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Tag Archives: Gender

Gender


Madhuri Kamat
BRINGING BACK GRANDPA
2021

Bringing Back Grandpa by Madhuri Kamat, a sequel to Flying with Grandpa is a realistic portrayal of the life of a single child in an urban, middle class Indian family of today. The child’s character is coloured with loneliness and control. This review begins with a brief summary of the story, which is followed by some observational comments. Finally, the reviewer poses a few questions on the current state of childhood in India and what role children’s literature can play to address children’s needs.The story appears as a page from the life of a single, privileged male child, Xerxes. He is quite close to his grandpa, who is his only friend and also his saviour. All of a sudden his grandpa falls ill. Before Xerxes could make sense of the situation at home, he finds himself being bullied by his classmates…


Reviewed by: Nidhi Gaur

Sushil Shukl. Illustrated by Vandana Bist
BHAI TU AISI KAVITA KYON KARTA HAI
2020

In March 2020, the world was told to shut themselves in. The much-condemned mobile phone became the center of our lives. Children who till February 2020 were told by WHO that screen time was evil and they should play vigorously outdoors at least 60 minutes every day, were forced to stare at screens for study, and stopped from playing outside. In short, everything turned upside down, or rather, to make a bad pun, outside in. They do say, though, that every cloud has a silver lining. Well, this little book is part of the silver lining. I have carefully mentioned the cover pages, because the front cover sets the tone, while the inside front cover and the back cover also have little gems tucked into them…


Reviewed by: Anju Virmani

Tisca Chopra
WHAT’S UP WITH ME? PUBERTY, PERIODS, PIMPLES, PEOPLE, PROBLEMS AND MORE
2021

The book under review comprises twelve chapters, with eye catching illustrations, and easy to relate style of prose, that act as nothing less than a Bible for young adolescent girls. It beautifully explains the transition from hoops of puberty to fabulous adulthood. Young girls often tend to become self-conscious owing to the changes that occur during puberty. A proper guide, the right information and knowledge is what is needed to battle the dilemmas of adolescence like: their first period, picking up their first bra, encountering pubic hair, relationships, boys, developing pimples, gaining weight, periods hacks, menstrual hygiene, etc. This book is a good pick for that…


Reviewed by: Rafia Reshi

Payal Dhar
IT HAS NO NAME
2021

Sami is a young adult; a ‘girl’ who felt more at ease in carrying herself in a way that’s conventionally attributed to ‘boys’ only. This was often met with a wide range of inconsiderate, harassing (and vulgar) remarks and humiliating questions… Are you a boy or a girl? Her parents were thoughtful and sensitive enough, but that did not mean an escape from the occasional, You know you’re not a boy, right? Why don’t you make an effort to look more like the other girls?Sami soon discovers that she is gay and seems to be accepting and willing to explore her sexuality. As she is about to start exploring this newfound realization, a major shift comes in; she has to move to Chandsarai with her mother, a small village in the hills. Being away from her father, Nisha (her best friend) and the place she felt so connected to wasn’t easy…


Reviewed by: Ruchi Shevade

Divya Anand. Illustrated by Rujuta Thakurdesai
I HATE MY CURLY HAIR
2020

Childhood, that precious time of intense loves and hates and hopes and disappointments, has been marvellously captured by Divya Anand in her story for children I Hate my Curly Hair, a story, beautifully illustrated by Rujuta Thakurdesai, that is reminiscent of the illustrated stories by that wonderful writer for children, Dr Seuss.The primary objective of any literature be it for children or adults is to entertain and give pleasure.  I Hate my Curly Hair does this  amply by using a rhyme pattern that would delight any young reader by the way it trips and slips off one’s tongue with its tizzy and frizzy and giggles and squiggles…


Reviewed by: G Anuradha

Ruskin Bond. Illustrated by Kashmir Sarode
ALL-TIME FAVOURITES (FOR CHILDREN)
2021

ll Time Favourites (For Children) celebrates Ruskin Bond’s writing with stories that are always loved equally by children and adults and can now be enjoyed in a single collectible volume consisting of 25 enjoyable stories. Curated by India’s most loved children’s writer, this collection brings together some of the most evocative episodes from the author’s life. Heart-warming, funny and spirited, this is a must have on every bookshelf!‘Goldfish Don’t Bark’ is a delightful story of Koki and the goldfish, which is kept in a glass jar and is constantly admired by the little girl who is visiting her grandmother, living on the other side of the hill. She is happy to notice that the goldfish do not make noises like dogs, donkeys or the birds…


Reviewed by: Indira Bagchi

Tara Kaushal
WHY MEN RAPE: AN INDIAN UNDERCOVER INVESTIGATION
2020

Tara Kaushal set out on a journalistic journey, interviewing nine men accused of rape and gang rape to analyse the psychological temperament of the rapist. The book is the roller coaster of emotions and a mentally intertwined journey on ‘Why Men Rape’. The commonly evident documentation of patriarchy…


Reviewed by: Azeemah Saleem

Rama Srinivasan
COURTING DESIRE: LITIGATING FOR LOVE IN NORTH INDIA
2020

Courting Desire: Litigating for Love in North India is a book that attempts very successfully to capture the nuances of change and contestations in Haryana through the lens of youthful desire and love that transgresses caste/gotra/religion and courts the legal process to gain societal acceptance and legitimacy…


Reviewed by: Krishna Menon

Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen
ACCIDENTAL FEMINISM: GENDER PARITY AND SELECTIVE MOBILITY AMONG INDIA’S PROFESSIONAL ELITE
2021

In contemporary Indian and Pakistani societies, the question of the role of the woman in the nationalist scenario remains a vexed one. Ann McClintock observes about the role of the woman in the developing world, ‘Excluded from direct action as national citizens, women are subsumed symbolically into the national body politic as its boundary and metaphoric limit.’


