V O Chidambaram Pillai took on the mighty British Indian Navigation Company by floating the Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company. His struggle is the story of the early days of the Indian freedom movement in miniature
Aurangzeb in Indira Parthasarathy’s play wants to make India into an indistinguishable whole. The India of his dream is ‘one country, one language and one religion’.
BY P.a. Krishnan 26 August 2023
Was Rajaraja, the imperial Chola king, now better known as Ponniyin Selvan, thanks to Mani Ratnam’s grand film, a Hindu?
BY P.a. Krishnan 29 October 2022
Our classical texts are replete with many different examples of friendships, from Andal to Kamban, Valmiki to Ghalib
BY P.a. Krishnan 12 August 2022
Our history books have to do justice to every region of India — but only for the sake of truth and for acquiring a balanced knowledge of our great land
BY P.a. Krishnan 1 July 2022
In this concluding volume of his sympathetic biography of the RSS icon, Vikram Sampath focuses on the Hindu Mahasabha’s role in the freedom movement and the Gandhi murder trial.
BY P.a. Krishnan 15 October 2021
Not the ‘LA International Airport’ of Susan Raye fame. The only sound was of the trolley wheels. 'We are in a deep hole,' said the lady at the counter. 'How’s India doing?' Well…
BY P.a. Krishnan 11 June 2021
This tribute to lower caste Mrdangam makers, who had an unequal relationship with Brahmin artistes, is an important social history of music
BY P.a. Krishnan 1 September 2020
A Tamil classic doesn’t extol the central act of class violence; it speaks of life and futility
BY P.a. Krishnan 7 February 2020
The winds are favourable...Savarkar is enveloped in a biographic embrace. Sampath is digressively elaborate; Purandare is concise and critical. Both are sympathetic.
BY P.a. Krishnan 26 October 2019
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