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Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Draft Press and Periodicals Rules 2024

 Seeking public comments, India’s I&B Ministry issued draft rules for implementing the Press and Periodicals Registration Act 2023 passed recently. The rules outline the powers and processes for the Press Registrar.

Inspection Triggers for Media Houses

As per the draft, physical inspection of a publisher’s business premises can be taken up if annual statements are not submitted regularly or a desk audit flags issues requiring further verification.

Press Registrar’s Discretionary Powers

The Registrar can also initiate inspection after receiving complaints about a publication or if deemed necessary for other exceptional reasons. Justification for the same has to be recorded in writing.

Verification of Circulation Claims

Another provision enables verifying circulation numbers if a newspaper seeks central government ads or is subjected to complaints. Initial checking has to be via desk audit of submitted information.

Concerns Around Sweeping Powers

Some experts have criticized the discretionary physical inspection clauses as giving sweeping powers to the authorities with possibilities of misuse to harass media outlets.

About Press and Registration of Periodicals Act

The Press and Registration of Periodicals Act enacted by the Indian Parliament in 2023 aims to replace the archaic 1867 Press and Registration of Books legislation instituted during colonial rule. It was formally implemented from December 29 after getting legislative approval and presidential assent.

The 156-year-old Press Act was criticized as an obsolete legislation lacking required oversight mechanisms for digital age media platforms. By repealing and introducing updated provisions governing registration of publishers and norms compliance, the 2023 Act seeks to catalyze responsible journalism and curb misinformation proliferation enabled via modern technologies.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

National Read a Book Day: Ignite Your Imagination with these 5 Captivating Reads

 In a world bustling with digital distractions, the quiet embrace of a book's pages offers a sanctuary unlike any other. These pages serve as gateways to explore intricate plots, empathise with characters' struggles, and ponder profound ideas. Reading, far from mere entertainment, invites us into a haven of introspection, where our thoughts intertwine with another's story. As National Read a Book Day approaches, it beckons us to embrace this refuge from the relentless pace of our digital age.

In today's frenzied world, where screens demand our attention and notifications vie for our focus, this special day becomes a gentle reminder to slow down, unplug, and immerse ourselves in the world of words. It's a day to rediscover the magic of literature, to rekindle the joy of getting lost in the pages of a captivating book.

For those both well-acquainted with the joy of reading and those seeking to reignite their passion for books, we've curated a selection of five exceptional literary works from the British Council Digital Library.

1. The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka

Prepare to embark on an enchanting journey into a world of artistry and wonder as Shehan Karunatilaka weaves a mesmerising tapestry of storytelling. This novel, adorned with the prestigious Booker Prize, assures readers an unforgettable exploration through the intricate layers of Maali Almeida's life. It captures the very essence of culture, identity, and the boundless human spirit.

2. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by J.K. Rowling

Take a nostalgic trip back to where the magic all began with J.K. Rowling's timeless tale of a young wizard's induction into the enchanting world of wizardry. "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" introduces readers to a universe brimming with spells, friendship, and adventure, an enchantment that has captivated generations. Join Harry, Ron, and Hermione on their initial steps into the mesmerising wizarding realm.

3. Belonging: Natural Histories of Place, Identity, and Home by Amanda Thomson

Amanda Thomson's exploration of the concept of belonging invites readers to embark on a profound introspection into the intricate tapestry of home, identity, and the connections we forge with the world around us. Dive into the rich narratives that mould our sense of place and learn how they interweave with our understanding of self.

4. The Flow: Rivers, Water, and Wildness by Amy-Jane Beer

Embark on a captivating journey into the world of water and wilderness with Amy-Jane Beer's "The Flow." This enthralling exploration of rivers and their significance unravels the complex relationship between water, ecosystems, and the vitality they infuse into our world. Immerse yourself in the beauty and significance of one of our planet's most precious resources.

5. The Coming Bad Days" by Sarah Bernstein

In "The Coming Bad Days," Sarah Bernstein paints a riveting portrait of a future that is both unsettling and eerily plausible. Through her evocative prose, she crafts a vision of a world teetering on the edge of transformation, where characters grapple with the uncertainties of what lies ahead.

On National Read a Book Day, let these literary gems serve as your passport to uncharted worlds, diverse perspectives, and boundless imagination.

Source: The Telegraph, 4/09/23

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Reading should always be in vogue

 “A book is a gift you can open again and again”   says Garrison Keillor. My father inculcated and nurtured my reading habit as he took me to local book exhibitions when I was young and made sure that I enrolled myself in the Goa State Central Library, then housed in Institute Menezes Braganza, Panjim. As a kid, as my reading grew, books espoused my curiosity to understand the world better. A study conducted by B Greene in 2001 says it aptly “Reading habit is best formed at a young impressionable age in school, but once formed it can last one’s lifetime”.

