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Monthly Archives: October 2017




Shashi Deshpande
IN THE COUNTRY OF DECEIT
2009

I made the mistake of reading other reviews of the novel before writing my own. At that time I had not read In the Country of Deceit, and did not know that I would be asked to write on it. Eventually when I did read the novel, it seemed different from the impression I had gathered from the reviews. No one had mentioned that a character in the novel dreams of making a film called Sannata, which would be about the silence of an entire town.


Reviewed by: Meenakshi Mukherjee

Shawkat Osman
KHUNTI KADAI AND BANGLADESHI CUISINE
2009

The Bengali likes to sport an intellectual air, which in no way detracts from his deep and abiding interest in things culinary. And the gourmet in him demands that the dishes are properly sequenced, starting with bitter gourd (karela) or even neem leaves cooked with brinjal, depending on the season, followed by a staggering procession of vegetables, fried or in curried form, fish, prawn and meat.


Reviewed by: Deb Mukharji

Sathya Saran
TEN YEARS WITH GURU DUTT: ABRAR ALVI'S JOURNEY
2009

Settling-of-score books can be entertaining, vindictive, or just plain boring. More often than not such a book reveals more about the writer than his subject. Alas, it can also be one long whine—not just me-too, but me-not-him/her, mostly both childish and petulant.


Reviewed by: Madhu Jain

Stephen P. Huyler
DAUGHTERS OF INDIA: ART AND IDENTITY
2009

Daughters of India is a collection of profiles of twenty women from diverse communities all over India. It is also a photographic record of artistic activity among these women, ranging from the kolam patterns drawn in front of the house to wall paintings, embroidery and scroll designs.


Reviewed by: R. Srivatsan

Roda Ahluwalia
RAJPUT PAINTING: ROMANTIC, DIVINE AND COURTLY ART FROM INDIA
2009

Should one judge a book by its cover? By its title? Indeed, one should not and I would hasten to speak out against such a superficial and disrespectful attitude towards books and the great effort that it takes to produce them.


Reviewed by: Kavita Singh

Vidya Dehejia
DELIGHT IN DESIGN: INDIAN SILVER FOR THE RAJ
2009

When the dowager Maharani of Beri, my god-daughter’s grandmother, visited me for the first time, she brought me a long, narrow pen box, decorated with the curvy exfoliated scrolls characteristic of Kutchi silver.


Reviewed by: Laila Tyabji

Chatterjee & Lal
RICHARD BARTHOLOMEW: A CRITIC'S EYE
2009

This book has been several years in the making. Archiving and selecting the photographs by Richard Bartholomew which were exhibited recently at Photo Ink Gallery, New Delhi, must have been an arduous job, since Richard would not ever have even thought of exhibiting them.


Reviewed by: Geeti Sen

George Michell
VIJAYANAGARA: SPLENDOUR IN RUINS
2009

The title of this book is extremely apt. As you thumb through this book, you can glimpse the sombre grandeur of the ruins of an imperial empire at Hampi. It is up to the reader whether he/she sees the splendour in the ruins or the ruins of what was once the splendour of Vijayanagar.


Reviewed by: Vijaya Ramaswamy

Jackie Kirk
WOMEN TEACHING IN SOUTH ASIA
2009

The increasing enrollment of girls in school during the past two decades has been accompanied by a less discussed but not insignificant change in the landscape of schooling in South Asia, i.e. the increased feminization of the teaching profession.


Reviewed by: Sharada Balagopalan

Devi Sridhar
ANTHROPOLOGISTS INSIDE ORGANIZATIONS: SOUTH ASIAN CASE STUDIES
2009

Influenced by the works of David Gellner and Eric Hirsch’s Inside Organizations at Work (Oxford, 2001), Cris Shore and Susan Wright’s The Anthropology of Policy: Critical Perspectives on Governance and Power (Routledge, 1997), and Susan Wright’s Anthropology of Organizations (Routledge, 1994), the editorial expedition of Devi Sridhar’s Anthropologists Inside Organizations…


Reviewed by: Aditya K. Mishra

Parvati Raghuram, Ajay Kumar Sahoo, Brij Maharaj and Dave Sangha
TRACING AN INDIAN DIASPORA: CONTEXTS, MEMORIES, REPRESENTATIONS
2009

As a commemorative volume, Tracing an Indian Diaspora: Contexts, Memories, Representations celebrates the first ten years of the existence of the Centre for the Study of Indian Diaspora (CSID), Hyderabad and the annual Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, held at Hyderabad in January 2006.


