Art as a Path to Social Justice: A Personal Reflection
Anita Vallabh Ph.D
The following article was first published in Sruti.com on June 24,2025.
Art has always mirrored society—its values, contradictions, aspirations, and anxieties. In a world increasingly divided by caste, class, gender, and power, can art become more than a reflection? Can it become a tool for healing, unity, and transformation?
In India, ancient scriptures like the Rig Veda and the Bhagavad Gita articulated ideals of equality and shared humanity long before the modern concept of social justice emerged. These texts remind us that justice, in its truest form, is as much spiritual and ethical as it is social and political.
The performing arts, when grounded in such principles, become powerful agents of change. They can amplify marginalised voices, challenge systemic injustice, and create inclusive spaces for dialogue and belonging. But this begins with introspection—by examining the institutions and classrooms that shape artists and asking whether they themselves uphold justice.
In 2007, I witnessed this truth firsthand when I conducted a ten-day dance workshop at the BCT, Model High School. The objective was to revive the folk arts of Andhra Pradesh. At that time, many of the traditional artists had become agricultural laborers out of economic necessity.
For the duration of the workshop we invited these labourers to teach our students dance and song in the evenings. Despite long, back-breaking days in the fields, they would gather beneath the trees, under an open-air stage, to pass on their knowledge. As the days progressed, something wonderful unfolded. The workshop evolved into a communal celebration: students, teachers, villagers, and passersby all participated. Art became the common language—bridging generations, overcoming petty politics and gossip, dissolving social divides, and restoring dignity.
A year later, my cousin Ramesh, who oversees the Trust's initiatives, shared an unexpected outcome: incidents of domestic violence had declined in the village. The evening gatherings had become more than artistic sessions—they were spaces of emotional release, belonging, and reconnection for the community.
That experience revealed to me the transformative power of the arts—not just as tools of heritage preservation, but as active forces of social healing and justice. Art gave people not only a platform, but a renewed sense of identity and non-violent expression. It met a core tenet of justice: restoring human dignity where it had been diminished.
As an educator today, I continue to see how inequality manifests in subtle but harmful ways. I’ve seen students quietly excluded due to caste or class. I’ve witnessed religious spaces restrict participation based on orthodoxy. I’ve seen how certain “celebrated” artists receive preferential treatment—complimentary passes, front-row seats—while others are left invisible. These everyday acts of exclusion are not simply about etiquette; they reflect deeper structural injustices.
Such experiences remind me that the real work of justice starts close to home. Art is a powerful form of expression that can promote social justice by challenging discrimination, encouraging inclusion, and amplifying marginalised voices. To foster this, cultural institutions and classrooms—where artists are shaped—must themselves be equitable and inclusive. This means ensuring fair access, protective policies for all identities, and a respectful environment. Only when these foundational spaces uphold justice can art truly reflect and inspire a more compassionate and equal society. Artists must therefore not just create, but consciously create—with purpose, empathy, and social awareness.
Looking back and moving forward
Throughout history, ideals of social justice have found powerful expression through the songs and poetry of saint-poets. Facing hardships and societal resistance, these poet- saints poured their emotional truths into their art, offering a “spiritual blueprint” for social justice and equality.
The often-quoted ideal of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam—“the world is one family” —finds its roots in an ancient aphorism: “To the narrow-minded, the world is divided into ‘me’ and ‘others’;To the broad-minded, the entire world is one family.”
Can we imagine a world where we truly opened our hearts and minds—reconsider those we once saw as superior or inferior, learned or uneducated, wealthy or poor—as belonging to our own family? If we can, we draw closer to honoring the divine presence within ourselves—and in doing so, we serve the greater cause of social justice, equality, and equity in our communities.
The true power of art lies not just in performance or preservation, but in its ability to foster dignity, empathy, and social unity. For art to be transformative, the spaces where it is created and taught must be equally inclusive and just. It is only then that art can become a force for healing, representation, and meaningful change.