Reading encourages sound scholastic development of the mind. The most direct outcome of the reading is it strengthens vocabulary and leads to a fluid formation of comprehensible sentences. Reading allows the mind to go through an assortment of characters, their lives, ambitions, nuances thus allowing it to weave a story. It empowers and emancipates citizens, and it brings people together. It helps to form opinions and guide one’s judgements. It fuels up the imagination and makes us receptive to new ideas. It allows and fosters re-thinking and questioning about themes to which non-readers cling without any understanding. It allows one to be empathetic and liberal in viewing society. Reading is an investment that pays rich dividends in life.

However, reading habit has taken a backseat in this online world. There are three essential steps for any habit to form: a trigger, the process and a reward, says Adam Grant. This method has been mastered by the greatest distractors of all time: the social media giants! The smartphone notification (the trigger), countless feeds of pictures/videos (the process) and instant gratification one gets (the reward) fully utilise the caveat of habit formation. While on the other hand, reading a book or a newspaper compels the effortful mind to think over facts and assimilate the ideas. Though development in technology has brought books at our fingertips in the form of e-books, e-magazines or e-journals, it has been poorly successful in imbibing the reading habit. This notion is bolstered by the scene of students in the reading rooms of libraries seen fiddling with the smartphone screens.

The advent of audio books has tried to replace the traditional methods. Lack of dedicated time (or will for it) for reading has been monetised by companies that offer books to listen to on the go. Since the brain cannot multitask effectively, listening to a book while doing chores does not allow us to absorb the essence of a book. In contrast, reading a book evokes undivided attention and facilitates the development of focusing ability, thus also leading to more absorption of the contents.

I consider custodians of a library to be the luckiest people on earth, while the visitors to be next in the hierarchy to be lucky! However, as we move up through the educational hierarchy, the tradition of visiting a library slowly disappears from the curriculum. The students are embroiled with the syllabus and supplied with readymade notes, thus diminishing the need to visit a library. Therefore, visiting the library must be allocated a place in the regular timetable.

 

Source: Herald, 11/11/21

Thursday, June 18, 2020

A book a day keeps the blues away; Your lockdown reading is here

Reading is a solitary act, but during the lockdown, you can be alone together with other book lovers, thanks to these digital initiatives.

Pick a Book

* Thousands of e-books are just a download away; many are available on discount, others, free of cost. Publishing house Juggernaut Books has made select titles available for download free on its mobile app. Read the prize-winning Early Indians by Tony Joseph or actor-writer Twinkle Khanna’s Pyjamas are Forgiving, if you are in the mood for something light. For a dose of history, you can turn to Kohinoor by William Dalrymple, or, for policy discussions to Good Economics For Hard Times by Nobel prize-winning economists Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo
 National Book Trust is also offering some of its titles for free download, as part of its initiative #StayHomeIndiaWithBooks. Over 100 books, in various Indian languages, including Ahomiya, Bangla, Guajarati, Malayalam, Odia, Marathi, Kokborok, Mizo, Bodo, Kannada, Sanskrit, can be downloaded from its website nbtindia.gov.in. Most of these are for children and young adults, but there are also classics by there Rabindranath Tagore, Premchand and others. More titles will be added soon.
* Kolkata-based Seagull Books is offering a free book a day, available for download from its website. The first batch of seven is already out, which includes translated works of writers Banaphool, Alawiya Sobh, Florence Noiville, among others. Return to the site each Sunday for a fresh stash for the week.
* Author Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni has penned the first chapter of what is to become a crowd-sourced novel — possibly an apocalyptic one, given the times — in which, Manaroma, a school teacher, wakes up to find not only her husband and children missing, but the whole city quiet. Initiated by Harper Collins India, anyone can participate in the contest and the collection of the prize-winning chapters will result in a book.

Festive Fervour

* A virtual literature festival with book readings, conversations, sneak peaks into authors’ bookshelves, masterclasses and workshops has been organised by Juggernaut Books. You can listen to actor Konkana Sen Sharma read Jhumpa Lehri’s Hell-Heaven, Shabana Azmi read the story Nanhi ki Nani by celebrated Urdu writer Ismat Chughtai or tune into a masterclass by dietician Rujuta Diwekar, who will guide people on quarantine workouts and meal plans.
* Manjul Publishing House is also organising a two-day literary fest from April 11 on their Instagram live. Watch 20 authors, including mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, on @manjulpublishinghouse.
* The annual Jaipur Literature Festival has also announced a new series called ‘Brave New World’, in which the sprawling grounds of Diggi Palace have been replaced by the boundless possibilities of the internet, with interactions with over 40 authors including Jhumpa Lahiri, Michael Palin, Robert Macfarlane, Aanchal Malhotra, Bee Rowlatt, Edmund de Waal, Peter Carey, Roger Highfield, Tom Holland, among others. Instead of putting out videos of older sessions, the organisers decided to have “digital-specific format, a point-of-view, one-on-one, half-hour sessions, directly talking to the viewers, taking questions”. Peter Frankopanm, who argued about “the danger of a forthcoming pandemic” in a magazine article in December after the outbreak in Wuhan, will be in discussion with Pulitzer-prize winner writer and oncologist Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee; Tom Holland will be talking to Stephen Greenblatt about Roman poet-philosopher Lucretius’s warning on p

