Anveshi - Research Centre for Women's Studies

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Newsletter March-April 2009

 

 

New Arrivals in English under different subject headings

Arts

 Indian Miniature painting: manifestation of a creative mind/ Daljeet and P.C. jain. – New Delhi: Brijbasi Art Press Ltd, 2006.

Children’s Literature

The two named boy and other stories/ P.Y Balan. – Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Head Curry/ Mohammed Khadeer Babu. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Moon in the pot/ Gopini Karunakar. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Mother/ Kancha Illaiah. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Tataki wins again & Braveheart Badeyya/ Gogu Shyamala. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Untold School stories Three Fourth, Half Price, Bajji/ Mohammed Khadeer Babu. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008. Textbook/ Nuaiman. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Friends in School/ Joopaka Subhadra. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

The Sackclothman/ Jayasree Kalathil. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Spirits from History My friend, The emperor. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Beloved Spirits/ Rekharaj. - Kerala: D C Books, 2008.

Cultural Studies

Consumer culture reborn: the cultural politics of consumption/ Martyn J. Lee.- London: Routledge, 1993.

Television and the people : a programme for the democratic participation/ by Brian Groombridge.- London: Penguin books ltd., 1972.

Private practices: girls reading fiction and constructing identity/ Meredith Rogers Cherland.- London: Taylor & Francis Ltd.,1994.

Six myths of our time: little angels, little monsters, beautiful breasts and more/ Marina Warner.- New York: Vintage books, 1995.

Dalit Studies Dalit women: the black untouchable apartheid women of India/ B.M.Leela Kumari.- Vijayawada: Dalit women literary parishat, 1995.

Economics

The Indian economy: crisis, response and prospects/ A.Vaidyanathan.- Bombay: Orient Longman, 1985.

Global capitalism and the Indian Economy/ C.T.Kurien.- Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 1994.

Education

Cultural action for freedom/ Paulo Freire.- Harmondsworth: Penguin books, 1970.

Philosophy of education and painting/ Devi Prasad. - New Delhi: National Book Trust, 2000.

Rabindranath Tagore: pioneer in education: essays and exchanges between Rabindranath Tagore and L.K.Elmhirst.- New Delhi: Sahitya Chayan, 1994.

Education- Autobiography

Teacher: the testament of an inspired teacher/ by Sylvia Ashton- Warner

Education- Politics

The Politics of literacy/ ed.by Martin Hoyles. - London: Writers and Readers, 1982.

Feminism Thinking through: essays on feminism, Marxism and anti-racism/ Himani Bannerji.- [s.l]: women’s press, 1995.

Feminist Theory

Antigone’s Claim: kinship between life and death/ Judith Butler. – New York: Columbia University Press, 2000.

Feminism- Literary Theory

The Sadeian woman and the ideology of Pornography/ Angela Carter.- New York: Harper & Row,1980.

Gender Studies

Upholding the common life: the Community of Mirabai/ Parita Mukta.- Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994.

The women, gender and development reader/ ed.by Nalini Visvanathan, Lynn Duggan, Laurie Nisonoff and Nan Wiegersma.- New Delhi: Zubaan, 1997.

Health

The art and politics of science/ Varmus Harold .- New York: Norton and Company, 2009.

Language/ Linguistics

Language, education and society/ Bh.Krishnamurti.- New Delhi: Sage publications, 1998.

Multilingualism in India/ ed. By Debi Prasanna Pattanayak.-Hyderabad: OrientLongman, 2007.

Law

The nature of judicial process/ Benjamin Cardozo. – Delhi: Universal Law publishing Co. Pvt Ltd, 1991.

The Growth of the law/ Benjamin Cardozo. – reprint. - Delhi: Universal Law publishing Co. Pvt Ltd, 2008.

Heracles' bow: rhetoric of the human science/ White James Boyd.-London: the University of Wisconsin Press, 1985.

Governing the present: administering economic, social and personal life/Miller Peter ; Rose Nikolas.- Cambridge: Polity press, 2008.

Narrative violence and the law: the essays of Robert Cover/ Minow Martha ,Editor ; Michael Ryan ,Editor ; Sarat Austin ,Editor.- Michigan: the University of Michigan Press, 1992.

The body in pain: the making and unmaking of the world/ Scarry Elaine.- New York: Oxford University press, 1987.

