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My ‘Vaccine’ Against the Pandemic of Fast Fashion & Discount Sales
(The Quint) The thing about history is that it never goes out of fashion. Pragya Tiwari makes a case for slow fashion.
Strong Female Leads, MeToo, And More: A Look At Women In Hindi Cinema In 2018
The year will go down in history as a milestone in the long journey of the Indian woman towards true equality.
Safdar Hashmi and the art of cultural resistance
Safdar Hasmi and the art of cultural resistance
Safdar Hashmi and the art of cultural resistance
On the morning of the first day of the new year in 1989, a group of young men and women set out from Delhi for Jhandapur, an industrial...
Whose feminism is it anyway?
Nothing that you will read here is new. But I am still writing this. Here’s what prompted it.
In praise of Hemu: Medieval king reveals true intent of Hindutva history
On Hemu and Hindutva by Pragya Tiwari
In praise of Hemu: Medieval king reveals true intent of Hindutva history
The auditorium at the National Museum, in the heart of Delhi, is packed to capacity on the afternoon of the 5th of October.
The Love Issue | Two of a kind
Straight women and gay men: a love story At first glance, “Why do straight women and gay men make such great friends?" seems exactly...
[P for Pictures] Episode 03: For the love of Jazz
Pragya Tiwari speaks to acclaimed journalist and writer Naresh Fernandes,
When The Wandering Falcon Came To Delhi
here is this world among the many worlds of Delhi- the world of book events- you show up for a reading followed by a conversation ....
Where does the Lit Fest go from here?
The Jaipur Literature Festival this year faced criticisms of overcrowding and an indiscriminate choice of sponsors.
In Conversation with H.M. Naqvi
Video interview with author H.M. Naqvi, winner of the DSC Prize for Literature 2011.
Sheldon Pollock on Hindutva and the Life and Death of Sanskrit
Video interview with scholar Sheldon Pollock.
Jaipur Literature Festival, January, 2011.
Junot Diaz – An Interview
An interview with Junot Diaz. Jaipur Literature Festival, January 2011. Originally published in The Tehelka