Authors’ Lounge

* Organised by Niyogi Books on their facebook page, many authors are doing readings of their works. Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award-winning writer E Santhosh Kumar narrated a short story from A Fistful of Mustard Seeds, which was originally written in Malayalam over two decades ago.
* Roli Books has launched their digital initiative, Roli Pulse, which will see podcasts, weekly debates and virtual book clubs. They have also been running a weekly line-up of authors speaking on various issues. This week saw activist Aruna Roy discussing the migrant exodus due to the lockdown with Chirag Thakkar, commissioning editor at Roli Books, while Sujata Assomull and fashion designer Rahul Mishra contemplated on the Indian fashion scene in the times of COVID-19.
* Watch out for Harper Collins’s virtual reading party along with ‘The Curious Reader’, a portal for booklovers, on Instagram Live. The first edition, on April 11, will be called ‘Chai Time’, and it will feature Richa S Mukherjee, author of Kanpur Khoofiya Pvt Ltd.
*Pan Macmillian has also joined the bandwagon with a ‘Reading Space’, where they will post videos and articles every Tuesday from their authors, on a range of topics — investigative stories, history, culture and travel, climate change, personality development and spiritual guidance. The first one was by Ankur Bisen, author of Wasted.andemics.
* JCB Prize for Literature has also announced a series on their Instagram called the #TheJCBPrizeCatchUp. Here, readers and aspiring writers can interact with authors and dwell upon the challenges the virus has brought to fore — isolation, loneliness and sickness and how that affects their creative process. On April 11, Mukta Sathe will talk, followed by Vivek Shanbhag on April 13, and Roshan Ali on April 15.
* Pakistani writers Fatima Bhutto and Sanam Maher are also making an effort to bring the global literary community together with a project in support of writers, publishers and booksellers affected by event cancellations and bookshop closures in this time for social distancing. ‘Stay Home, Stay Reading’ has writers from all over the world sending videos reading, in many languages, from their work and works that bring them comfort in these times. While Bhutto read from Alice Greenway’s White Ghost Girls, Irish writer Caoilinn Hughes read from her latest dark comedy The Wild Laughter, and Omar Musa read from his debut novel Here Come the Dogs.

One for the Kids

* Penguin has come up with a line up to keep the children engaged with the online initiative called #OnceUponABookWithPenguin. Since March 30, at 6.30 pm, an author has been going live on Momspresso’s Facebook page every day to tell the kids a story. While Neha Singh’s I Need to Pee, Tazmeen Amna’s The Incredible Adventures of Mr Cheeks: The Carnival of Hastings, and Ruskin Bond’s Mukesh Starts A Zoo turned out to be really popular with children, the upcoming sessions include a reading of Let’s Do This Together by Lubaina on April 11, and Lavanya Karthik will end it with Ninja Nani on April 14. Mompresso has also collaborated with publishing house Hachette with another set of sessions at noon. On April 11, Archana Garodia Gupta and Shruti Gupta will hold an interactive history quiz.
* Meanwhile, Usha Uthup and Nandita Das, among other celebrities, have come together to sing, read and tell stories on Katha with Karadi, a website that Karadi Tales launched to entertain children during the lockdown. They have several audiobooks narrated by actors such R Madhavan, Vidya Balan, Soha Ali Khan and Jaaved Jaaferi, along with virtual storytelling sessions by actor Janaki Sabesh and authors like Natasha Sharma and Sampurna Chattarji. They have released a free e-book titled Farmer Falgu Stays at Home, written by Chitra Soundar, on the importance of social distancing, and another one titled Princess Easy Pleasy – I’m So Bored by Natasha Sharma, a story about how children can quell boredom while indoors. They are hosting daily live events on their Facebook and Instagram pages at 5.30 pm.
Source: Indian Express, 11/04/2020

Thursday, March 19, 2020

The Hard Truth

A Dalit insider’s experiment with touchables

Could Not Be Hindu — The Story of a Dalit in the RSS
Bhanwar Meghwanshi
Navayana
240 pages
` 399
I read Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s I Could Not Be Hindu — The Story of a Dalit in the RSS in one sitting and started writing this review before its gush of ideas, acts and truth could escape me. It is admirably plain-spoken, and it offers hitherto unknown facts about the 95-year-old Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. I am glad this book appeared while I am alive and working.