Literature

Figures of literary discourse/ Gerard Genette/ tr.by Alan Sheridan.- New York: Columbia University Press, 1982.

Drama

The plebeians rehearse the uprising: a German tragedy/ Gunter Grass.-Harmondsworth: Penguin books, 1966.

Kiss of the spider woman: the screenplay/ Leonard Schrader.-London: Faber and Faber, 1987.

Poetry

“Spain, take this Chalice from me” and other poems/ Cesar Vallejo/ tr.Margaret Sayers Peden.- New York: Penguin books, 2008.

Fiction

The Dilemma: and other stories/ Vijayadan Detha/ tr.Ruth Vanitha/ ed. Madhu Kishwar.-New Delhi: Manushi Prakashan, 1997.

The fruit palace/ Charles Nicholl.-London: Picador, 1985.

The almost moon/ Alice Sebold.-London: Picador, 2007.

Literary Theory: Tracing the charit as a genre: an exploration in comparative literature methodology/ Ipshita Chanda.- Kolkata: Jadavpur University, 2003.

Motion Pictures/ Theatre

Women’s pictures: feminism and cinema/ Annette Kuhn.- London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982.

Experimental Theatre: from Stanislavsky to Peter Brook/ James Roose- Evans.-London: Routledge, 1989.

Politics and Government

 Caste, nationalism and communism in south India: Malabar 1900-1948/ Dilip M.Menon. - New Delhi: Cambridge University Press, 1994.

The Nation the state: Indian identity/ ed. By Madhusree Dutta, Flavia Agnes and Neera Adarkar.- Calcutta: Samya, 1996.

The political evolution of Muslims in Tamilnadu and Madras 1930-1947/ J.B.P.More.-Hyderabad: Orient Longman,1997.

Religion

Women saints of Tamilnad/ M.Arunachalam.- Bombay: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1970.

Terrorism/ Global Politics

The terrorist in search of Humanity: militant Islam and global politics/ Faisal Devji.- New Delhi: Foundation books, 2009.

Translations – English

Voices of silence: English translation of Hali’s MAJALIS UN-NISSA and CHUP KI DAD/ tr. By Gail Minault.- Delhi: publications, 1986.

Women’s Writings

Challenge to women/ by Amrit Kaur. - Allahabad: New Literature, 1946.

Five Novellas: by women writers/Nabaneeta Dev Sen, Mrinal Pande, Vaidehi, B.M.Zuhara & Saniya.-New Delhi: OUP,2008.

The ghosts of Wasu master/ Githa Hariharan.- New Delhi: Penguin books, 1994.

Separate journeys: 23 stories from the women of India/ by Geeta Dharmarajan.-Bombay: India Book Distributors, 1993.

Women- History

Daughters of time: women in the western tradition/ Mary Kinnear.- Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1982.

Contents of Journals

SEMINAR: the monthly symposium ,Issue NO.597

GOVERNING INNOVATION Sheila Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

DARING TO IMAGINE Brian Wynne, Professor of Science Studies and Associate Director, ESRC Centre for Economics and Social Aspects of Genomics, CESAGen, Lancaster University, UK

RISK, UNCERTAINTY AND POWER Andy Stirling, Professor and Director of Science at SPRU - Science and Technology Policy Research, and Co-Director of the ESRC STEPS Centre, University of Sussex, UK

FROM COMMITMENT TO COMMITTEES Mariachiara Tallacchini, Professor of Bioethics, State University of Milan, Italy

THE SEARCH FOR COGNITIVE JUSTICE Shiv Visvanathan, social science nomad

QUESTIONING TEMPERAMENTS IN AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE Rajeswari S. Raina, Senior Fellow, Centre for Policy Research, Delhi

THE FATE OF AGRICULTURE V. Balaji, researcher in knowledge sharing processes in agricultural sciences, Hyderabad

KNOWLEDGE AND DEMOCRACY: FABLES FROM SRI Shambu Prasad, Assistant Professor, Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar

THIN ENCOUNTERS WITH KNOWLEDGE Chandan Gowda, Associate Professor, Centre for the Study of Social Exclusion, National Law School of India, Bangalore

DEBATING KNOWLEDGE: NEW SPACES OF CONVERSATION Esha Shah, Research Fellow, The Institute of Development Studies; member, STEPS Centre, University of Sussex, UK

