it led against the former Soviet Union but its
continuation well after the disintegration of USSR and on a country like India is not only
reprehensible but a manifestation of a USstanding in the status quo. This unexplained
hostility against India in the backdrop of Russia’s occupation in Ukraine using the latter’s
military occupation as a reason for this trade sanction against India is reflective of
America’s fear of India as an emerging economy with the potential to rebalance power
shifts happening globally. India’s attempt at carving a niche for itself in the global
panorama of nation-states while having a voice and a rooted Indic philosophy that has
evolved indigenously is reflective in its refusal to retract its many trade negotiation with
Russia accompanied by a conscious effort to display soft power through regional blocs
like BRICS+, ASEAN , SAARC, BIMSTEC etc. Soft power coined and popularized by Joseph
Nye had a very particular stance on Soft power which clearly demarcated Soft Power and
Power exhibited through money and military. This categorically put any attempt at
influencing another country through force, compulsion or economic sanction as falling
outside the ambit of Soft Power. Therefore, NDB and CRA and other developmental
association(Roberts et al., 2018) are not expression of soft power but in this paper and
in India’s intent, Soft power is not only limited to the deepening of cultural values coming
from independent countries to safeguard their status hierarchy but also economic
association which has the potential to not just supplement western financial institutions
but also, replace them. The need for soft power projection in the language construed by
South Asian countries is anything that is not hard power. The three most important
means of influencing other nations are money, imposition and attraction. Hence, the use
of attraction is often used in soft power to negotiate differences on political lines. In the
case of south-south dialogue, economy and attraction are the two main sources of soft
power. While cinema and sports have often acted as catalyst in cementing relation
between countries of the global south, the use of religion and alternative knowledge
system have still not been deployed as dominant cultural themes around which countries
rally. A.F.K. Organski has espoused a Power transition theory that in a way, finds
solutions to structural limitation of comparatively less developed economies in
rebalancing power structures. Any attempt in entrenching the power position of nations
who are already situated at the higher level of hierarchy are expected to maintain the
status quo while the countries who are emerging as powerful nations are expected to act
as revisionist countries. This in turn modifies the international balance of power and
revise the structural position of the countries determining balance of power. This is a
step further away from the traditional structural realism by reconfiguring the ideational
context within which the countries are exercising soft power. The value of culture is
directly associated with position of the countries in the larger context of power. Structural
Realism propounded by Michael Walzer talked about structural limitation as procedural
qualification in the bid to further the self-interest of countries individually as well as
collectively. Hence, while campaigning for a self-sustained global south narrative, we are
not only assessing the soft power influence of all the countries in the global south
collectively but also evaluate India’s influence individually yet codependently on other
states(Walzer, 2015). The big brother syndrome that seeks to assert the supremacy of
one nation superseding the collective political and cultural space of countries while
reinstating hierarchies is steadily replaced by an acknowledgement that all countries
however small, have fed into and is directly in conversation with the larger global bloc.
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The ‘regional’ bloc as is referred to in modern day Eurocentric understanding, has to be
levelled up with the global union such as United Nations, G20, G7 and other
organizations. In the interest of India and other ‘rising’ powers(O’Brien, 2000), the
urgency to constitute a globally recognized organization reflective of the changing
partnerships across the world is further underscored. This in turn sheds light on the need
to pry open cultural crevices that can act as resources for shared cultural capital and
establish the foundation of successful economies collaborating with each other defining
a distinct dimension of global politics. In this continuously shifting narrative of
outmaneuvering and outsmarting the countries of the west, the new ‘paradigm’ of
international politics streamlines the peripheral thinking into the core. The satellite
countries(Frank, 1978) are no longer limited to their role as buffer but are now
capitalizing on their unique cultural and colonial experience to remodel the global
landscape not in accordance with the blueprint offered by the west but a morally vibrant
and culturally diverse political landscape. This paper will map the cultural potential India
has in establishing an alternate knowledge system around which global south will grow
and evolve under four significant signifier of Indian Cultural autonomy which is Yoga,
Ayurveda, Indian Diaspora and Mahakumbh. The paper takes up the task of relinquishing
the responsibility of rising economies like India, Brazil and South Africa of acting as a
conduit between the developed and underdeveloped economies. The paper reimagines
the emergence of global south and redraws the boundary between global north and south
on its own terms and at the same time, asses the potency of this reimagination to
rebalance the power structures. It particularly studies the impact of Indian cultural capital
in renegotiating the way global south emerges and rewrites its power trade-offs with the
presumably developed economies through international regional blocs. However, this
paper does not dismiss or discredit in any way, the contribution made by other countries
through their cinema, sports, food and tourism but due to the limited scope of research
carried out in this paper, it focuses specifically and primarily on Indian cultural capital.