After Narendra Modi, a Bania with an OBC certificate became prime minister, there was and is a feeling among both Dalits and Shudras that the RSS and the Bharatiya Janata Party have opened up to all castes and tribes. For decades, when they were perceived to be Brahmin/Bania fiefdoms, the possibility of their capturing power in Delhi and other states was remote. Over the decades, the Sangh has thrown up the odd Shudra leader (Kalyan Singh, Uma Bharti, and others), only to use them and cast them aside.
At this juncture, the publication of Bhanwar’s book, first in Hindi and now in English, has the potential to change the opinion of Shudras, Dalits and Adivasis with definite proof of the Sangh Parivar’s anti-national Brahminism. Bhanwar, a Dalit from Bhilwara in Rajasthan who joined the local RSS shakha at the age of 13 thinking it was just fun and games, became privy to the operational structures and ideology of the Sangh. In about five years, despite his willingness to give his life for the organization, Bhanwar realised that Manu dharma governs the functioning of the RSS. Brainwashed, he participated in the kar seva in 1990, harassed Muslims, was high on toxic nationalism and spent time in jail.
One day in 1991, when kar sevaks on an asthi Kalash (funerary urn) yatra led by senior RSS and VHP leaders passed through his village, Sirdiyas, Bhanwar hosted a meal at his home. By that time he was a karyavah, the district office chief of RSS’s Bhilwara unit. But the dwija Sangh leaders turned down the food, saying that eating at an untouchable’s home was not part of the plan. They told him to pack the food; they would eat it on the way. But the next day he found that they had dumped all the puri and kheer by the wayside some kilometers away, and dined at a Brahmin home. Bhanwar realised what his true place in the RSS would be. His world was turned upside down.
Facts first. Of the six sarsanghchalaks who have headed the RSS, five (KB Hedgewar, MS Golwalkar, MD Deoras, KS Sudarshan and Mohan Bhagwat) are Brahmins and one is Kshatriya (Rajendra Singh). Sourcing internal information, Bhanwar says that in 2003 in a 36-member Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha, the highest policy-making body of the RSS, 26 were Brahmins, five Banias, three Kshatriyas and two Shudras (who comprise nearly 50 percent of the population). No Dalit or Adivasi can make it to the top echelons for the next 50 years, nor can a Shudra of any caste become sarsanghchalak. The RSS is structurally and philosophically controlled by Brahmins (three percent of the population). The Banias (three percent) control Sangh finances. Money collected in donations is kept in their homes, never in banks. The RSS is not a registered body, and these unaccounted sums are laundered in Bania homes. Banias have operated the usury market for centuries, entrapping the poor into paying extortionate interest rates. The RSS makes money out of money. The Shudras who form the rank and file are not deemed dependable for this task.
The Sangh’s daily ritualistic prayer, “namaste sada vatsale mathrubhoome”, swearing “eternal dedication to the Motherland” is a consent-construction instrument that brainwashes people into the dogma of Hindu parampara. This is why the RSS catches the likes of Bhanwar and thousands of others at the school level so that they do not enter university education or adult life with an open mind. They need the Shudra/Dalit/Adivasi cadre for muscle power. They are made to believe that Muslims are the enemy, and this works like a drug. But the hard truth is that even if all masjids in India are destroyed, the Shudra/Dalit/Adivasis will never become the Brahmin’s equal.
What also struck me was the absence of any talk in the Sangh ideology of people involved in productive labour. Their literature and speeches are only about mythic stories with vague ideas of falsified past glory. Labour, wages or the science of advancing food production are never mentioned. It follows that those who work in the fields are the despised mlecchas. The tillers of the land, graziers, shepherds, potters, fishers, carpenters, smiths, shoemakers — all get mobilised as unequal to the Brahmins, Banias and Kshatriyas (dwijas) of the Hindu Rashtra. Shadow enemies are constructed on a daily and hourly basis so that the enemy within, caste, is not exposed.
Bhanwar’s book has the potential to undo all this scheming. This unputdownable work must be made compulsory reading for all schoolchildren and college and university students, especially among Shudras, Dalits, Adivasis, and women. Nivedita Menon’s translation from Hindi is elegant and Navayana has produced the volume handsomely.
Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd is the author of Why I am Not a Hindu and Buffalo Nationalism
Source: Indian Express, 19/03/2020

Friday, February 28, 2020

Setting the Record Straight

British writer Hallie Rubenhold’s latest book tells the story of the five victims of Jack the Ripper.

