Long Reads News - Page 4

Debate around IIM-A dorms' demolition underscores irony of emphasising heritage while ignoring history
If the dormitory blocks at IIM-A are conserved, that would be beautiful. But when will we restore the professional understanding of our roles and responsibilities as architects in shaping the professional and public realm – its intellectual, political, and aesthetic (philosophical) dimensions and discourses?

A Himalayan community's efforts to contain COVID-19 attest to power of outreach, and need for better healthcare
Residents, medical workers and a youth group mitigated a dangerous rise in COVID-19 recently in the district of Lahaul and Spiti in Himachal Pradesh, but the pandemic exposed a desperate need for better healthcare in this remote part of India.

How gaming made 2020 a tiny bit more tolerable: A short story
This January, as I pondered the new direction my gaming was taking, what I hadn’t factored in was 2020, what an absolute stinker it was going to be, and how gaming would make the year (ever-so-slightly) more tolerable.

100 years of Sahir Ludhianvi: An essential, timeless poetic voice
“What is the secret behind Sahir Ludhianvi’s everlasting appeal?” Surinder Deol asks in an essay for Firstpost, examining the poet-lyricist’s life and legacy in the year of his 100th birth anniversary.

An Oral History of the COVID-19 Crisis: Indians narrate their lived experiences of a lockdown and pandemic
The Oral History Project aims to be an ongoing compendium of individual experiences of the pandemic, with a focus on one significant day in our respondents’ lives during this time.

In Mumbai Monochrome, photography and haiku conjoin to explore the unfamiliar in the mundane
Through Mumbai Monochrome, a collection of photographs that capture the cityscape in all its moods, Kelkar places dead centre the people who have made this much talked about city an energetic, complex and multicultural metropolis simply by way of their quotidian lives and occupations.

On the trail of Sambhaji Bhide: Ahead of Bhima Koregaon riots' 3rd anniversary, tracing the Hindutva leader's rise
How image, ideology, outreach and political patronage took Sambhaji Bhide from RSS rebel to Sangli's kingmaker.

To give the (unseen) woman farmer a land of her own
The mahila kisaans of Bundelkhand are visible everywhere in the fields, but rarely seen in official policy. Khabar Lahariya imagines a world which places women farmers at the centre of agriculture policy rather than at the peripheries.

Remembering Moheener Ghoraguli, India's first rock band from Kolkata whose legacy thrives in resistance
Forty-five years since their formation, Moheener Ghoraguli — who likened themselves to a "movement" — continue to find resonance in the sound and art of budding artists not just in Bengal, but across India, with their songs being widely reprised and recreated.

In an illustrated biography, Tenzin Geyche Tethong looks at Dalai Lama's perilous journey from Tibet to India
The 352-page-book titled His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama: An Illustrated Biography has been in the making for nearly five years and is written by Tenzin Geyche Tethong, one of the Dalai Lama's closest aid and trusted advisor of over 40 years. It includes nearly 400 photographs and documents, many of which have never been seen before or published.

Bhutan's hydropower exports flourish during lockdown, but for rural communities it's a mixed blessing
For many rural communities, having hydropower stations nearby is a mixed blessing. Houses in these areas have developed cracks that often reappear even if they are fixed. Much of the damage remains unrepaired.

In a bid to lower carbon footprint, a group of Indian designers turns food waste into haute couture
Orange peel, lotus stems, betel nut husks, rose petals, sugarcane, pineapples, coffee grounds, eucalyptus and even fish scales are no longer just food or waste. They are the fashion frontline in combatting climate change.

Lockdown Secrets: With transgressions big and small, people test the limitations of a post-pandemic world
Through an anonymous survey on social media, we asked people about the fears and secrets they have been living with over the past several months — things they felt uncomfortable sharing with others, perhaps apprehensive of being judged.

In Bangladesh, abuse of Madhupur's indigenous people persists amidst government's 'social forestry' programmes
The Garos of Madhupur Sal forest have been struggling for the right to access the forest since 1962, when the Madhupur forest was declared a national park by the Pakistan government, which then administered the land.