Yoga and Ayurveda, Indian Diaspora and Mahakumbh: A ‘polyphonic’
narrative among many narratives
In an age of global pandemic where the resilience of health infrastructure is directly
related to a united front of all countries in eradication of the said pandemic, alternative
knowledge system around wellness and health helps to build a healthier community of
individuals. It also highlights the presence of ancient tradition of Yoga for wellness which
is not only an alternative medicinal system but a holistic answer to the mental and
physical wellbeing(Mazumdar, 2018)(Marx, 2007). Mahatma Gandhi, devised and
popularized a system of well-being that believed in the integration of mind, body and
soul(Gandhi, 1997). This integration is reflected through individuals as self-reliant
political beings thereby channelizing an ideological viewpoint as an instrument of political
unity. Yoga as an ancient tradition is not only an answer to the health crisis that we face
today but also a political reply to the growing anomie and hyper individuation as a result
of capitalism crusaded by the West. The duality of mind and matter that rules the western
philosophy is challenged systematically by Ayurveda that believes in non-dualist nature
of human body. This is not just a systematic overthrow of the Western epistemology but
also a foregrounding of a self-reliant nation that sustains its political uniqueness by
consciously utilizing its cultural capital and sharing its wisdom to attract the admiration
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and respect of countries in the regional bloc. However, the larger picture is not just about
eliciting respect from the fellow countries but inspiring other South East Asian as well as
South Asian countries to build on their indigenous value-systems. These cultural
exchanges without any political interference forms the lynchpin of soft power
manifestation in the BRICS+, SCO, QUAD, OIS etc. and other powerfully regional yet
international organization. Yoga as an ancient wisdom and as a political resource uniquely
deployed to further elevate the global image is counteracted by building the perception
that it is a political handmaiden of the right-wing politician furthering the cause of
Hinduism. There is a concertedly shaped narrative that seeks to dismantle any and every
attempt made by the ruling disposition to cultivate a global image on, “Sanatan
Sanskriti”(Bhargava, 2023) . This closed, non-permeable and neat categorization of
religion has not only warped the political imagination of its citizenry but has underscored
a need for a redefined and renewed sense of religiosity. There is no clear solution to the
problem of accommodating different theological inclination within the fold of religiosity
but a wider and flexible model of religion that does not chastise or abhor theism
advocating cultural practices could be a way forward. This thought is neither ahistorical
nor outside the ambit of scientific rationalism and has surfaced in not only closed echo
chambers but also in the thoughts and deeds of nationalist leaders. The foundational
element of a nation which values religion stems not just from constitutional morality that
is necessarily irreligious but a morality that preaches religious solidarity and its
concomitant patron which is nation-state. Hence, the over-emphasis on the constitution
and its sanctimony lies not in juxtaposing it with religious morality. With Indian politics
progressing into Pilgrims progress , Upendra Baxi has succinctly described the para-legal
structures and the unwrittenness(Baxi, 2012) of the Indian constitutionalism coming up
with a new language of rights and duties which can never be enveloped by liberal
constitutionalism. It is on the contrary, the unfamiliar and uninvited guest amongst the
cohort of democratic requirements in a country as diverse and large as India.
From Sardar Patel to Rabindranath Tagore, there is one unifying ideal that brought
together mostly all the nationalist thinkers and that was the need to develop an authentic
theory of politics which can create alternative political constructs that were strictly
indigenous(Mahajan, 2013). As Rabindranath Tagore has wisely put, We in India must
make up our minds that we cannot borrow other people’s history, and that if we
stifle our own, we are committing suicide. When you borrow things that do not
belong to your life, they only serve to crush your life”. The formidable task was
thus, to return to the past but what was to be called authentically ‘Indian’ still has to
bear an interminable series of challenges(Sahu, 2020). Are we to then comprehend, what
it means to be an authentic Indian. The magnitude of this question still bears heavily on
the way politics is designed today. Is the question of partaking into internationalising a
cultural praxis, today a closed circuit which only reaffirms patriotism of a single variant
of politics that is rooted in majoritarian religion. This assumption is at the heart of politics
today and marginalises the voices that may or may not be overtly religious. The transition
of ‘cultural’ to ‘political’ is not the fallout of a historical continuum. It reflects the
seemingly benign yet subversive elements of the state that detests attempt at uniting
tactical forces. However, it would not be right in completely dismissing the liberals,
seculars and self-appointed equalisers while striving to render a global image to the
nation. The politics of today is the politics of visibility where what is perceptibly seen and
is veritable becomes the source of power. This newly acquired power which while
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recognizing cultural essentialism, do not slip into political carnage of difference. While
preserving cultural particularity is the stronghold of liberal multiculturalism, the present
day politics is about finding unity and commonness in the shared culture. In a way,
cultural embeddedness has to be replaced by historically situated self(Mahajan, 2013).