Underneath the jacket of Hallie Rubenhold’s latest book, The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper, the names of five women are printed — Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes and Mary Jane Kelly — the canonical victims of the unidentified serial killer, who brutally murdered them in and around the Whitechapel district in London in 1888. It is by design, she says, as we sit down for a quick chat in the midst of sessions at the recently-concluded Zee Jaipur Literature Festival. “Over the past 131 years, there’s been such a fascination with the murderer. So much time and effort has been invested in finding out the minutest details of these horrific crimes and yet not much was done to find out who these women really were,” says Rubenhold, who has upset ‘Ripperologists’ with her devastating deep dive into the other side of the horrific killings that continue to captivate lovers of true crime the world over.
“Ripperologists focus on the last days or the final hours of these women; the newspapers of the time were quick to paint them with the same brush and say they were all prostitutes. When I started my research, I failed to see evidence that three of the five were sex workers at all,” says Rubenhold. Identifying the women as such was easy for the police, the papers, for Victorian society at large, for the idea of a woman’s work is intrinsically tied to her worth; the killings were an event that single-handedly vilified sex work, a profession that serves men the most.
Rubenhold describes herself as a “social historian” interested in the lives of ordinary people, especially women in the UK. “How women lived in any particular time will tell you what you need to know about society. For this book, I had to peel back all the conspiracy theories and locate primary sources of information such as birth and death certificates, marriage certificates, census and workhouse records. Poor women, as these women were, have a very narrow range of possibilities in their lives — it helped me trace their journey. The inquests that were held were like morality trials — held not tWinner of the 2019 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-fiction, The Five is Rubenhold’s bold attempt to not only rewrite a sordid history, but also claim a sliver of dignity for the victims. From Jack the Ripper tours in Whitechapel to Hollywood fare like From Hell, the deaths of the five have been capitalised to no end. “The tours have been there since the first murder — these women die over and over again, for entertainment and commerce. The best ammunition to fight those lies is knowledge and an awakening of empathy. I want my book to be the antidote to that venom,” she says.
The London-based writer is now working on her next book, another true crime story that became the biggest newspaper headline in 1910. “It’s about the Crippen murder: Dr Hawley Crippen, an American quack medic, murdered his wife, dressed as a boy and ran off with his secretary, and boarded a ship to Canada. He was caught, brought back and tried for murder and he was hanged. The trial was extraordinary, because nobody could understand how this meek little man could kill a woman much larger than him — she must have ‘asked for it’. But the most incredible thing about this story is how 25 women brought this case to court, helped to catch him, and have him prosecuted. It’s a story of women’s empowerment at the turn of the century, and unsurprisingly, it has been erased,” says Rubenhold.o ascertain the cause of death but to find out if these women merited their deaths,” she says.
Source: Indian Express, 28/02/2020

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Rohingya refugees in India sketch their stories in a comic book

Put together by World Comics India, a collective that promotes comics as a communication and empowerment tool for the marginalised, the book is an outcome of a workshop conducted by the organisation with around 50-60 Rohingya refugees in Kalindi Kunj and Nuh, Mewat.

We see Zuhara Bibi and her family struggling to find a place in a bus, truck and train during their long journey from Myanmar to Jammu to Delhi. There is also Tasmida recounting being discriminated against in her school in Myanmar. Shamema is disgruntled with the dirty shared toilets in the refugee settlement where she stays with her family.
These are few of the snapshots of the life of Rohingya refugees in India, written and sketched by them as part of a comic book called Rendered Stateless Not Voiceless. Put together by World Comics India, a collective that promotes comics as a communication and empowerment tool for the marginalised, the book is an outcome of a workshop conducted by the organisation with around 50-60 Rohingya refugees in Kalindi Kunj and Nuh, Mewat. “The idea of documenting their stories is to reach out to people and authorities through first-person accounts… The book will help highlight the human face behind the refugee crisis,” says Sharad Sharma, cartoonist and founder of World Comics India. Having worked with immigrants previously, he had been following the news on the Rohingya refugees after they arrived in India in large numbers in 2012, but it was only last year that he decided to document their stories through art.
“A comic book can help us reach out to those who are literate and also others who may not be able to read,” says Ali Johar, who was only 10 when he had to flee his home in Myanmar to find refuge in Bangladesh in 2005. Seven years later, his family moved to Delhi. “It has been a constant struggle,” he says. Until recently, Johar stayed with his family in a shanty in Kalindi Kunj with several other refugees who have settled there. While he has now moved to Zakir Nagar, he visits his friends often. Managing education scholarships for select students from the community, he is also here to propagate how he feels that good education perhaps is the only means for a better tomorrow. “In Myanmar, my father was a businessman with political connections, but in India, we are refugees and have no rights; we can’t buy property, get a government job. But no one can deny us education,” says Johar. The graduate in political science is promoting the same message through his comic strip, Born Ali-en.
A resident of Delhi’s Kalindi Kunj camp, Sanjida Begum, 27, agrees with Sharma that art can help them tell their stories. In her story, Hum Khud Chale Jayenge, she sketches the concerns of her community on being deported back. “We are grateful that we have been allowed to stay for this long. We do have difficulties, but Myanmar is not safe for us. When it is peaceful, we will return on our own,” says the mother of two.
Mother-daughter duo Taslima and Mizan have also shared their concerns and aspirations through the book. Taslima notes that they should only be sent home after they are guaranteed safety and assured citizenship rights that existed till 1982. Mizan, a student of class VI at Gyandeep Vidya Mandir, is grateful to the UNHRC for helping her get admission in Delhi. “Back in Myanmar, we had a nice place to stay. Here we stay in such inhospitable conditions. We don’t know when will we get our rights,” says Mizan.
Source: Indian Express, 20/02/2020

