Weekend Reads

  1. India’s Hindu “majority” is an outcome of Independence and constitutional process, explains Dipankar Gupta in the Times of India.
  2. Their contrasting, yet complementing, campaign styles have turned Akhilesh and Dimple Yadav into Uttar Pradesh’s power couple. A victory in UP would make them a decisive force in national politics as well, writes Ajay Uprey in the Week.
  3. The dissent of Manoranjan Byapari: In Mint, Shamik Bag chronicles how a former Naxalite and rickshaw-puller became one of the most celebrated writers of Dalit literature in Bengali.
  4. The past three years have witnessed a blatant effort by communal forces to infiltrate viewer and reviewer responses to Hindi films, writes Anna MM Vetticad in the Business Line.
  5. In Open magazine, S Prassannarajan reviews Pankaj Mishra’s Age of Anger calling it an “indispensible addition to the canon of intellectual histories”.
  6. Ever wonder why facts do not change people political opinions? In the New Yorker, Elizabeth Kolbert writes about new discoveries about the human mind show the limitations of reason.
  7. After more than a half-century in the wilderness, the socialist left reemerges in America, writes Patrick Iber in the Nation.
  8. Make America great again. Take back control. Restore the caliphate. From politics to culture, we have been gripped by a wave of nostalgia. In the Guardian, Mohsin Hamid calls on storytellers to look ahead with hope.
  9. Is travel writing dead, asks Karan Mahajan in Granta.
  10. In Nautilus, Jordana Cepelewic profiles Harvey Friedman, the man who might be about to blow up mathematics.

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