by Banhi Baran Ghosh*
Abstract
Pandemic engendered by Covid-19 rekindles the normative view of the Indian State. For more than two decades the State which has been embracing the ideology of neo-liberalism, suddenly has turned into advocating its transformative role in the guise of Dirgiste State. In this article an attempt has been made to recuperate the role of Indian State in this pandemic from a political economy perspective.
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For more than one year we have been experiencing (…)
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Most recent articles
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Pandemic and the State: a Political Economy perspective | Banhi Baran Ghosh
7 August 2021 -
The Lord Macaulay’s Minute, 1835: Re-examining the British Educational Policy | Ajit Mondal
7 August 2021by Ajit Mondal *
Development of education system during the British period was determined by the needs of the colonial powers. If we analyse the development, we will find that the colonial interests of the British always shaped the then educational policies of India. European trading companies began their commercial activities in India from 1600 A.D. Gradually the Portuguese, the French, the Dutch and the English settled in some parts and commercial centres of India. Among them the English (…) -
Intimations of Stupidity | Avay Shukla
7 August 2021by Avay Shukla
30 July 2021
These last two weeks have been pretty confounding and humbling for me, both as a generic Indian and a stand-alone Shukla. It’s bad enough to be treated as an idiot by the government of the day, but it’s worse when you start suspecting that the government may be right after all. I no longer get Wordsworth’s intimations of immortality, what I sense now are Sambit Patra’s intimations of stupidity , thanks to Mr. Modi . His government has conveyed to all of (…) -
Ruthless times & Some Unusual People | Humra Quraishi
7 August 2021, by Humra QuraishiMUSINGS
August 4, 2021
The rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl child in the capital city of the country, New Delhi, is another of those reminders that we are living in dark-barbaric-ruthless times. Nah, no human form is safe and secure, in spite of all those governmental claims that there’s that machinery to look after the welfare and well-being of the citizens. Bogus seem those hollow assurances and tall claims.
Correct me if I’m wrong but only a very small percentage of the rape (…) -
An Enigma Called Gorky | M R Narayan Swamy
7 August 2021, by M R Narayan Swamyby M R Narayan Swamy
Was Maxim Gorky a Stalinist stooge? Did he embrace Bolshevism fully? Was he an apologist for Stalin’s crimes against fellow Russians? The questions have dogged the eminent and controversial Soviet writer for long. More than 150 years after his birth, there are no clear answers.
Satyanarayan Sinha, an Indian revolutionary who went to Moscow to learn how to oust the British but quickly became disenchanted with the Soviet realities, met Gorky in southern Italy where the (…) -
Was Guru Dutt a Marxist? | Radhakanta Barik
7 August 2021, by Radhakanta Barikby Radhakanta Barik *
In the Bombay film world there was a Calcutta school of filmmaking. Prominent of them was Bimal Roy who had a command over each area of film making. Strong tradition of storytelling was the strength of these film makers. It depended on literary works. It did not believe in stereotype and it differs from one story to another. They did depend on cinematic language to tell the story. They had a command over each area of film making. Choreography, direction and (…) -
Urgent Need for Disarmament Efforts As Threat From Nuclear Weapons Is Increasing | Bharat Dogra
7 August 2021, by Bharat DograOn August 6, as the world observes Hiroshima Day (the 76th anniversary of the first-ever use of an atomic weapon in Hiroshima) , serious concerns regarding the threats from nuclear weapons are increasing in the middle of new tensions and power rivalries. We should not be misled into a false sense of security that the reduction in the number of nuclear weapons, when compared to cold war peak numbers, has increased the overall security of our world. There are several other technological and (…)
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Painting: Cranes and Ships, Glasgow Docks, 1947, L.S. Lowry
7 August 2021 -
Audio: Author Salman Rushdie doubtful that a better world will emerge from COVID-19?
7 August 2021https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/1901691971609/
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Music: Prince Igor - Act II: Polovtsian Dances with Chorus "Uletay na krylyakh vetra" | Alexander Borordin
7 August 2021Play
Prince Igor: Polovtsian Dances with Chorus "Uletay na krylyakh vetra" by Grand Academic Choir of All-Union National Radio Service and Central ... - Topic https://youtu.be/zAUQazfrlkk
Prince Igor is an opera in four acts with a prologue, written and composed by Alexander Borodin. The opera was left unfinished upon the composer’s death in 1887 and was edited and completed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Glazunov. It was first performed in St. Petersburg, (…)
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