The Grammar of Power

Every political system has its own grammar of power. It is a set of linguistic patterns through which authority is claimed, normalised, and challenged. In Pakistan, this grammar unfolds how politicians, citizens, and the military narrate legitimacy, betrayal, unity, and nationalism. At the recent Deakin University conference on Bureaucratic Populism, Military, Judiciary, and Institutional Politics, […]

Every political system has its own grammar of power. It is a set of linguistic patterns through which authority is claimed, normalised, and challenged. In Pakistan, this grammar unfolds how politicians, citizens, and the military narrate legitimacy, betrayal, unity, and nationalism. At the recent Deakin University conference on Bureaucratic Populism, Military, Judiciary, and Institutional Politics, […]