BOOKS Reviewed by Dipak Gyawali

SEMINAR: the monthly symposium ,Issue NO.596

THE PROBLEM A short statement of the issues involved

WELCOME, THE AGE OF FEAR Ashis Nandy, political psychologist; social, cultural and political critic, Delhi

PINK CHADDIS AND TOOTHLESS DAYS Tarun J. Tejpal, Editor and Publisher, 'Tehelka', Delhi

MAKING SENSE OF ANTI-INCUMBENCY Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, journalist and political commentator, Gurgaon

WHY PEOPLE DESIRE CHANGE Sudheendra Kulkarni, member, BJP election management team; former aide, Prime Minister Vajpayee's office, Delhi

FROM THE BOTTOM UP Manvendra Singh, Member of Parliament (BJP), Barmer

SHIFTING SANDS OF INDIAN POLITICS Sitaram Yechury, Member of the Polit Bureau, Communist Party of India (Marxist), and Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha), Delhi

BRIDGING THE GENERATIONAL DIVIDE Manish Tewari, Spokesperson, Congress party, Delhi THE CHIRANJEEVI FACTOR K.N. Arun, Associate Editor, 'Sakal Times', Chennai

INTERVIEW With Ram Vilas Paswan, Union Minister, Chemicals and Fertilizers, and Steel;
Member of Parliament, Lok Jan Shakti Party (LJSP) by Vijay Sanghvi, journalist; Chief of Bureau, 'Gujarat Mitra'

CASTE POLITICS AND THE FUTURE OF BSP Seminarist, Lucknow

DISLOCATION, DISCONNECT AND DISMEMBERMENT Yusuf Ansari, political activist and writer, UP

IN DEFENCE OF SECULAR FUNDAMENTALISM Mani Shankar Aiyar, Union Minister for Panchayati Raj and the Development of the North East Region, Delhi

HOW SOON WILL THE 2009 ELECTION BE HISTORY? Surjit S. Bhalla, Managing Director, Oxus Research and Investments, Delhi

BOOKS

Reviewed by Harsh Sethi, Tridip Suhrud and Prathama Banerjee

COMMENT Competitive Political Democracy by C.P. Bhambhri, Emeritus Professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi

SEMINAR: the monthly symposium,   Issue No.595   

THE PROBLEM Posed by Bhaskar Goswami, Forum for Biotechnology and Food Security, Delhi

MEDIA AND THE AGRARIAN CRISIS Kalpana Sharma, independent journalist and columnist, Mumbai

COPING WITH COMPLEXITY C. Shambu Prasad, Associate Professor and Coordinator, Rural Management and Library Services, Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar

AT THE EDGE OF A PRECIPICE Suneet Chopra, Joint Secretary, All India Agricultural Workers' Union, Delhi

CONTRACT FARMING FOR AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT Sukhpal Singh, The Center for Management in Agriculture (CMA), Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad

LEARNING FROM PEOPLE Anil K. Gupta, Professor, Indian Institute of Management and Executive Vice Chair, National Innovation Foundation, Ahmedabad

TOWARDS SUSTAINABLE FARMING PRACTICES Bharat Dogra, independent journalist and columnist, New Delhi

TRANSGENIC CROPS: A QUESTIONABLE OPTION? Kavitha Kuruganti, Member-Secretary, Coalition for a GM-Free India, Jaitu, Faridkot

DIVERSIFICATION: A PLOY TO REDUCE SUPPORT TO AGRICULTURE?
T.N. Prakash Kammardi, Professor of Agricultural Economics, and Editor, 'Hittalagida', University of Agricultural Science, GKVK, Bangalore

PUSHING BIG BOX RETAIL IN AGRICULTURE Dharmendra Kumar, India-FDI Watch, Delhi

REVIVING AGRICULTURE Devinder Sharma, Forum for Biotechnology and Food Security, Delhi

WAYS OF SEEING P. Sainath, Rural Affairs Editor, 'The Hindu', Mumbai

BOOKS Reviewed by Iain Boal, Bhaskar Goswami and Harsh Sethi

FURTHER READING A select and relevant bibliography

COMMENT Festival Diary: Hi-jinks in Jaipur, received from Ananya Vajpeyi, Assistant Professor of History, University of Massachusetts, Boston

