Generating AI answer…
Scroll Adda: Why Indians have stopped reading
If you thought Chetan Bhagat was bad for Indian literature, wait till you hear about what’...
Interview: ‘Ritwik Ghatak was far ahead of his time, addressing i...
A conversation with Shamya Dasgupta, editor of an anthology that celebrates the Bengali fi...
MIFF 2026 kicks off with a song of ice and fire
The Mumbai International Film Festival will run until June 21.
In London, an exhibition puts the spotlight on the fascinating li...
The mixed-race daughters of the last ruler of the Sikh empire were pioneering female stude...
If you thought Chetan Bhagat was bad for Indian literature, wait till you hear about what’s happening now.
A conversation with Shamya Dasgupta, editor of an anthology that celebrates the Bengali filmmaker’s birth centenary.
The Mumbai International Film Festival will run until June 21.
The mixed-race daughters of the last ruler of the Sikh empire were pioneering female students, one a suffragette, another an antifascist.
Academics and activists call this the privatisation of public spaces.
Archival correspondence reveals how fear, displacement and bureaucratic hurdles shaped the departure of Hindus and Sikhs from Afghanistan after 1947.
Long before the World Wars, imperial strategists imagined Canadian regiments guarding India’s frontiers against revolt and invasion.
Racialised fears of invasion shaped law and policing under the Raj.
He described Mumbai, where he wrote ‘Madhumati’ and ‘Musafir’, as ‘rotten’ and ‘crude’ and ‘materialistic’ and ‘completely unsuited to any creative work’.