Reviewed by: Sobhita Jain

Robert A. Hueckstedt
PASHTUN MIGRATION 1775-2006
2009

The rugged mountainous region straddling the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan have, for many centuries, produced large flows of emigration. Men (there were almost exclusively male migrants) variously described as ‘Afghans’, Pakhtuns’, ‘Pathans’ and ‘Rohillas’, speaking dialects today such as ‘Pashto’, have made their way in significant numbers into northern India, Arabia and beyond.


Reviewed by: Joya Chatterji

Kalpana Kannabiran
CHALLENGING THE RULE(S) OF LAW: COLONIALISM, CRIMINOLOGY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
2009

The book is, both a challenging and an exciting preposition, challenging, because it brings together the intellectual initiatives of the nineteen contributors drawn from different social sciences disciplines, working on diverse crime themes, in pre-colonial, colonial and postcolonial time-frame in one large volume; and exciting, because it endeavours to run the two thought streams, namely, human rights and criminology in almost all the essays.


Reviewed by: B.B. Pande

Ashutosh Dayal Mathur
MEDIEVAL HINDU LAW: HISTORICAL EVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENED REBELLION
2009

The book under review is a modified version of the author’s Ph.D. thesis submitted in 1997, and has taken a full decade to appear in print. The author, far from being distressed at this delay, is actually ‘glad’ that it ‘has taken so much time to appear as a book’. He notes in the preface,


Reviewed by: Purushottam Agrawal

Partha S. Ghosh
THE POLITICS OF PERSONAL LAW IN SOUTH ASIA: IDENTITY, NATIONALISM AND THE UNIFORM CIVIL CODE
2009

Asubstantive body of scholarly writings, especially from femi-nists, has contributed significantly to the debate on personal laws and the Uniform Civil Code (henceforth UCC) in South Asia.


Reviewed by: Anupama Roy

Ujjwal Kumar Singh
HUMAN RIGHTS AND PEACE: IDEAS, LAWS, INSTITUTIONS AND MOVEMENTS
2009

This is a timely volume of essays, significant in the context of the present times of unprecedented turmoil and a stealthy erosion of the rights and liberties of an ever-increasing majority, who as the editor rightly points out, continue to be rendered ‘rightless’, even amidst an ever-expanding range of human rights instruments and laws.


Reviewed by: Sonali Huria

Ahmed Rashid
DESCENT INTO CHAOS: HOW THE WAR AGAINST ISLAMIC EXTREMISM IS BEING LOST IN PAKISTAN, AFGHANISTAN AND CENTRAL ASIA
2009

The subtitle of this book encapsulates its contents. Future historians will undoubtedly judge the eight year long George W. Bush era harshly as being America’s wasted years. Following 9/11, the responsibility for bombing the World Trade Centre towers in New York was affixed on Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda organization hiding in Afghanistan.


Reviewed by: P.R. Chari

Madawi Al-Rashid
KINGDOM WITHOUT BORDERS: SAUDI POLITICAL, RELIGIOUS AND MEDIA FRONTIERS
2009

Books on Saudi Arabia have appeared in three distinct waves. The first wave sought to explore and understand the mysterious Saudi world. Harry St. John Philby represents the first wave.


Reviewed by: Gulshan Dietl

Omid Safi
RELIGION AND POLITICS IN SALJUQ IRAN: NEGOTIATING IDEOLOGY AND RELIGIOUS INQUIRY
2009

A lot has been written and discussed about the linkage between religion and politics. The Iranian Revolution of the late 1970s in a way epitomized such a relationship. Omid Safi, who grew up in Iran during the revolutionary days and whose family later shifted to the United States, looks at the ideological and political aspects of Islam in the Saljuq era Iran of the eleventh and twelfth centuries.


Reviewed by: A.K. Ramakrishnan

Rajendra Abhyankar
WEST ASIA AND THE REGION: DEFINING INDIA'S ROLE
2009

The Centre for West Asian Studies was set up in the Jamia Millia Islamia in 2005. The Director of the Centre, Rajendra M. Abhyankar, has pointed out in his ‘Introduction’ that the Centre’s area of study is much larger than West Asia, and includes the Horn of Africa, Central Asia, Iran and Turkey.


Reviewed by: K.P. Fabian
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ISSN No. 0970-4175 (Print)