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Only for sale in India.
The shrill ring of a telephone in the depths of the night and the nightmare of an anxious father who refuses to face the fear that his son may have been killed. The desperate plea of a destitute goatherd that he has a ‘fundamental right’ to his property of a few ill-fed goats. The terror of a little boy at the relentless violence of the upper castes against his kith and kin, in his mind inextricably linked to the name ‘Gandhi’ after whom public spaces are so often named. And the helpless grief of two mothers who mourn the deaths of their sons, Ram and Rahim, separated by religion but in the end united in the senseless waste of their untimely deaths.
Not front page news, just the human face of the statistics that swell the inside pages of our newspapers. In her inimitable manner, Mahasweta Devi brings us face to face with the reality of oppression that continues to haunt India.
- ISBN: 9788170462927
- Pages: 80
- Size (inches): 5 x 8.5
- Format: Paperback
- Publication Year: 2005
- Series: The India List and The Selected Works of Mahasweta Devi
- Category: Fiction and Women in Translation
If you are ordering from India, your order will be shipped from Seagull Books, Calcutta. Shipping is free for orders above ₹999.
If you are ordering from the US or the UK or anywhere else in the world, your order will be shipped from the University of Chicago Press' distribution centre, Chicago.
Please note: For customers paying in currencies other than Indian rupee or US dollar, prices will be calculated according to the currency conversion rate at the time of purchase and may vary from the printed price.
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Seagull Books (estd 1982) has been crafting books with an eye to both exceptional content and radical design. What began highly risky business of publishing books-books on alternative cinema, philosophy, culture-continues to be a passionately felt need of the hour: manuscripts that need to see the light of day, instinctive and theatre, visual arts, to reach a readership, to stimulate minds, to change outlooks. Read More
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