INDIAN JOURNAL OF SECULARISM, VOLUME 13, ISSUE NO.1, APRIL-JUNE 2009

Articles
Democracy, elections & Minorities in India – Dr.Asghar Ali Engineer 

Sixty Years of Secularism in India – Dr (Mrs.) Vasundhara Mohan

Reservation & Sustainable Development of Muslims of India – N. Jamal Ansari

Gurus in India – Prof.Uday Mehta

Rethinking Pasmanda Movement – Khalid Anis Ansari

Malaysia: Multicultural Society, Islamic State, or What? – Johan Saravanamuttu

State and Secularism in Bangladesh – Habibul Haque Khondker

Document
On Jews and Middle-East
A Non- Violent Look at Conflict and Violence – Mohandas K. Gandhi
• Book Review

Riyas V.M

Agenda , Issue 14, 2009.

 Introduction: Sensitivity and professionalism:

The twin mantras for conflict reporting by Kalpana Sharma

Amplifying chaos, sowing discord by sukumar Muralidharan

The ethics of conflict coverage by Sevanti Ninan

Manipur: the tussle and the compromise by Thingnam Anjulika Samom

Media perceptions vs law enforcement in Kashmir by Muzamil Jaleel

The stress is on conflict, not its resolution”: Chindu Sreddharam by Aditi Bhaduri

Reporting communal conflict by Jyoti Punwani

The art of not writing by Shubhranshu Choudhary

Who is Ima Gyaneswari? by Teresa Rehman

Sensation and sympathy by S Anand

A skewed definition of balance by Nityanand Jayaraman

Is it really tiger vs tribal? by pankaj Sekhsaria

War, peace and journalism by Dilip D‘Souza

To give peace a chance, make peace the story by Aditi Bhaduri

Terror on Tv, or by TV? by Rashme Sehgal

‘We need to handle painful stories with great care’: Peter Jprrpcls. BBC

Some hard questions: DUJ report

NBA guidelines

THE INDIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK ,Volume 69, Issue 2, April, 2008

EDITORIAL

Contextualising Social Work Practice in India: Some Exploration – Lata Narayan

ARTICLES

Towards a Conceptualisation of Social Action within Social Work:Teaching Social Action as a Dialogue Between Theoretical Prespectives and Between theory and Practice – Denzil Saldanha

Human Rights Perspective in Social Work: Illustrations from Health Social Work - Vimla V. Nadkarni

Dalit Women at the Intersections:

Voices from the Margins - Shewli Kumar

Disasters and Social Work Responses - Armaity Desai

Working with Individuals in Urban Settings - Shankar Das

Social Work with Groups - Lata Narayan

Revisiting Community Organisation in a Rural Context - Amita Bhide

Social Work Practice for Rural Development: Some Reflections - Anjali Kulkarni

Ethics for social Workers in the Era of Golbalisation - Josantony Joseph and Helen Joseph

BOOK REVIEWS

Disability and Social Exclusion in Rural India, by I. Klasing Srilatha Juvva
Group work: theories and Practices, by Siddiqui, H.Y. - Mohua Nigudkar

THE LITTLE MAGAZINE
Volume VIII, Issue 1& 2

 Essays:

 What should keep us awake

An analysis of the idea of justice explains the dichotomy between India‘s economic success and its many inequities, writes - Amartya Sen

The long distance runners

The globalization of Bhasha literature of the airport lounge, fears – Alok Rai

Speaking of literature

G.N.Devy traces the growth of the literature of Adivasis and nomads from oral folk tales to modern drama and novels

Writing her space

Ritu Menon explores the diverse world of Indian women‘s writing that has opened up in the last two decades

The New Indian Drama

Barring Manipur, play writing in India has slipped from the heights of the Sixties and seventies, feels Samik Bandyopadhyay

The ant and the Himalayas

Mini Krishnan is amazed at the industrieous temerity of her peers, translators, editors and publishers who take the vast body of Indian literature out to the world

Writing wrongs Dalit literature lays bare the horrors of the past but shies away from depicting current Dalit realities, says Harish Narang

Poetic triptych

A.J.Thomas looks back on three path breakers in the development of Indian poetry in English

