Documentary Story of the QutubPrannv Dhawan Gandhar S. AshwinikumarA new documentary film presents a view of the Qutub Minar that goes beyond the Muslim invader-Hindu victim binary.
"Serious Men" Review Movie Review: ‘Serious Men’ and the myth of merit Prannv Dhawan Surbhi KarwaSerious Men attempts to address the contentious issue of “merit” that is bandied about as a counter to affirmative action but fails to go the full
Education A question of equitable access to legal education Prannv Dhawan Devansh KaushikAs legal education becomes increasingly expensive, government intervention to support NLUs, increase scholarship grants and roll back fees is the need
Review: Mee Raqsam Mee Raqsam review: Dancing together, separately Prannv Dhawan Surbhi KarwaThe fault lines of India’s “shared culture” are at the core of Mee Raqsam, a film that promises to ignite a dialogue about fraternity through it
Representing Muslims in cinema Bollywood: ‘Othering’ the Muslim on screenPranav Kohli Prannv DhawanBollywood must work on its own conscious and unconscious biases while representing Indian Muslims and move beyond the image of the “Muslim other”
Interview: Kabir Khan ‘Netaji would not like the Right to appropriate him’: Kabir Khan, film-makerPrannv DhawanInterview with Kabir Khan, film-maker.
Book Review Remembering Partition Prannv DhawanThe Urdu satirist Fikr Taunsvi’s account of Partition, written between August and November 1947, brings to life one of the most tragic episodes in t
Interview Mark Tully: Censorship more covert, structural nowPrannv DhawanInterview with Sir Mark Tully, veteran journalist.
Film Review Batla House: Through a filterPrannv DhawanThe film Batla House endorses uncritically any police action to ensure the nation’s safety and discredits civil society’s demands for institutiona
Has COVID truly exposed the broken global order? Despite the COVID-19 pandemic being a severe and truly global crisis, developed countries continue to act in the interests of Big Pharma instead of fo
SlideshowPostcards from Khasi hillsImages that mix politics, history and discomfort to document how the Khasi people made Christianity, a “foreign faith”, their own.