Kaveri Mishra, an ex-banker and a mother, turned into a full-time home-maker four years back. What holds her back every time she wants to return to her career?
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COVER STORY
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The Mahindra Kabira Festival at Guleria Ghat in Varanasi was a gentle reminder of the Sufi saint’s centrality to India’s syncretism
Family from UP village forced to run around to complete post-death official paperwork and even last rites.
Music genre has helped young artistes in the Kashmir Valley to articulate the people’s fears and woes.
Not since Indipop has a musical movement in India built such a strong independent presence
In impoverished neighbourhoods across the world are the true heroes, the unsung stars of hip-hop.
Young, brash and little-known artistes are using hip-hop as an outlet to speak up and speak out.
What has led to this change of heart over the past few years for the Church, long seen to be anathemic to the Sangh Parivar?
Kobad Ghandy, one of India’s top Maoist ideologues, speaks about the victory of the anti-farm laws movement, the lessons that India’s left movement can draw from it and the power of non-violence.
Far from the metropolitan spotlight, hip-hop is emerging as a vernacular eddy in smalltown Bihar, as global culture clashes with local tradition
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The Mahindra Kabira Festival at Guleria Ghat in Varanasi was a gentle reminder of the Sufi saint’s centrality to India’s syncretism
-
Family from UP village forced to run around to complete post-death official paperwork and even last rites.
-
Music genre has helped young artistes in the Kashmir Valley to articulate the people’s fears and woes.
-
Not since Indipop has a musical movement in India built such a strong independent presence
-
In impoverished neighbourhoods across the world are the true heroes, the unsung stars of hip-hop.
-
Young, brash and little-known artistes are using hip-hop as an outlet to speak up and speak out.
-
What has led to this change of heart over the past few years for the Church, long seen to be anathemic to the Sangh Parivar?
-
Kobad Ghandy, one of India’s top Maoist ideologues, speaks about the victory of the anti-farm laws movement, the lessons that India’s left movement can draw from it and the power of non-violence.
-
Far from the metropolitan spotlight, hip-hop is emerging as a vernacular eddy in smalltown Bihar, as global culture clashes with local tradition
OTHER STORIES
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Even though it arrived riding TV waves, hip-hop was a readymade fit for the subcontinent’s oral-aural multiverse
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Aamir Shaikh aka Shaikhspeare traces talks about the genre that uses music as a means to dissent.
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Hip-hop is not politically correct. And therein lies its beauty and brilliance.