Individuals cannot be contained in straightjacketed society but in sociality(Bauman,
2013) that has a symbiotic relationship with other communities. The individuals in these
communities are encumbered selves who have witnessed the constant interaction
between culture of their community and the outside world. The two hundred year rule of
the Britishers cannot be papered over for it has perpetual lingering presence on our
society as a whole. The reinterpretation of the prefix in post-colonial by Upendra B. serves
to establish this connection. Anything that transpired following the period of colonisation
seeks to respond to this violent and exploitative regime while using the grammar of
politics devised by the west to colonise the masses. Post-colony then accepts in its time
frame the oppression that was meted out to our country as an indispensable unit of
reference. This flawed assumption has made it necessary for the intelligentsia
constituting the civil society(Gramsci et al., 2011) to invent a unique frame of reference
that can act as potential conceptual source for a sense of belonging. This marks a patriotic
and paradigmatic shift in bringing to light a democratic discourse which seeks to rewind
the nature and content of nationalism. Anti-Hindu and Hindu apologetics have hitherto,
sustained politics of appeasement undermining women’s right in minority communities,
perceiving outright display of Hindu sentiments as communal, feeding into the disdain of
minority communities. This and other allegation have spurred the growth of intellectual
as well as political resources by carefully curating a solid frame of references that can
dissolve diversionary tactics. This nationalism can not only defy the claims of self-
aggrandising cultural apologetics but can help in evolving a strong and structured nation-
state that has the resilience to establish stable political union trumpeting any attempt at
disintegrating it. The political monopoly on secularism exercised by a certain few seems
to be alien if not outright unconnected with political reality. Finding semantical equivalent
has come up with ideas of “Dharmanirpekshta”, “Sarva Dharma Sambhava”,
“Vasudhaivakutambakam” (Bhargava, 2010)which have helped the intellectuals engage
with the Indian insight on Secularism. Unfortunately, such attempts have
decontextualized the Indian ancient tradition by studying these concept without the
political universe in which it emerged. In the post-truth era, when there is a spurt in the
growth of knowledge in and around religion, significance of tangible reserves to
propagate and profess religious values is further entrenched. The historical continuum
that unifies time and space brings to the world living breathing documents that have
manifested into rituals to signify the turn of century old practices. The search of an
independent political ethic that is rooted in the glorious past or what is famously referred
to as “Virasat”( Heritage) and then, conflating it with “Vikas”( Development) marks a
defining shift from the erstwhile method of political association that sought to distance
itself from any religious marker. The path towards ‘Swarnim Bharat’ is paved with great
political gusto while searching for a ‘common ground principle’ that can change the focal
point of the socio-political and economic engagement. The intellectual finding of this
paper has expanded the aperture of evaluation from individual engagement with spiritual
values to a political assessment of an organized form of religion. The rupture has taken
inspiration from premodern times where the written word of the mythological text was
interpreted with greater flexibility helping the local masses to easily associate with
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religious morality. In this backdrop, the crystallization of religious value in codifying
beliefs have spawned a rigid classification between what is verifiably and justifiably the
‘true’ meaning of ritualistic practices and what is not. In an age of digital and social media
where information and misinformation coexist together, false narrative impedes the
spread of actual meanings associated with religious practices and helps scholars rest in
their respective intellectual fiefdoms.