Lockdown Caste Atrocities: Online campaign addresses violence against Dalits in the pandemic through art and dialogue
The campaign aims to share 'stories of pain, plight and struggle of Dalits' that need visibility and solidarity both at the national and international levels, since Dalit rights need to be addressed as human rights

Imagery, messaging for Durga Puja undergoes shift as Kolkata's creative industries contend with COVID impact
Kolkata’s art and culture community is responding in creative ways to an unprecedented Pujo, navigating their way around the question of what it means to observe Durga Puja during a pandemic.

Rethinking the hijab: COVID-19 made masks ubiquitous; will it also spur shift in assumptions about veiled faces?
To broach the topic about the veil meaning something more than a mere clothing choice seems somewhat an exhausting exercise now, one marred by debates that insist upon centralising the hijab as the server of patriarchal functions.

Dastaan-e-Dilrubai: Fact, fable and the unknowability of the 'real' Siddheshwari Devi
Siddheshwari Devi was among the most revered singers of a genre of Hindustani music that is called “light” classical.
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Famine Tales from India and Britain: Project employs graphic and folk artists to illustrate perils of scarcity
The Famine Tales project aims to initiate a cross-cultural dialogue on food security and famines as urgent matters of concern, as opposed to distant episodes in history

Coronavirus Outbreak: A database of books, performances, courses available online in these times of social distancing
Several museums and art galleries have opened up their collections for viewers to enjoy from the comfort of their couch. Google Arts and Culture has teamed up with hundreds of these museums across the globe, digitising some of their art collections.

Dialects of Silence: Parul Sharma's black-and-white photographs capture the solitude of a locked down Delhi
In her latest book, Dialects of Silence: Delhi Under Lockdown, fine art photographer Parul Sharma captures her closest encounters with the sighs, sorrows and consolations of a city in despair

Donald Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis upends 2020 election, but is a replay of 2016 on the cards?
Take a moment and think about how the race for president was placed in October 2016. And recognise the faint echoes of 2020.

Court and Courtship: JP Losty on four miniature paintings from the TAPI Collection, featured in his new book
The 90 paintings in the TAPI collection span 16th century portraits of emperors, courtiers, animals, and more, and courtly pictures from the Deccan, Rajasthan, and Central India; 17th century representations of classic texts like the Gita Govinda, Harivamsha, and Rasikapriya; and 18th and 19th century paintings of ladies in resplendent textiles and costumes.

Kevin Pietersen's second innings: Former England player is now committed to saving rhinos from extinction
As a cricketer, Kevin Pietersen made a name for himself by never backing down from a fight. After his England career ended, he discovered a new calling and now finds himself in the middle of a bigger fight ― saving rhinos from extinction.

Six months after India's coronavirus lockdown, time has both slowed down and sped up
Six months since India’s coronavirus lockdown was declared, how are people marking the passage of time?

Sudipta Sengupta shares her story of ascending Lalana, tragedies and triumphs along the treacherous trek route
The aim of the expedition was to climb an unnamed virgin peak (20,130 ft/6,136 m) in the Lahoul Himalayas. If successful, we planned to name it Lalana, which means woman in Bengali.

Nomadic nature of Pakistan's Bakarwals in danger, as community faces weather, administrative issues
For centuries, Bakarwals have centred their lives around rearing sheep and goats (bakra in Urdu) and even today accompany their herds across mountains and meadows.

In Diwik Singh Chhalani's quest to restore old radios, a coming together of nostalgia and sustainable methods
'Diwiks' are revived versions of old radios which individuals and families have held on to for decades, mainly for sentimental reasons. They feature sustainably reclaimed wood and a modern two-channel sound system.

A Jharkhand town powers India's nuclear dreams, at the cost of its residents' health, the environment
The people of Jaduguda note that displacement and deforestation for uranium mining robbed them of their land and livelihood, and later cursed them with health impacts.

Through Her Lens: Online exhibition encourages dialogue on representation in the North East through photography, archiving
The project's aim has been to record the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown on women and marginalised communities in the northeastern states, and engage with visual storytelling as a form of research and archiving.