CUSIII, the import of The Satanic Verses, a novel by the author Salman Rushdie, was banned[1]. To give a brief background, ...
NEW DELHI – Salman Rushdie’s controversial 1988 novel ... Penguin Random House India, the book’s publisher, also celebrated the development. Editor-in-chief Manasi Subramaniam posted on ...
For art historian Aman Nath, 2024 was a great year for art books, demonstrating the range of India's cultural wealth ...
Her new novella, “Rosarita,” takes place in Mexico, a country she finds so like her native India that, she says, “I feel ...
IMSD does draw the line between Free Speech, which it fully supports, and Hate Speech, which it staunchly opposes. While, the Constitution of India guarantees the right to freedom of speech, the law ...
Ex-Bangladesh PM's niece, Tulip Siddiq, has been urged by The Times of London to stand down as a minister in Keir Starmer’s ...
Photography may not fix the traumas of Partition but it has been a prism the subcontinent’s artists have looked through to understand brokenness—as idea, an art ...
During the pandemic, Goa’s beaches became an unlikely sanctuary. At night, they turned into “a Fellini film”, with dogs ...
I was cursed to be a liar So, people know what’s true The old, the young the entire Village attempts to pursue Me -- to hear ...
I overcame the thought it was inauspicious to write about a death as Nan’s first column for the New Year. But it is a tribute ...
It has been tempting to view the C.I.A. as omniscient. Yet Coll’s chastening new book about the events leading up to the Iraq War, in 2003, shows just how often the agency was flying blind.