"I was born in a University campus and seem to have lived all my life in one campus or another"
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There is a sly humility baked into Sen's campus-to-campus autobiography: a life that could read as rarefied privilege is rendered almost oddly domestic, as if universities were not ivory towers but simply the rooms he kept moving through. The line works because it refuses the expected heroic arc. Instead of presenting himself as a globe-trotting public intellectual, he casts his identity as shaped by institutions built for argument, inquiry, and the slow grind of evidence.
The subtext is double-edged. On one level, it signals gratitude for the peculiar protection campuses can offer: libraries, colleagues, seminars where ideas are tested rather than merely declared. On another, it quietly confesses the limits of that protection. A philosopher-economist who has written about famine, justice, and capability is acknowledging the paradox of studying deprivation from places designed to insulate people from it. The phrase "one campus or another" flattens elite difference into a repeating pattern, hinting at how academic life can become a self-perpetuating circuit: you leave one institution only to enter the next, trading geography for continuity.
Context matters: Sen's biography is anchored in universities not just as workplaces but as formative environments, from his early years around Visva-Bharati at Santiniketan to later appointments across India, the UK, and the US. The sentence gestures toward cosmopolitanism while sidestepping its glamour. It's a philosophical move: foreground the conditions that make thinking possible, then invite the reader to question what those conditions exclude.
The subtext is double-edged. On one level, it signals gratitude for the peculiar protection campuses can offer: libraries, colleagues, seminars where ideas are tested rather than merely declared. On another, it quietly confesses the limits of that protection. A philosopher-economist who has written about famine, justice, and capability is acknowledging the paradox of studying deprivation from places designed to insulate people from it. The phrase "one campus or another" flattens elite difference into a repeating pattern, hinting at how academic life can become a self-perpetuating circuit: you leave one institution only to enter the next, trading geography for continuity.
Context matters: Sen's biography is anchored in universities not just as workplaces but as formative environments, from his early years around Visva-Bharati at Santiniketan to later appointments across India, the UK, and the US. The sentence gestures toward cosmopolitanism while sidestepping its glamour. It's a philosophical move: foreground the conditions that make thinking possible, then invite the reader to question what those conditions exclude.
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| Topic | Student |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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