Reviewed by: Nyla Ali Khan

Nikhila Menon
MOBILITY AS CAPABILITY: WOMEN IN THE INDIAN INFORMAL ECONOMY
2020

Amartya Sen’s ‘Capability Approach’ and ‘Development as Freedom’ continues to intrigue, interest and push scholars to explore what emerges when these are applied in the concrete, on the ground, to specific sectors, and, categories of people within these sectors…


Reviewed by: Padmini Swaminathan

Rajeev Kumaramkandath and Sanjay Srivastava
(HI)STORIES OF DESIRE: SEXUALITIES AND CULTURE IN MODERN INDIA
2020

(Hi)Stories of Desire is set to be a landmark publication on culture in modern India. It maps this via the route of sexualities and draws upon a diverse set of disciplinary locations and research to do so. In addition to a very comprehensive introductory chapter co-authored…


Reviewed by: Krishna Menon

Aditi Patil
PATRIARCHY AND THE PANGOLIN: A FIELD GUIDE TO INDIAN MEN AND OTHER SPECIES
2020

Patriarchy and the Pangolin: A Field Guide to Indian Men and Other Species is a book about two environmentalists who are women as well as researchers. It is important at the outset to state their gender identities, as the premise of the book is based on this shared…


Reviewed by: Shraddha A Singh

Amba Pande
INDENTURED AND POST-INDENTURED EXPERIENCES OF WOMEN IN THE INDIAN DIASPORA
2020

Women constitute a significant composition of Indian diasporic communities universally. Even though the role of female sojourners has been invisible in diasporic accounts for considerable period of time, feminist and subaltern interventions made substantial advancement.


Reviewed by: Parvathy Poornima

Panchali Ray
POLITICS OF PRECARITY: GENDERED SUBJECTS AND THE HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY IN CONTEMPORARY KOLKATA
2020

The pandemic of Covid is here to stay and we have to learn to live with it, as it becomes endemic. Among the many things the Covid pandemic has exposed—the neglect of public health, the disastrous implications of privatization of health, the utter lack of public health.


Reviewed by: Mohan Rao

Usha Sanyal
SCHOLARS OF FAITH: SOUTH ASIAN MUSLIM WOMEN AND THE EMBODIMENT OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE
2020

Usha Sanyal’s book on new institutions of Islamic learning for women is an important study on the relatively under-researched theme of South Asian Muslim women’s changing engagement with religious learning. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in two institutions namely.


Reviewed by: Hem Borker

Chitra Narayanan
FROM OBEROI TO OYO: BEHIND THE SCENES WITH THE MOVERS AND SHAKERS OF INDIA’S HOTEL INDUSTRY
2020

Most of us still peruse a list of hotels that pop up on various aggregators like we do a menu at an expensive restaurant—with one eye on the prices on the right. We are usually looking for a hotel or a homestay within our budget which will meet our basic requirements.


Reviewed by: Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri

Bharti Arora
WRITING GENDER, WRITING NATION: WOMEN’S FICTION IN POST-INDEPENDENCE INDIA
2020

Bharti Arora’s book is an analysis of eleven novels written by women in different Indian languages from 1950 to the mid-1990s. It draws from historical and sociological scholarship and policy reports to develop a framework to draw attention to the socially.


Reviewed by: Kiran Keshavamurthy

Ankur Bisen
WASTED: THE MESSY STORY OF SANITATION IN INDIA, A MANIFESTO FOR CHANGE
2019

Ulrich Beck in his much-acclaimed book Risk Society: Toward a New Modernity throws light on the consequences of a wide range of hazardous and deadly risks of a highly industrialized and urbanized society. He further elaborates that modern risks are not restricted.


Reviewed by: Rafia Kazim

Bidyut Mohanty
LAKSHMI THE REBEL: CULTURE, ECONOMY AND WOMEN’S AGENCY
2019

Bidyut Mahanty’s Lakshmi the Rebel: Culture, Economy and Women’s Agency is an  attempt to examine the status of women in society by exploring the links between history, political economy, culture and region in India. The uncertainties and the complexities of the narratives.


Reviewed by: Bijayalaxmi Nanda

Kalpana Sharma
THE SILENCE AND THE STORM: NARRATIVES OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN INDIA
2019

The Silence and the Storm: Narratives of Violence Against Women in India is an addition to the existing corpus of literature on gender politics. Working as a journalist for four decades, the author Kalpana Sharma has drawn the trajectory of women’s struggles in India.


Reviewed by: Sabah Hussain
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ISSN No. 0970-4175 (Print)