The Algebra of Belonging Published @ Biblio: A Review of Books Review of Barry O’Brien, The Anglo-Indians: Portrait of a Community’, Aleph Book Company, 2022), Cover of the Book… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 31, 2022 | Tags: Community, History, law | Read More
শয়নে-স্বপনে সিনেমা (Sleeping, Dreaming Cinema) Published @ Anandabazar Patrika Review of Chidananda Dasgupta, Collected Prose, Vol 1 (Ed. Samik Bandyopadhyay). Dey’s Publishing. By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 31, 2022 | Read More
Singer, Actor, Composer and Eccentric Published @ Wire Review of A Bhattacharjee and P Dhar, Kishore Kumar: The Ultimate Biography (HarperCollins, 2022). The Many Lives of Kishore… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 7, 2022 | Tags: Biography, Cinema, Kishore | Read More
A Legendary Legacy Published @ Biblio- A Review of Books By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 1, 2021 | Tags: Satyajit Ray, Sukumar Ray | Read More
A divine version of ourselves Published @ Bibilo India In the autumn of 2017, Bengal, as usual, was abuzz with the seasonal cacophony of the pre- Durga Puja media blitzkrieg. There were advertisements pasted across streets and the media canvassed everything.One particular advertisement irked the born-again Rightwingers, who, in this province at least, seemed to have sprung from the woodwork. It concerned a leading salon chain headed by a Muslim entrepreneur. Its sweet, cheeky advertisement depicted the entourage of Durga and her wards making a quick visit to the… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Oct 1, 2018 | Tags: Book Review, history of religion | Read More
The contradictory Bengali Published @ Biblio India A bhadrolok is someone taken to be urbane and informed, with genteel manners and liberal political values, whose authority derives not from class or birth but from having attained a cultural referentiality through education and through participation in enlightened debates. Here, two books by two eminent bhadralok Bengalis are being reviewed by another – not eminent but self- confessed – bhadralok Bengali. Does this reinforce the self-assured, self-governing, self-congratulatory and hermetically sealed world of the Bengali bhadralok? It apparently does. By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Jan 1, 2018 | Tags: Anthropology, Book Review, History | Read More
The Flaneur Outpaces A Tram Published @ Outlook India Calcutta — city of broken dreams and of crusty, magnetic charm. A young hack’s progress through its florid past and dented present winks at death itself. Having escaped certain death by a Nazi firing squad, the enigmatic French philosopher Maurice Blanchot dedicated the rest of his long life to understand how the act of writing itself can be the most assured insurance against the inevitability of death, of erasure. The Epic City reminded me of Blanchot’s pronouncements. In this book, with the… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Oct 6, 2017 | Tags: Book Review, Calcutta | Read More
The family and the city Published @ Biblio India Chandak Sengoopta has had a less-than-conventional training. He studied to be a medical doctor in Calcutta, did his doctoral research in the US on the history of medicine and is now a historian of colonial and postcolonial India in Birkbeck College, London. His first book was a study of the notorious Viennese philosopher Otto Weininger’s controversial work on identity, while his next two books – Imprint of the Raj: How Fingerprinting was Born in Colonial India (Macmillan, 2003)… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 1, 2016 | Tags: Biography, Book Review, Calcutta | Read More
The Shame Is Squarely On Them Published @ Outlook India Taslima’s solipsistic atomism jars, but one must admire her spirit in the face of slimy intolerance An autobiography called Exile is bound to invoke a dreary sense of deja vu, if for nothing else, but for the sheer weight of the word; and the impossibility of improving upon its literary and political foundations. And honestly, since when has exile not haunted a writer or his work? Look attentively to just the twentieth century and you’ll see a Jean Genet or James… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Dec 1, 2016 | Tags: Book Review, Gender | Read More
Crucible Of Intellect Published @ Outlook India As I write this review, India is in the middle of another proxy war, televised hate speech is deified as prime-time journalism and a cynical public is deeply divided and communalised. In such times, an anthology that ennobles the opposite of these ailments is a surprising, but welcome, infringement. It is difficult to imagine a time when politicians were also statesmen, read widely and debated vigorously, when they agreed to disagree with civility and yet partook in an… By Sayandeb Chowdhury | Oct 6, 2016 | Tags: Book Review, History, Politics | Read More