Thursday, January 19, 2017




Dear Reader

Greetings

We are happy to inform you that our faculty  Dr. Debdulal Saha wrote  a book title -Informal Markets, Livelihood and Politics: Street Vendors in Urban India published by Routledge .  The book  will  be available  in the library  for your reference.  

TISS Guwahati Campus Library

Informal Markets, Livelihood and Politics : Street Vendors in Urban India - Debdulal Saha

Monday, October 31, 2016

Ignorance that isn’t bliss

Without awareness of our ignorance, we are condemned to stay ignorant, no matter how much information we collect. The Internet enables this more than anything else in the past

We have been brought up with the hubristic and misleading belief that knowledge makes us truly human. It doesn’t, on its own. What makes us truly human is our knowledge of our ignorance. We seem to be on the verge of forgetting this in our Internet age, with its misleading surfeit of ‘knowledge’ — as the brasher ‘new atheists’, opinionated trolls, Hindutva radicals, Islamist ideologues, Trump die-hards, climate change deniers, and many others prove.
All complex beings have knowledge of different sorts. Birds can navigate their way thousands of miles in the sky and many species of fish can do so in the ocean. Squirrels know when to hoard and where to dig. Many birds and animals know when to seek each other and when to run: the small bird doing its dentistry in the lion’s or the crocodile’s jaws, the large fish being cleansed of parasites by a sea bird.
These are all kinds of knowledge, and some are beyond the capacity of human beings. We explain away our species deficiency by talking of instincts and so on, but the fact remains that we are still talking of ways of knowing.
Knowledge of ignorance 

One can argue that at least all complex organisms think in some way or the other. Birds do, animals do. Some animals, apes for instance, may think more like us than some other animals. Eduardo Kohn even argues in his book How Forests Think: Toward an Anthropology Beyond the Human that forests “think”. Perhaps plants too. But birds and animals definitely have knowledge of things — where to nest, how to build, where to dig, how to stash for the winter, when to run, when to bluff, and so on.
No, it is not knowledge that distinguishes human beings from other complex organisms. What we have and what they do not seem to have is knowledge of ignorance. Human beings do not just know what they know; they also have a fairly good idea of what they do not know. Non-human beings too know what they know, but there is nothing to indicate that they are aware of what they do not know.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what you are? Thus runs the nursery rhyme. What it conveys is not just wonder, which all complex beings have, but also knowledge-ignorance. A dog looking up at something twinkling would wonder too, as wondering grows from simple curiosity. But only the child can wonder about that twinkling as what is known to be a star and as stars we remain vastly ignorant of.
It can be argued that the truly educated are distinguished not by the extent of their knowledge, but by a greater and more nuanced awareness of their areas of ignorance. Actually, the two go hand in hand: true knowledge comes only with awareness of one’s ignorance, which is something that neither Internet trolls nor religious fundamentalists have fully understood. It is knowledge of ignorance that makes us truly human, and it is this that I am afraid we are forgetting with the rise of the so-called information society.
Now, information is not the same as knowledge, but there can be no knowledge without information. As such, there is an unspoken myth that individually and collectively we have more knowledge of things and ourselves now than ever in the past. After all, we have the Internet, cyber-linked libraries, 24-hour TV, whatnot.
Interestingly, what unites all Internet trolls — whether they are Hindutva fanatics screaming about how every scientific discovery has taken place in ‘Vedic’ India, Islamists claiming that their version of Islam is the most perfect system ever, Trump supporters insinuating about conspiracies and rigging — is the fact that they surf only for information that confirms their ‘knowledge’ and does not challenge their ‘ignorance’. The availability of information is not sufficient. It is outright misleading when we are convinced of our own knowledge, and not willing to challenge it.
Without awareness of our ignorance, we are condemned to stay ignorant — no matter how much information we collect. The Internet enables this more than anything else in the past, as it enables a solitary, selective, isolated, hidden, unabashed-of-ignorance search for ‘information’, and its instantaneous, too-fast dissemination.
Books and the Internet

