Facebook Pixel Coding of a City | Outlook - news - Lee esta historia en Magzter.com

Intentar ORO - Gratis

Coding of a City

Outlook

|

November 01, 2025

With a philosopher's insight and an anthropologist's curiosity, Sundar Sarukkai records Bangalore's stories

- Vineetha Mokkil

Coding of a City

SUNDAR Sarukkai’s second novel, Water Days, is set in a frenetically transforming Bangalore—in the wake of the liberalisation of the Indian economy in 1991.

With a philosopher's insight and an anthropologist’s curiosity, Sarukkai observes the goings-on in his city. Change is in the air, not just in Bangalore but all across India. Stories lurk everywhere. But what language does the metamorphosising city speak, the novelist wonders. Not Kannada, Tamil, Malayalam, Konkani, Telugu. Not English or Hindi. “The city has its own language. It is not the language that the majority of the people in a city speak. A city is not produced by a majority, it is not a measure of numbers,” Sarukkai says at the start of his novel. This preoccupation with language and words and the intricacies of communication pulsed through his first novel Following a Prayer as well.

The city speaks to the writer in its own language. This is how the story of its existential crisis reaches him. This language is sensory. It lives in the clamour of the rain bombarding city streets, the hazy whispers wafting under street lamps, the howls of stray dogs, the clatter of vegetable carts. This story drips from the taps that women in some parts of the city line up in front of at dawn to fetch water for their families. Water in the growing city is a scarce resource, and access to it, unequal. Water is a recurring motif in the novel, sometimes appearing as rain, sometimes as a metaphor for the deprivation that is heaped on less privileged residents of a city that is run by a callous administrative machinery.

At the centre of

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Outlook

Outlook

The Obituary that Took Me 30 Years to Write

When most of us were clueless about our ambitions in life, my classmate and best friend Samaresh Maitra announced, one hot day in April, that he wanted to become a goonda (gangsta) when he grew up.

time to read

3 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Policing the Self

A democratic law on transgender rights would begin by trusting the person- recognising self-identification without bureaucratic mediation

time to read

7 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Whatever Happened to the Voice of America?

War, once the defining moral crisis of American youth, no longer commands the same fire

time to read

6 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Welfare Against Democracy

Among the four states where the election process has begun, three—Kerala, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal—present a striking picture of defiance; defiance directed at the style of politics associated with the Union government.

time to read

17 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Why This War?

Failure to stop the war will hurt not only the region, but the entire global economy

time to read

6 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Assam is a Place for All

It was as much a political signal as a warning, as Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma recently said that if the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) returns to power, his government will “break the backbone” of “Miyas”.

time to read

5 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Bullets in Persepolis

The deep-seated love of Iranians for their land and cultural roots is what remains at stake in a war where the aggressors threaten to eradicate an entire civilisation

time to read

8 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Why the Elite Hate Freebies

The deeper question to ask is not whether India can afford welfare but what happens without it

time to read

6 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Machinery Vs. Maths

As more than 27 lakh people have their democratic rights suspended, Amit Shah's 'Mission Bengal' aims to bulldoze all equations, but they may still have to fight the maths

time to read

7 mins

April 21, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

War From an Ocean Away

In the many endings that I picture, my mother and Ali end up stranded on roads, separated in different cities, looking for their belongings in the rubble, or chewing some meagre bread to quell their hunger

time to read

6 mins

April 21, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size