Salimullah Khan (Bengali: সলিমুল্লাহ খান, Bengali pronunciation:[solimulːakʰaːn]; born 18 August 1958) is a Bangladeshi writer, academic, teacher and public intellectual. Khan explores national and international politics and culture using Marxist and Lacanian theories. Informed and influenced by Ahmed Sofa's thoughts, his exploration of Bangladesh's politics and culture has a significant following among the country's young generation of writers and thinkers. Khan translated the works of Plato, James Rennell, Charles Baudelaire, Frantz Fanon, Dorothee Sölle into Bengali.[1][2][3][4][5] In Bangladesh, he is a regular guest in talk shows on national and international political issues.
Khan is currently the director of the Centre for Advanced Theory at the University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh. He is associated with a number of other organisations, such as the Center for Asian Arts and Cultures and Ahmed Sofa RashtraSabha.[citation needed]
A proponent of anti-colonial movements, Khan has engagements in the regional political economy and culture from a Lacanian-Marxist perspective.[12][13][14] A critic of Western interventionism,[15] Salimullah Khan analyzes Western thought and discourse through critical scrutiny of the colonial and imperial legacy of the West.[16] From this perspective, he has written on the works of Charles Baudelaire,[17]Walter Benjamin, Michel Foucault,[18]Frantz Fanon, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Edward Said,[19]Aime Cesaire,[20]Talal Asad[21] and many others. Since 1997, his engagement with Freud and Lacan has made him use psychoanalysis to explore Bangladesh's politics and culture, as well as international issues. He also wrote two books on Freudo-Lacanian philosophy: Freud Porar Bhumika, and Ami Tumi She.[22]
Khan views Kazi Nazrul Islam as an anti-colonial and democratic thinker cherished dearly by the people of Bengal.[30][31][32] His book Ahmed Sofa Shanjibani provides an expansive assessment of the works of Ahmed Sofa.[33][34] It established him as the leading expert on Sofa.[35][36] He also edited a collection of writings by Ahmed Sofa on Rabindranath Tagore.[37]
In a 2011 debate arranged by bdnews24.com, Khan critiqued the portrayal of the Bangladesh Liberation War in the film Meherjaan.[38]
In his book Behat Biplab, Salimullah Khan analyzed the strategic and political aspects of the liberation war of Bangladesh.[39] In Khan's view, the three fundamental principles of the liberation war of Bangladesh are equality, human dignity, and social justice.[40]
During the Shahbagh Movement in Dhaka, Khan came forward in strong support of the war crime trial.[41][42] He has intervened in recent debates on the number of martyrs in the Liberation War of Bangladesh.[43]
Khan advocates for an inclusive education system in Bangladesh.[44][45] In April 2017, as the government of Bangladesh took the decision to recognize the Dawra degree of the Qawmi madrasa system, Khan hailed the decision as important for integration of Qawmi group into the national mainstream.[46][47] He discussed how Islam was propagated in Bengal through the medium of Bengali language.[48]
Khan analyzes the issue of communalism and extremism from a historical perspective.[49][50][51][52][53][54][55] and locates the origin of communalism in South Asia in the British colonial period.[56] His analysis of communalism has also touched upon the Rohingya question.[57] He denounced communal attacks and suggests that upholding social justice is critical to drive away communalism from the national arena.[58] He defends the equal right of all communities to observe their respective religions,[59] and believes that proper education and guidance is critical to dissuade the young generation from going down the path of extremism.[60]
Khan is a leading advocate of Bengali to be the main medium of education in the Bangladeshi academia.[61][62] He opined that without establishing Bengali as the main medium of education in all stages, the decolonization process would lag behind, and the Anglocentriccolonial cringe would persist in the social dynamics in Bangladesh. In Bangladesh, the ruling class albeit admits Bengali to be the state language, their preference for English is apparent in their language application.[63] Citing Freud and Lacan, he wrote that the people of the ruling class are pervert since their acts and thoughts do not reflect their words.[64] He also called them traitors to the nation.[63] Quoting a French proverb with puns in Bengali, he stated that until Bengali is not the medium of education in higher studies, the quality of education would stay medium, and in the realm of education, medium (quality) equals low. Compromise with the medium of language thus means the demise of quality in the domain of education, impeding progress of the nation as a whole. He also said that second languages should be taught to complement Bengali, not to supersede it.[65]
Khan is a vocal critic of certain prescriptions on Bengali orthography.[66] In his opinion, Bangla Academy has failed to perform its duty in publication of advanced knowledge in Bengali language.[67]
^Salimullah Khan (2013). "Rule of Torture, Rites of Terror and the Mirror of Fascism: A Further Tribute to Frantz Fanon". In Md. Shariful Islam (ed.). Human Rights and Governance: Bangladesh(PDF). Asian Legal Resource Centre. p. 33. ISBN978-962-8161-13-3.
^Salimullah Khan (18 March 2011). বাজে জসীমউদ্দীন [Bad Jasimuddin]. Prothom Alo (in Bengali). Archived from the original on 25 April 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
^Khan, Salimullah (13 March 2018). ভাষার নির্বন্ধ : পরাধীনতার ঐতিহ্য. Bangladesh Pratidin (in Bengali). East West Media Group Ltd. Retrieved 5 April 2018.