You might claim that so did books to some extent: after all, one could read books in isolation, shut up in a room. This is true, but only if one confined oneself to a narrow book and its strict acolytes: something that fundamentalists — religious or political — have done and still do. The Nazi reading only Mein Kampf and Nazi commentaries is no different from the religious fanatic reading only one sacred text and its ‘true’ commentaries. In this sense, we are not faced with an entirely new danger.
But there is a difference. The moment one starts reading books in general, one is forced to encounter opinions and information that do not necessarily fit one’s world view. It seems easier to avoid such encounters on the Internet. Moreover, in a world of books, knowledge was by definition beyond any set of covers, any fixed reading. Knowledge in that sense was always partly elusive. This seems to have disappeared with the rise of cyber culture because the myth has arisen that all knowledge is now at our fingertips. All we need is the right search machine.
This is reflected not only in our tendency to Google medical treatments but also in the inanity of many cyber reviews, where reputed classics and complex books are dismissed with a line like “I found it boring”. It is reflected, above all, in the screams of Internet trolls, all of them seeking and disseminating only ‘information’ that suits them.
Can there be any knowledge without a humble awareness of ignorance?
Tabish Khair is an Indian novelist and academic who teaches in Denmark.
Source: The Hindu, 31-10-2016

Monday, August 22, 2016

Publisher wins rights to a book no one can read
BURGOS, SPAIN
AFP


`Voynich' manuscript is written in an unknown or coded language
It's one of the world's most mysterious books, a centuriesold manuscript written in an unknown or coded language that no one -not even the best cryptographers -has cracked.Scholars have spent their lives puzzling over the Voynich Manuscript, whose intriguing mix of elegant writing and drawings of strange plants and naked women has some believing it holds magical powers.
The weathered book is locked away in a vault at Yale University's Beinecke Library, emerging only occasionally. But after a 10-year quest for access, Siloe, a small publishing house nestled deep in northern Spain, has secured the right to clone the document -to the delight of its director.
“Touching the Voynichis an experience,“ says Juan Jose Garcia, sitting on the top floor of a book museum in the quaint centre of Burgos where Siloe's office is, a few paved streets away from the city's famed Gothic cathedral.
Siloe, which specialises in making facsimiles of old manuscripts, has bought the rights to make 898 exact replicas of the Voynich -so faithful that every stain, hole, sewn-up tear in the parchment will be reproduced.
The publishing house plans to sell the facsimiles for 7,000 to 8,000 euros ($7,800 to $8,900) apiece once completed -and close to 300 people have already put in pre-orders.
Raymond Clemens, curator at the Beinecke Library, said Yale decided to have facsimiles done because of the many people who want to consult the fragile manuscript. “We thought that the facsimile would provide the look and feel of the original for those who were interested,“ he said.

Source: Mumbai Mirror, 22-08-2016

Wednesday, August 03, 2016

President Pranab Mukherjee receives copy of book 'Grassroots Innovation' 
New Delhi: The President of India, Shri Pranab Mukherjee received a copy of book ‘Grassroots Innovation’ authored by Prof. Anil K. Gupta of IIM Ahmedabad who is also the Vice Chairman, National Innovation Foundation at Rashtrapati Bhavan today (August 2, 2016). 

Speaking on the occasion, the President congratulated Prof. Anil K. Gupta and said that he was deeply appreciative of his efforts and painstaking work about the innate creativity and innovative potential of our people. He stated that Dr. Gupta’s book was about stories of extraordinary men and women who are silently contributing in the innovation movement for the economic development and advancement of society. 

The President said that the Government should provide institutional support to the grass root innovators. Their efforts will not be appreciated if necessary linkages between the relevant stakeholders are not established. The Festival of Innovations which is organized by Rashtrapati Bhavan in collaboration with National Innovation Foundation has helped to bring together creative energy from different domains. 

The President conveyed his best wishes to Dr. Gupta and his dedicated team to continue their march in adding value to the ideas and innovations of communities at grassroots level. 

Among the dignitaries present on the occasion were Prof. Ashutosh Sharma, Secretary, Department of Science & Technology and Dr. R. A. Mashelkar, Chairperson, National Innovation Foundation. 