 P O E T R Y

A Map: Kunwar Narain

Kamala Das: Wishing That evening,

Nabaneeta: Jayanta Mahapatra

Dilip Chitre: The lunatic wakes

Nirvana: Keki N. Daruwalla

K.Satchidanandan: Nude descending

Suddenly, for Neera: Sunil Gangopadhyay

Prayag Shukla: While a plane zooms past

Each thing twice: sitanshu Yashaschandra

Bhalchandra Nemade: And you‘re done

People: Namdeo Dhasal

Rajee Seth: On writing an autobiography

In the beginning: Joy Goswami

Padma Sachdev: This evening

Bluebottle fly: Lakshmi Kannan

Anna Sujatha Mathai: Paradox and Parable

They dislike every thing about me: Nirmala Putul

Om Prakash Valmiki: My ancestors

Patriotism: J.P.Das

Taking of today: Vijaya Mukhopadhyay

Gulzar: The heart seeks

The Seventies: Nirupama dutt

Salma: Green angel

Because: Gagan Gill

Satinder Singh Noor: Love

The spring oriole‘s song: Udaya Narayan Singh

Shafi Shauq; Remembering the skies

I have a river : Hiren Bhattacharya

Temsula Ao: For Christ and all

Prayer Flags – 2: Mamang Dai

Kynpham Sing Nongkynrith: Sundori

Again snowfall: Jiwan Namdung

Vishwanath Prasad Tewari: the agony of humanity

Rules for citizens: Jeet Thayil

Chiranjiv BasuL Guernica

Tongue: Durgaprasad Panda

F I C T I O N

Dera Baba Nanak by Joginder Paul

Kamaroopi by U.R.Ananthamurthy

Why tell father? by Asokamitran

Drum by Rajendra Yadav

Seeds by M.T.Vasudevan Nair

Bought woman by Gurdial Singh

Dushyanta remember by Nabaneeta Dev Sen

Umeshji by Mrinal Pande

The Porno weekly edition and Ramanikutty by N.S.Madhavan

In the realm of God by Bolwar Mohammed Kunhi

May Parvati watch over you by Varsha Adalja

The red coat by Yeshe Dorjee Thongchi

A Writer Critiques herself by Sara Joseph

Antacid by Rohini Bhat Sahni

FIRST PERSON

A fine balance Shashi Deshpande makes a crucial distinction between being a feminist and being a feminist writer

The moving finger A brief introduction to writing from a leading practitioner, Krishna Sobti

EXCERPTS

Kunti and the Nishadin by Mahasweta Devi

Middleman by Sankar

PLAY SCRIPT

Bhookh Aag Hai

Krishna Baldev Vaid casts a satirical eye on the most visible irony in India—hunger in the midst of plenty

REVIEWS

Art to Art Indrajit Hazra reads Amit Chaudhuri‘s latest novel and finds it‘s like admiring a large-canvas artwork from close up

Women as exiles

Pamela Philipose reads five completely different novellas by Indian women writers, each depicting an implicit state of exile

In the shadow of history Su Venkatesan’s new Tamil novel is a fine tapestry of life over six centuries in Madurai, writes A.S.Panneerselvan

Chroniclers of our times

Kirti Jain reads the collection plays of Mahesh Elkunchwar and Satish Alekar,whom the mainstream find disturbing

Stories from the periphery

Malati Mathur browses two translated titles from South India which pass the acid test: they will attract both the lay reader and the academic

Wealth of ideas

Nandan Nilekani’s imagining India can be read even in the midst of a market crash, finds Parsa Venkateswar Rao Jr.

Last man standing

Namita Gokhale reads Navtej Sarna’s take on the life of Duleep Singh, a pawn in the hands of imperial power

Fan’s eye view

The Zoya Factor is more than just chick lit,to being a fan in a cricket stadium, in a cricket-crazy country

Drama in real life

Pratik Kanjilal reads Indrajit Hazra’s coming of age novel about Fact,Who goes by the name of Adela.Adela will not let the hero be

The center does not hold

Tarun j. Tejpal is a seething, explosive but his work lacks the control of the mature craftsman

In their own words

Suchita Vemuri follows Sudeep Chakravarti in his travel through Maoist country and wishes he‘d ventured a little further

Plus other short reviews

ART INDIA: the art news magazine of India Vol.XIII, Issue III+IV, 2008-09

INTERNATIONAL REPORT

Madhvi Subrahmanian is wonder-struck by Singapore‘s second Biennale.

INTERVIEWS
Rirkrit Tiravanija cooks up more than an amazing Thai curry; Jordan Troeller is thrilled to serve us portions from his latest projects.

