Poging GOUD - Vrij
The Indian Quarterly - July-September 2016

Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD
Lezen The Indian Quarterly samen met 9000+ andere tijdschriften en kranten met slechts één abonnement
Bekijk catalogusAbonneer u alleen op The Indian Quarterly
Op elk gewenst moment opzegbaar.
(Geen verplichtingen) ⓘAls u niet tevreden bent met uw abonnement, kunt u binnen 7 dagen na de ingangsdatum van het abonnement een e-mail sturen naar help@magzter.com voor een volledige terugbetaling. Geen vragen gesteld - beloofd! (Let op: niet van toepassing op losse nummers)
Digitaal abonnement
Directe toegang ⓘAbonneer je nu en begin direct met lezen via de Magzter website, iOS, Android en Amazon apps.
Geverifieerd beveiligd
betaling ⓘMagzter is een geverifieerde Stripe-handelaar.
In dit nummer
Feasting is the theme this issue. Mahesh Rao looks at excess in Delhi, while Rimli Sengupta reminisces about her widowed grandmother’s kitchen in Bengal. Prabha Chandran looks at the role of culinary diplomacy in forging bonds between individuals as well as nations, Sandhya Mulchandani explores the relationship between food and faith and Alberto Ruy-Sánchez examines the significance of the Mexican Day of the Dead. Shougat Dasgupta savours his memories of “inauthentic” food, while Mahesh Shantaram’s lens lays bare the big Indian wedding.
Elsewhere, Gautam Pemmaraju explores the state of sleep and dreams, Juliet Reynolds views the Sistine Chapel with new eyes and Kanu Gandhi’s photographs reveal his uncle, the Mahatma, in an intimate light. I discover a safe house in Amsterdam with an Indian connection; Sohini Chattopadhyay tracks the evolution of the woman warrior in Indian cinema; Waswo X Waswo goes looking for Europeans in Shekhawati; Kusum Haidar sees a brilliant new theatre production in Kerala; and Amal Allana remembers her father, Ebrahim Alkazi, as an artist.
There is also original short fiction by Jenny Bhatt, Meghna Pant and Shoili Kanungo, and original poetry by Sharif Elmusa and Amlanjyoti Goswami. And, in what will be a regular feature, we have new translations of work by Manohar Shyam Joshi, Rilke, Sant Ram Udasi, and others, by the foremost translators at work in India today.
Let the feast begin.
The Indian Quarterly Description:
The Indian Quarterly (IQ) is a national and international magazine. We hope that just as The New Yorker exhibits a distinctly Manhattan sensibility and always contains articles about New York City, IQ will manifest the fact that it is edited and published in Mumbai through its cosmopolitan and open-minded perspective on the world and on India.
In fact, we hope to provide a unique way of interpreting our ever changing culture, and to define our own experiences through the strength of thought, ideas and imagery, be it in the form of fact, fiction, poetry, illustration or photography. IQ is therefore a paean to the polyphonic nature of reflection and the creativity that is its outcome.
Recente nummers
July - December 2021
April - June 2021
January - March 2021
July - December 2020
April - June 2020
July - September 2019
October - December 2018
July - September 2018
April-June 2018
January - March 2018
October - December 2017
July - September 2017
April - June 2017
January - March 2017
October - December 2016
April-June 2016
January - March 2016
Gerelateerde titels
Chalachitra Sameeksha
Design Essentia Magazine
Colour Canvas
Art India
Art Soul Life
COSMO ART BULLETIN
The Designer
The Neo Art Magazine
ib magazine
Touring Talkies Magazine English
Art Knowledge
In Depth
ART STYLE
Zyne
WORLD ARTISTS
The Bookish Club
Western Art Collector
Prehistoric Times
Rapid River Magazine
Maine Antique Digest
WAJ Magazine
Ploughshares
The Relatable Voice Magazine
Art & Object
Airbrush Technique Magazine
Dots x Circles Illustration
Sculpture
Imagine5 magazine
Lookbox Living
The Art Newspaper Singapore