Source; Indiaeducationdiary, 2-08-2016

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

We will always be young adults

India still does not have its Judy Blume, but a clutch of new books are pushing the boundaries of the genre of YA

I read Priyanka Mookerjee’s Hedon in big gulps, taking breaks because I had to, because its intensity clung to me in an almost oppressive way. In fact, I don’t think I realised till I was done reading that I had liked the book; that this dense, raw world with its fevered pace had appealed to me. Till I finished, I hadn’t had time to think; the pages crowded, words tumbling over each other in a rush to tell their story.
But afterwards, I wondered. Here is this new book with its fairly typical world, created with building blocks we know far too well now — a young girl (“plain”, precocious) and an older man (handsome, unattainable), a meet-cute that almost borders on trite, and the story of an Indian girl in a college abroad, juggling aspirations and heartbreaks and temptations. Routine stuff, really. So why does it work? Why does this young adult novel, with all its expected ingredients and predictable plot twists, seem to stand a little apart?
Expectation and reality

More than anything else, it is perhaps how the book feels that distinguishes it; how its convoluted, angst-ridden self-awareness stops just short of posturing, so while you expect one thing (teen pop romance laced with tried and tested tropes), you get quite another (a kind of breathless unravelling of everything, all at once). Young adult fiction’s late entry to the Indian literary market makes Hedonespecially rare, and I cannot find the exact comparison by an Indian author. The only one that perhaps comes close is Jobless Clueless Reckless by Revathi Suresh, published in 2013 by Duckbill. Suresh’s intelligent grasp on the teenage psyche and her easy ability to navigate its labyrinth finds an echo inHedon, but whereas Suresh’s voice is younger, Mookerjee’s is older and somehow darker.
At one level, Hedon was familiar to me in the way my own teenage years are — hazy half-memories that seem both intensely private and completely alien. It reminded me that while I can pretend I’ve forgotten how seventeen felt, its raw intensity is easy to summon. At least, Hedon helps make it easy.
The book’s protagonist Tara Mullick’s life isn’t every teenager’s life. It was certainly not mine, but even while her own world follows a trajectory I cannot draw parallels with, it is the voice Mookerjee gives her that pulls at you — its vulnerability, beating steadily behind the thin veneer of nonchalant self-confidence that only teenagers can pull off, so that Tara shifts between an indulgent assurance of her own intelligence and a deep insecurity about her own place in the world she inhabits. I’ve seen that voice used before, but rarely, so that when it does appear, it holds you captive. It creates a book that only just fits into that youth adult shelf we’ve created, its pages bleeding into all the other spaces that surround it. The label refuses to stick, and you find that there’s no space for it anyway, because while you’ve got yourself a book that’s about a young adult, written in the voice of a young adult, and entirely accessible to young adults, you’ve also got a book that belongs to every reader who picks it up.
Perhaps that statement is true of any book. But reading Hedon reminded me of how amorphous the term ‘young adult’ really is. How fiction overtly written for this age bracket exists in a state of perpetual shift, so that sometimes it seems strange that we’ve set these limits at all; that when it comes to books, we are so sure about what goes where. After all, in life, things are a lot more muddled, the lines a lot more blurred. Who can tell, really, when exactly they grew up?
When Tara falls immediately and completely in love with a near stranger, she’s just seventeen; when she writes poetry for her dead neighbour or when she tumbles through chapters’ worth of casual sex and experimental drugs, you see awkward innocence in her desperate rush to grow up. You see her pull and push at these conflicting notes, and when the plot seems to spiral out of control, Mookerjee keeps up, laying down for us the very moments that change Tara. Together, these moments become the strength of the book, lending it a kind of universally relatable quality that has nothing to do with actual plot developments.
The voice of the teenager

Perhaps this is why there are so many adults dipping into young adult fiction, and why books like Hedoncannot entirely define their readership. I remember reading Judy Blume in school, going through her books one after the other in a greedy rush to read them all. I always devoured them with a kind of guilty thrill, because back then Blume’s books were really a few of the only ones that would discuss certain things — puberty, sex, boys, death, even love in a way — with a frankness that was refreshing and unnerving. I don’t know how Blume did it, but she made her teenagers breathe — she made them say and do things that rang true, and her books pulsated with unfettered honesty. When I pick up the same books now, the voice is just as honest, the book just as relatable. Only, I find myself appreciating things I didn’t then. I know that I’m not reading a different book; just reading it differently.
Over the years, I’ve come across several voices that have reminded me, in one way or the other, of Blume’s. Before, these were books written by international authors, reaching India with their stories intact, even if their context gained distance — the once obscure cult favourite, Christopher Pike, with his dark and disturbing world brimming with the unnatural and supernatural; Lois Lowry’s The Giver with its beautiful complexity; or Sherman Alexie’s The Absolute Diary of a Part-Time Indian riddled with the kind of funny that twists your stomach and makes you grin, all at the same time. These will thankfully keep coming, but now our options back home are steadily growing, whether it is Paro Anand’s gritty attempts to explain and understand a world from the eyes of a teenager, Himanjali Sankar’s exploration of homosexuality in Talking of Muskaan, or Mookerjee’s Hedon.
swati.d@thehindu.co.in
Keywords: BooksgenreYoung adults
Source: The Hindu, 24-05-2016

Friday, May 06, 2016

Love in the time of development

By Madhusree Mukerjee

6 May 2016

Pankaj Sekhsaria’s new novel about the Andaman islands turns real life into compelling prose.

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