Intentar ORO - Gratis

Feeding off each other

Down To Earth

|

May 01, 2024

VEGETARIAN MOVEMENTS IN SOUTH ASIA AND THE WEST GREW WITH MUTUAL SUPPORT AND VALIDATION

- AKSHAT JAIN

Feeding off each other

JULIA HAUSER's A Taste for Purity is a detailed historical account of the formation of the global vegetarian movement in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It centralises global connections in the rise of vegetarianism in the different national contexts of Britain, Germany, US and South Asia.

In India, vegetarianism got much of its early support from vegetarian movements in Europe and America. The two parties colonial Euro-America and colonised South Asia-reinforced each other. While vegetarians in India needed the scientific gloss of the "White Man" to make their ideas appear secular or modern, those in Europe and America needed the spiritual gloss of the "merciful Hindoo" to make their anti-Semitic or eugenicist ideas appear moral and traditional.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Down To Earth

Down To Earth

1,500 days, and an alarm for new climate

SEASONS ARE the compass that guide humans to survive and thrive as a society. What happens if seasons lose their distinct character and predictable rhythm? This is no longer a theoretical question. The Earth is entering a new climate regime, its atmosphere now saturated with greenhouse gases at levels without precedent in human history. And the earliest sign of this shift is the near-dissolution of familiar seasons; all merging and dissipating like the pupa inside the chrysalis, but, not to give birth to that mesmerising butterfly. This metamorphosis is manifest in the blizzard of weather events, extreme in severity and unseasonal by nature and geography.

time to read

2 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Rights in transit

A recent dispute over transport and trade of kendu leaves in Odisha highlights differing interpretations of forest rights laws in the state

time to read

6 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Roots of peace

Kerala's forest department plants fruit and fodder trees to ease human-wildlife tensions

time to read

2 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Flattened frontiers

Efforts to reclaim degraded land from Chambal ravines expose both people and biodiversity to ecological risks from erosion and flooding

time to read

5 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

INDIA'S DRY RUN

India is poised to be a global hub of data centres—back-end facilities that house servers and hardware needed to run online activities.

time to read

21 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Bangla generic drugs to the rescue

A buyer's club for generic cystic fibrosis drugs sourced from Bangladesh highlights the country's laudable pharma development

time to read

4 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

COP OF TALK

The UN's 30th climate summit, COP30 in Belém, was billed as the COP of truth and implementation.It was an opportunity for the world to move beyond diagnosis to delivery. Instead it revealed a system struggling to prove its relevance.

time to read

14 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

Direct approach

A new direct cash transfer scheme as well as decades of women-centric programmes yield an electoral windfall for the ruling alliance in Bihar

time to read

5 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Down To Earth

HIDDEN RESOURCE

Punjab's 1.4 million abandoned borewells offer a chance to mitigate flood damage and replenish depleting groundwater

time to read

4 mins

December 01, 2025

Down To Earth

Corporate bias

INDIA'S DRAFT Seeds Bill, 2025, introduced by the Centre in mid-November, proposes a few key changes.

time to read

1 min

December 01, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size