As Begian, Wim, Delvoye has his wicked way pigs and human beings.
Gillian Da Costa watches on with glee.

Shilpa Gupta muses about politics, Prejudice and piracy in a conversation with
Abhay Sardsai.

Mithu Sen‘s new project involves love letters. Latika Gupta finds out more.
Tallur L.N.airs his views about art, artifacts, Museumology and placebo effect; Suresh Jayaram is all ears.

Sandhya Bordewekar work out the progress of Nataraj Sharma‘s small painting and colossal installations.

Ravi Agarwal speaks Meera Menezes about the complex relationship
Between environment consciousness and aesthetic interventions.

Shiladitya Sarkar interrogates jitish Kallat about sweat and the city.
Veteran video artist Ranbir Kaleka paints with light; Latika Gupta is fascinated by the results.

As Clare Ami conducts a photographic documentation of India‘s vanishing trades, Sandhya Bordewekar is glad to be given a glimpse.

Abhay Sardesai finds Sudhir Patwardhan citing the city a as he visits eight places in Maharashtra with his traveling art project.

Jehangir Sabavala speaks eloquently about his elegant paintings to Sage Mehta.
Lee Johnson talks to mega-collector Frank Cohen about his penchant for mega-sized art.

Amrita Jhaveri confides in Zehra Jumabhoy about the art of living with art.
Latika Gupta quizzes Gayatri Sinha about the act of juggling criticism and curation on the way to Mutant Beauty.

LETTER FROM PAKISTAN/INTERVIEW

Rashid Rana helps Quddus Mirza look even more closely at the digitally derived artwork.

SPECIAL REPORTS

Sundhya Bordewekar takes a birds eye view of the art awards scene.
Marta Jakimowicz gets high on art at BAR1.

India‘s first Art Summit in New Delhi got off to a hearty start, says Meera Menezes.

INTERNATIONAL PROFILE

Zehra Jumabhoy tries to come to terms with Zarina Bhimji‘s films and photography.

INTERNATIONAL REVIEWS

Yet another boring Tumer Prize at Tate Britain, groans Deirdre King after shuffling through the prestigious award‘s 2008 edition.

Asok Sukumaran‘s first solo in the Big Apple lit up the New York art scene in more ways than one, confirms Poornima Paidipaty.

Bharati Kapadia‘s organic construction with fabric, paper and dry leaves explore the nature of reality, Peter Felch tells us how.

The Raqs Media Collective did an inspire job of curating a part of Manifest 7, applauds Rotem Ruff.

Kriti Arora‘s tar-coated works are worth tarrying for, thinks Cindy Elden.

Radhika Khimji‘s installations in London have Lucy Soutter Excitedly forging cross-cultural connections.

REVIEWS

Subuhi Jiwani watches performance artists Pramada and Pritham K.
Chakravarthy make feminism fun.

Two heads are not always better than one, crows Gitanjali Dang at praneet soi and Cartos Amorales‘ joint-show at project 88.

Shiladitya Sakar is privy to the pain and passion in Jaya Ganguly‘s paintings.
Vishal Kumar Dar‘ssteely sculptures leave Gopika Nath cold.

Khoj‘s Six Degrees of separation takes a long hard look at the value of institutions; Preeti Bahadur Raamswami is pleasantly surprised at the exhibition‘s honesty.

Shumona Goel‘s multi-media Family Trees involve a nostalgia-free trip down memory lane; Beth Citron is pleased to go along for the ride.

HOMAGE

Sadanand Bakre, one of the leading lights of P.A.G., has not got the recognition he deserves, observes Kashinath Salve.

LISTING

Published Stories, articles, Book reviews of Anveshi members
Teaching ‗feminism‘ in a UGC refresher course/ A.S.R.V. Suneetha,
IAWS newsletter, April 2009.

Ae deuvudaina sthree ni Anumaaninchaedamnaaye? / Mery Kumari Madiga, Bhumika: Sthree Patreka, April 2009. ―

Mattipulu‖ S.T, S.C, B.C Mainaaritii Rastrasthaie Avirbhava Sadassu / Bhumika, May 2009.

Dalita Rachaetrulu Pranthiya Konaalu/ J. Subadra,
Arunatara,Jan-Feb 2009.

Dalita Kutumbamam,Uttapathi, Rajakiyalu/ Gogu Shyamala,
Arunatara,Jan-Feb 2009.