Culture & Heritage
7 min read
134

Shyam Benegal, The Last Great Auteur of India’s Parallel Cinema Movement, Exits the Stage

December 23, 2024
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Shyam Benegal, who heralded a new era in Hindi cinema with the ‘parallel movement’ in the 1970s and 1980s with classics such as Ankur, Mandi and Manthan, died on Monday, December 23, after battling chronic kidney disease. He was 90. The filmmaker, a star in the pantheon of Indian cinema’s

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Culture & Heritage
2 min read
89

Quiet Dies a Craft: Traditional Bengal Boat Making Documentary 2024

December 17, 2024
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WATCH | Quiet Dies a Craft: Traditional Bengal Boat Making Documentary 2024 | Video Credit: Reporting and narration: Suhrid Sankar Chattopadhyay; Videography: Jayanta Shaw; Editing: Samson Ronald K., Kavya Pradeep M; Team Frontline: Abhinav Chakraborty, Saatvika Radhakrishna, and Mridula V.; Produced By: Jinoy Jose P. In West Bengal’s Shyampur, 74-year-old master

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Culture & Heritage
5 min read
109

Does Rasam Hold the Secret to Transforming A Glum Day Into A Flavourful Experience?

December 15, 2024
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As the sun slouches westward, are you having a day like mine? Snail-slow, all grimace and growl, stagnant, the very air in aspic—in a word, glum? Breakfast is a memory from deep time, lunch is a receding mirage—did I just see you reach for chai? Toxic masala or green detox?

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Culture & Heritage
1 min read
117

‘The Dystopian Times’ by Appupen

December 11, 2024
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‘The Dystopian Times’ by Appupen Source link

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Culture & Heritage
7 min read
106

Catfish| A Hindi Story in Translation

December 11, 2024
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They were catfish. Seven catfish thrashing about in a flat tray made of white Styrofoam. Their skin was dark grey and smooth, their moustaches big and black. They were huddled close together, tail to mouth, moustache to back, their movement arrested at the edge of the tray for they could

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Culture & Heritage
10 min read
153

Book Review: In ‘Nehru’s India’, Aditya Mukherjee Counters False Narratives About India’s First Prime Minister

December 10, 2024
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At a time when the forces of Hindutva are relentlessly denigrating Jawaharlal Nehru’s contribution to the freedom of our country and the first 17 years of nation-building in independent India, the historian Aditya Mukherjee brings welcome clarification to the debate largely by citing Nehru’s own words and expanding on their

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Culture & Heritage
12 min read
109

INTERVIEW We Now Have Means to Actively Build a Community and Train and Help Emerging Translators: Daisy Rockwell

December 9, 2024
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The creative partnership of Daisy Rockwell and Geetanjali Shree is embodied in Daisy’s moniker, Shree-Daisy. But before her International Booker–winning partnership with Geetanjali Shree, Rockwell had already translated and curated a panorama of epoch-defining Hindi-Urdu novels probing the heart-wounds of the subcontinent. Over the past two decades, Rockwell has brought

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Culture & Heritage
11 min read
103

Geetanjali Shree Interview: Language as Protest in ‘Our City That Year

December 9, 2024
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Geetanjali Shree’s 1998 novel, Hamara Shahar Us Baras, rendered into English by Daisy Rockwell as Our City That Year (Penguin, 2024), is the story of a communalising city as experienced by a vulnerable narrator grappling with the task of lending language to the self-estrangement of her secular friends. The narrator, who is not

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Culture & Heritage
6 min read
114

Avtar Singh’s Into the Forest: An Exploration of Isolation, Loneliness, and Human Fragility During the COVID-19 Pandemic

December 6, 2024
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A homeless person sleeps on a storefront during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, in Lyon, France, in 2020. | Photo Credit: Getty Images/ iStock There is a moment (around the 40-page mark) in Avtar Singh’s new novel, Into the Forest, that does not directly engage with the COVID-19 pandemic but

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Culture & Heritage
5 min read
123

Island Novel About Sentinelese Tribe Draws Criticism for Ethical Concerns

December 6, 2024
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In November 2018, a 26-year-old American missionary, John Allen Chau, made headlines when he ventured into the forbidden North Sentinel Island in the Andamans and got himself killed at the hands of what many call “the world’s most isolated” indigenous people, the Sentinelese. His was a foolhardy mission, disrespectful of

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