
I have to say that this article is very well written. The first sentence right away caught my attention because it presented the problem at hand in a very clear manner. Just from that sentence we know that the problem to be discussed a peasant would have to break a list of codes in order to rise for his rights. “For his subalternity was materialized by the structure of property, institutionalized by law, sanctified by religion and made tolerable- and even desirable- by tradition” (p. 45).
The first thing that came to my mind when I read this was the recent events in Saudi Arabia, where when the people thought of rising in a revolt (and there were few protests that happened) they were threatened to be put in prison (or worse), to have their properties taken away, losing their jobs, and of course the so called religious scholar of Saudi said it is against religion to go on with the protests. Exactly the way Guha explains about the materialization of subalternity. (In case you guys are wondering, it worked. Not only they stopped the revolts in Saudi, they also sent troops to Bahrain to kill the peaceful protestors there).

I think one of the main aspects of the article is the manipulative description of the people who revolt and of their actions. As the author explains by giving examples of some of the metaphors used to describe these people as: “they break out like thunder storms, heave like earthquakes,
spread like wildfires, infect like epidemics” (p. 46) which clearly gives the sense of a rebellion that is done without thinking, in a very wild and “natural” way (in a negative sense of the word), as uncivilized, more reflexive rather than intentional and conscious.
The author explains the reason why this is the case and how historically this kind of representation of the revolts was possible by talking about the three discourses that are used when talking about these events: primary, secondary and tertiary.
Primary: - almost always official (originated with bureaucrats, soldiers, sleuths, people
who were directly employed by the government, or people not officially working for the
government but with personal interest in supporting the government.
- For administrative use and administrative concern
- Characteristic of immediacy: they were written during or right after the event, and by people involved in it.
Secondary: -uses primary source as material but this material is transformed
- There is considerable time gap between this discourse and the event
- Could be written or taken from writing intended for the public
- It is supposed to be less biased, it has various perspectives, but it is not the case
Tertiary: - “further removed in time” (p. 71)
- It looks at event from the third person perspective
- “work of non-official writers ...or of former officials no longer under any professional obligation” (p. 71)
- “This literature is distinguished by its effort to break away from the code of counterinsurgency. It adopts the insurgent's point of view and regards, with him, as 'fine' what the other side calls 'terrible', and vice versa. It leaves the reader in no doubt that it wants the rebels and not their enemies to win” (p. 72).
p.s. Image 1: Bahrain protestors
Image 2: Saudi troops sent to Bahrain