The most unassailable intellectual victory of John Rawls was not in arriving at a ‘concept’
of Justice as Fairness but in evolving an articulate methodology to arrive at it. In times
when the motto of individuals as well as scholars is aimed at usurping each other and
furthering their own agenda, the intellectual requirement to rise above and beyond
immediate affiliation and gratification to give a ‘conception’ of justice (Rawls, 2005)
seems to elude us. However, the crisis is not about having no encumbrances but to be
able to project ourselves despite not being an unencumbered self(Sandel, 1984). In yet
another theory, Subaltern (Guha, 1997) authors have articulated in not so vague terms,
the idea of cultural essentialism and its inevitable exclusion of those communities that
are the foundational building blocks of the newly independent country. This is a
fundamental challenge to how democratic discourses are made and its impact on how
people perceive politics. The subaltern challenge also challenges the historiography and
the making of political memory which has devised a framework that marginalizes a
section of the populace just by virtue of the fact that they are at the lower rung of our
society. However, it can be argued that the exploitation and historical injustices have not
frozen in time and exploitative tendencies have further augmented the demands of
representational politics that not only determines the ‘what’ of the narrative but ‘who’
will set it and ‘how’ it has to be brought to the international forum. From Nancy Fraser
to Iris Marian Young, the politics of misrecognition to the politics of misrepresentation,
tells us that the model of justice that is predicated on the triumvirate of recognition,
representation and redistribution has often helped in securing one to the detriment of
the other. We have enlarged the scope and impact of this model onto the global forum.
Global south is in common parlance, an inconsistent and incoherent entity that seeks to
represent varied voices internationally but it is an honest attempt to find a
representational platform that can at the least, project an image which is constantly
interacting with multiple power vortices. Countries in the global south has an equal and
proportionate reflex for defying the forces that seeks to create exclusive spaces for
representation and the growing elite within the circle of South Asian intelligentsia have
done just that. Therefore, the politics of dependency looms large even in today’s time.
The growth in elitism and development blockade was succinctly described by Gail Omvedt
in a national context and A.G. Frank in an international context. The political predicament
is not just limited to the territory of the nation-state but is slowly permeating through
the boundary interacting with global forces. Amidst globalization, aggressive nationalism
can take the form of Xenophobia but India’s entrenched nationalist model keeps itself
from ways that can progress into an outright neglect of those who are deemed as ‘other’.
It is important to establish a hierarchy of political ideals. It is significant to recognise our
own prejudices especially when it comes to dealing with the community belonging to
different religion. It is equally significant to see how far our country has come from
Panchsheel to Panchamrit. Our largely ignored yet powerful reservoir of teachings in the
name of Vedas, Upanishads and the fortuitous materialisation of the late Vedic teachings
in the form of Mahakumbh at the length and breadth it was celebrated, tells us the all-
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encompassing fervour and spirit of comradery fraternising not just with people
domestically but internationally.
Rebalancing Power structures: Rewiring Diplomacy through New
Diplomacy
Diplomacy of the yester years was about building trust, reliability, truth and peaceful
negotiation(Berridge, 2015). These markers have gone through an irreversible overhaul
that has not only revamped these markers but have drained its essence. New Diplomacy
strongly detests the older practise of following the formal procedural techniques of
moving towards truth, building trust through peaceful negotiation and also, construing
narratives that can make the countries reliable. This intense makeover of the Older
diplomatic pathways of sending ambassadorial delegation, setting up of embassies as a
sign of trust, peaceful negotiation have not just lost its moral traction but also its
international viability. In this context, where social media or what was commonly referred
to as ‘twiplomacy’ and now termed ‘X’ woefully depicts the formation of narrative without
nuance and without a careful reflection over facts and opinions. Hasty generalisation,
hyperbolic statements and polemical takes on present day international conflicts have
increased the volatility of countries involved and sees military occupation as an inevitable
consequence. Hard Power is thus, seen to be the only recourse left for countries acting
in real self interest with Hobbesian state of nature turning into ‘nature’ of state. In this
backdrop, if soft power is deployed to carve a niche for a country to legitimise its place
in the larger international scheme, it is by no means an unjust method of asserting power
or dominance. However, its larger impact on the global stage have to be assessed and
the just(ness) of international pre-eminence has to be evaluated before the countries
aspire to climb up in the hierarchy of countries writing or rewriting the politics of smaller
less militarily equipped nations.
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India’s Soft Power Signifiers and Global South’s Polyphonic Narrative
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How to cite this note
Srivastava, Nalini (2026). India’s Soft Power Signifiers and Global South’s Polyphonic Narrative.
Janus.net, e-journal of international relations. VOL. 17, Nº. 1, May 2026, pp. 695-704. DOI
https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.17.1.06