In an exclusive interview, actress Kalki Koechlin discusses unwed pregnancies, why she opted for water birth, and tips for postpartum care.
Every year on 20 October, World Osteoporosis Day is celebrated across the world to raise awareness about the disease that severely affects bone health of an individual.
Rather than feel sorry for themselves, brands must understand that they are only belatedly learning, the hard way, that piggybacking cultural moments is easy, but creating your own, especially absorbing its criticisms, is a whole other thing.
Eminent scholar and critic Shafey Kidwai's painstakingly researched and illuminating new book, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan: Reason, Religion and Nation, breaks new ground in the studies around Sir Syed’s life and work, as well as his contributions to the making of modern India.
"This is a transition phase so I believe we'll have the best of both the worlds — pandemic trends like staycations and workations will continue to stick as both international and domestic markets will feel comfortable to travel again," says Puneet Dhawan, Senior Vice President - Operations, Accor India & South Asia.
In an exclusive interview, Sidhartha Mallya talks about mental health, quitting alcohol, his acting plans, and why his new book If I’m Honest is anything but a “PR stunt.”
Since Bhatt is a household name, Agarwal is optimistic that having her financial backing will help his start-up enter new markets.
Radharaman isn’t just an heir to a historical estate; he has also brought on amazing textile innovations that have modernised weaving entirely.
Some streets, chowks, and bazaars of India that could do with a change of name, not because they might purport a certain politics or right what many believe is wrong, but because it is what history, in a cultural sense, demands.
In an interview, Nayak talks about a different version of Goa, the world of diving, why raves are like modern-day tribal gatherings, and more.
In an interview with Firstpost, Ellmann talks about Virginia Woolf being among her biggest inspirations, why Trump is "one of the biggest failures of all time", and more
The award is given annually, by the district administration, on Shivaram Karanth's birth anniversary
Nawaaz Ahmed talks about his debut novel, homosexuality, Islamophobia, and how the personal is political and the political, personal.
Most of the information Ghosh conveys is generally available to the educated public and his contribution is primarily its assembly.
Attention Factory manages to tell a story, humanise the company behind TikTok, dispel myths, and decode the power of short videos that changed the world in 2020
This book may not be the last word on diversity but it is a good place to start for those who are grappling with some of these questions.
Vilks’ life changed radically 13 years ago after he drew a sketch of Prophet Muhammad that infuriated conservative Muslims
The novel seems to invite us to think about what ‘home’ and ‘family’ mean after having lived through this pandemic.
The book examines Mahatma Gandhi's economic philosophy, shedding light on why he needs to be looked at as a management guru.
If you are searching for a substantial plot, Beautiful World has none.
Around 64.1 percent of voters in the wealthy Alpine nation supported the move, on a 52 percent turnout.
In Imaan, Byapari returns to his life of struggle and strife, unpeeling what is perhaps the most intimate he has been about his own past yet.
There are a number of issues involved here, but the primary one is confusing fashion with clothing
What brings the show back from the precipice of unbearable wokeness is that it stops short of cancel culture. It portrays heterosexuality without sneering at it.
She founded the South Asian feminist network Sangat, which works with underprivileged women from rural and tribal communities
With his usual clear-sightedness, Bharati argues that promoting English education at the expense of India’s national languages would sound the death knell of their future.
She said that she had undergone treatment to reduce fat and has suffered a rare side effect called paradoxical adipose hyperplasia (PAH) which causes people to develop a swelling in the areas that were treated.
On the runway, the simple fashion response to lockdown is denim and knitwear, and easy-to-wear shoes.
The saree is a beautiful piece of clothing we prize as a national possession, but its rejection should not be linked to the suppression of our heritage.
Aquila may not have it down as a written rule, but it needs to sensitise its staff to respond carefully to the cultural heritage of its primary clientele: Indians.