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Sept. 6, 2023

Faculty voice: Being 'ordinary' can be extraordinary

Sejuti Das Gupta is an assistant professor in James Madison College at Michigan State University. She completed her doctoral studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. She received the Felix Scholarship to conduct her doctoral research in Development Studies. Her book “Class, Politics and Agrarian Policies in Post-liberalisation India,” was published by Cambridge University Press in 2019. Das Gupta was a featured speaker during the 2023 TEDxTalks at MSU.

  

The career path I took was uncertain and weird but when I look back, all the pieces came together, and I make a decent living now with it. As an 18-year-old, interested in political philosophy and then fieldwork, there was a lot of misgiving and hesitations.

While I was on that journey and I decided not to be a lawyer or a bureaucrat, I had moments of self-doubt. Was I giving up my chance to be the extraordinary? But now I feel quite sure about the steps I took. The one thing I knew was I wanted to work for people and with ordinary people, and let that guide my decisions, rather than allow external gratifications and rules made by others guide me. In the process, these interactions with so-called ordinary people paved a path for extraordinary learning.

I have three current projects. "Making ends meet: Women’s Work, the Care Sector and Regional Informal Economies: Detroit," "Agrarian Transformation and Inequality in India," "Democracy, Development and Inequality:  A case study of India."

The first project is something I am working on with Professor Louise Jezierski. We are examining how women workers and employers navigated informal care and personal service sectors of the Detroit metro region.

The second includes a team of researchers. We examine high-value crops such as floriculture to understand the agrarian transformation unfolding in India on a gender-class axis.  

"Democracy, Development and Inequality:  A case study of India" is a book project to bring together issues faced in democracy and development, where we find wider representation and deepening inequality to be taking place simultaneously.

The TedX talk gave me the opportunity to share my story with students and younger people looking to decide their career paths and find their callings today. As they say, nothing succeeds as success, but what that success is, should be defined by us!

This story was adapted from a piece on the James Madison College website.

 

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