CATEGORIES
Why Liberal Arts?
A liberal arts education forces students to be thrown out of their familiar corners and confront multiple viewpoints.
Power of Literature
In a world faced with loneliness, profits and othering, literature helps us to connect, to empathise and to have compassion
A Long Battle Ahead
The wrestlers' pursuit of justice has so far been heroic, but their fight will clearly not end with Singh's arrest
Celebrating Chattisgarh
The state of Chattisgarh is in celebratory mode celebrating its own history, culture, people and achievements.
Wrestlers Vs Brij Bhushan
As protesting wrestlers hope for justice to prevail, there is anger among various sections of society about why a protest of this nature should drag for so long
Sport, Sex And Gender
The gendered and sexualised dynamics within sport has dire consequences for its female athletes
Diary
Dutee Chand is an Indian sprinter and current national champion of the women's 100m event
It Takes a Hundred Years to Love
This creative non-fiction essay is about creating memories throughout our lives so that after we die, it becomes less heavy, difficult and empty for the ones whom we are leaving behind. Filmmaker Rituparno Ghosh has written a very simple, beautiful and profound line in the screenplay of the film Memories in March in which he has acted too). He said: If have to go away, can leave a bit of me with you?” This short essay centres around creating memories, many of them
Archiving Loving Memories
Two senior photographers-Prashant Nadkar and Mahendra Parikh-passed away recently. Their memories and archives are never going to die
A Museum of Memories
Since their inception, museums have acted as the guardians of history and antiquity. But can a museum be more than just a repository of artefacts?
In The Shadow of Mann Ki Baat
Artists of global acclaim put together an exhibition to celebrate 100 episodes of a government-run radio show
"It is the Players' Movement"
Dressed in all-white and a saffron headscarf, Rakesh Tikait sits against large photographs of Chaudhary Charan Singh, Mahendra Singh Tikait, Babasaheb Ambedkar, Sardar Patel, and a farmer's plough. There is a collage resting on a corner table. There are photographs of Uttar Pradesh's revolutionary kisan movement from 1986-1989, helmed by the \"kisan messiah\" Mahendra Singh Tikait. The office traces Bharatiya Kisan Union's (BKU) rich history of protests and the participation of farmers and women in popular movements.
It's Time to Reflect...
What does the wrestlers’ protest tell us about the reality of violence against women in India?
A Story From Sakshi's Village
Young pehelwans in Mokhra village are disappointed at the way their poster girl Sakshi Malik and the other wrestlers are being treated
It Is Time To Speak Up
Sexual harassment and gender bias continue to exist in Indian sport
In a Culture of Fear
Human interest stories are important when tragedy strikes
Twisting Facts and Narratives
Immediately after the Odisha train tragedy, when the minds were the most vulnerable, why was an attempt made to feed the conspiracy theory angle?
Out of The Loop
Why did three trains collide in Balasore? Were the railway systems in place and working? Or was there any meddling at the signalling and interlocking points?
TRACKS OF TRAGEDY
The Balasore train accident is a grim reminder of shattered hopes and separated families. But what has made it worse is the politicisation of a catastrophe
A REQUIEM FOR VICTIMS
Photographs captured at the site of the recent train accident in Odisha's Balasore district tell multiple tales of tragedy. A trigger warning.
A Timeless Video Loop of Disaster
A temple was touted as a mosque; a process of 'othering' began soon after; and, sabotage permeated the media, WhatsApp and everything else. But for now, we must give dignity to the dead
Mewat In The Mirror
Jasraj was one of the early popularisers of Hindustani classical, his voice timbrally pleasing and rich, but ductile enough to be drawn into thin filigree
Kamala, Here She Comes
First Indian-American to run for US vice president
A Covid-Era How-To For The Money-Wise
Lessons on investor behaviour during the unprecedented pandemic
Towering Inferno
The draft Environment Impact Assesment has triggered outrage for watering down earlier provisions to protect the fragile ecology
Turncoats: An Open Season
As Trinamool embarks on an aggressive rehabilitation and induction drive, BJP keeps looking for poaching opportunities
‘I am happy about the new phase in my life'
Bobby Deol made a grand entry into Bollywood with Barsaat way back in 1995 and followed it up with major hits like Gupt (1997) and Soldier (1998). The youngest son of Dharmendra, however, failed to hold onto his early successes and had to sit at home without any work for three years in the new millennium. The 51-year-old, who makes his digital debut with Class of ’83, a Shah Rukh Khan-Netflix production on August 21, speaks to Giridhar Jha about his latest film, his 25 years in movies and how he handled his failure. Excepts:
Styled Yours, Mahi
Seen from the perch of his great brand appeal, Dhoni is in the sublime present, and as grounded and undemonstrative as ever .
Bharat Cadre
The IAS isn’t a preserve of the elite any longer. Candidates from the hinterland, often with disadvantaged backgrounds, are laying claim to its hallowed ranks.
Language of politics
More voices from the state demand learning of Hindi