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Bans & Bar Girls: How the ban emerged from economic reasons, not moral grounds

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Interviewed Sameena Dalwai for her book Bans & Bar Girls. The interview appeared in Sakal Times Ambika Shaligram Published on :  24 Mar, 2020 , 12:21 pm Earlier this year, the Supreme Court paved the way for the reopening of dance bars in Mumbai, relaxing stringent conditions imposed by the Maharashtra government on their licencing and functioning. The decision to ban dance bars was taken in August 2005 and the public discourse revolved around the subject of ‘morality’. A new book on the subject, Bans & Bar Girls — Performing Caste in Mumbai’s Dance Bars, says the reason had to do with economics, with wo men from lower caste earning more. The monograph (defined as a highly detailed and thoroughly documented study or paper written about a limited area of a subject or field of inquiry) has been authored by Sameena Dalwai and it has been published by Women Unlimited — An associate of Kali for Women.  EXAMINING THE REASONS In the introduction to the book, Dalwai says, ‘The essence

World Book Day: The publishing business during the COVID-19 days

For Sakal Times, now The Bridge Chronicle Ambika Shaligram Published on :  23 Apr, 2020 , 1:42 pm On World Book Day, Indians find themselves in a unique scenario. The book stores, libraries are shut; and WhatsApp groups are abuzz with free downloads of novels, comics, magazines and so on. And on Facebook and Instagram, the authors are recommending lockdown reads, reading excerpts from their books and trying to widen their audience base. The publishers too, have postponed the launches of their physical books and are making them available on digital platforms. Will this have an impact on our reading habits?  We chat with a few people from the sales and editorial team of publishing houses to get answers. *** ‘eBooks will grow, but this trend will not sustain…’ Rahul Srivastava, MD, Simon & Schuster India & Himanjali Sankar, Editorial Director, Simon & Schuster India. Many books are now being released digitally either on Kindle or as eBook as distribution of physical copies is

'The Mughal court was considered an extraordinarily cosmopolitan and polyphonous world': Ira Mukhoty

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 I interviewed Ira Mukhoty for her book Akbar-The Great Mughal. The interview appeared in Sakal Times, now The Bridge Chronicle Ambika Shaligram Terming Ira Mukhoty's Akbar - The Great Mughal, a fun read, could invite ire of some since it trivialises a piece of history. But the definitive biography published by Aleph Book Company is fun. It engages you from the word go and takes you into the world of Akbar which was shaped by the histories of his grandfather Babur, his father Humayun, his many uncles and aunts, his progeny, and the many wars they fought. All of us know a smattering of the Mughal history, mostly apocryphal. In Akbar - The Great Mughal, Mukhoty has researched various sources, from the imperial court to his aunt's account, thus giving us a full account of the man who became Akbar. Here's more from the author: You have previously written Daughters of the Sun: Empresses, Queens and Begums of the Mughal Empire. It gives a very different view of the zenana life. I