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Humanities and democratic discourse belong together – Harvard Magazine

The day before she cast two tiebreaker votes in the Senate in early February, Vice President Kamala Harris brought chocolates for senators on both sides of the aisle and then huddled with a few senior members around a fire in her office. The gestures were no doubt strategic, given her determination to support progressive decisions, but they also conjure references to another period of social gatherings hosted by elegant women. It was during the Enlightenment, when such gatherings in private salons outside the royal palaces softened the absolutist culture of European monarchies.

From the seventeenth century on, spirited conversation in salons became a favorite pastime for educated noblemen and a burgeoning class of professionals, sundry guests who could exercise the wit and curiosity that they acquired through humanistic education. In the welcoming atmosphere of private homes, where hostesses presided with social grace to stimulate lively but not contentious conversation, gentlemen got together with businessmen, military leaders, diplomats, poets, and philosophers to talk about a range of topics that often had no apparent practical or moral value. Disinterested sparring made social equality thinkable. Diverse guests recognized one another as worthy interlocutors. Conversation across class differences depended on talking about fascinating things that didnt rely on privilege or expertise. They talked about beauty, for example, precisely because it has no established criteria and depends on personal, subjective, responses that people want to share in inter-subjective judgments, to take Immanuel Kants line of thinking. When conversations veered toward interests in politics and economics, an alert hostess would tactfully steer the speakers back to the safer space of exciting but uncontentious sparring about the arts.

Aesthetics is the name of this egalitarian activity, a social venture that follows from being surprised by something beautiful, or even something ugly. The surprise is visceral and stays subjective, but the experiencewhen we think and talk about itis social. Extended engagement with beauty or the sublime has no practical purpose beyond the pleasure of engaging. This shared pause from pursuits is an obvious and available antidote to the crush of self-interested calculation and competition.

Sociability was a key word for Enlightenment thinkers. The pleasures of hearing unanticipated viewpoints and a variety of storytelling talents, music, theater, and interpretive conversations managed to weave and to sustain the political fabric of democracies. That social fabric has frayed over time, while investments in the humanities also erode. This is no coincidence. The weave and the practices of equitable interchange need mending today, as democracy shows signs of unraveling along anti-social barriers that sideline the arts and interpretation from public life, even though these activities ground democracy with stakes in civility.

Active citizens are humanists. They enjoy doubt. Questions need not find efficient answers; they are stimuli to listen, to investigate, and to consider a variety of possible solutions. The humanities dont do the work of politics, but they prepare that work through the pleasures of diverse company.

Decision makers in government and in civil society have little time for pleasure. How can they, when people are hungry and sick and homeless, when the planet itself is in jeopardy and our political system comes close to shambles? It is possible, however, that some serious concerns, starting with politics and education, are aggravated by the shortness of social breath and the devaluation of pleasant conversation. Sociability is the glue or the grease that can bridge people beyond their personal self-interest and outside of their communitarian camps. That is why Kant was desperate to save sociability from the officious pretensions of reason. His political philosophy is Aesthetic Judgment, according to Hannah Arendt.

More than a historical reference, this is an urgent reminder that our precious and precarious political experiment of collective self-rule depends on cultivating humanistic education. Without the pleasures of intellectual engagement about things and events that have no intrinsic material or moral interest, we do not acquire the necessary taste and stamina for engaging in contentious issues.

The election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris is a reprieve from the fear that democracy has already unraveled beyond possible mending in favor of a more primitive line of charismatic leadership with single-file followers. We can take a deep breath of relief now, a breath that also commemorates George Floyd and many black martyrs who longed to breathe free in the United States. But the pause from terror is no guarantee of our freedom. It is a moment to consider how to heal, repair, and strengthen the weave of our still precarious political culture.

It is time to consider how much democracy depends on the pleasures of interacting with people across political, racial, ethnic, and gender lines. Without enjoying variety and surpriseaesthetic effects that stimulate questions and conversation as they did in Enlightenment salonsdemocracy is hardly thinkable. Democracy is a collective work of art. Hard questions require training to listen and to learn, because human progress is not linear; it is reflexive and collaborative, social and aesthetic in the sense of surprising and needing interpretation. Now is the time to reflect and to collaborate in our commitment to democracy through the urgent work of reviving the humanities as a core field for civic training. We are at a tipping point beyond which revival may be impossible and the costs will include the loss of democratic public life.

Democracy develops by stages. It cannot kick off scaffolding from one stage to the next, because it continues unfinished and under construction. If sociability was a scaffold in the eighteenth century, and if it depended on humanistic education to cultivate verbal sparring for the sheer fun of it, sociability and the humanities continue to be supports for democracy in the making. Emerging from the debris of January 6, 2021, we are cured of any illusion that democracy is a solid and self-sustainable system. When citizens broke down the doors of Congress and trashed constitutional safeguards to democratic rulefundamental questions grip Americans about how to relate to each other and to the world. The insurrection obliges us to become guardians of democracy and co-constructors of improvements. The work is a delicate balance among conflicting desires and opposing ideals: for example, equal opportunities in free markets versus equal participation to adjust disadvantage.

We hope that our new administration will revive a spirit of interchange to save politics from boiling down to games of power-grabbing. That collaborative spirit is no impossible dream. Before 1994 it had been a living, breathing force of friendship that allowed Democrats and Republicans to collaborate.

Now is a time for the revival of sociability as a necessary platform for politics, though the concept is hardly heard today. More than ever, humanistic training is wanted to develop a knack for disinterested reflection. For years, power and self-interest have seemed more solid supports for politics. They have been disastrous, philosopher Jrgen Habermas observes, because they miss the mark of Enlightened modernity. The eighteenth-century project, he explains, was intersubjective and collective. But liberals in the line of John Locke and dialecticians from Hegel on assumed that self-interest was the high road to development. That high road has turned into a self-defeating shortcut. The road not taken, the one that Kant defended, was social, not selfish. Deliberate about beauty and the sublime, he counseled, flex the mental muscle of judgment about things that dont compromise your freedom with economic or moral purpose, and youll be prepared to argue about practically anything.

The demise of democracy occupies pundits, futurologists, and historians. They can be shrewd about the disaster without taking responsibility for it. Praxis has not been in fashion; pessimism has. To be sure, the palpable deterioration of civil and political institutions feels like an uncontrollable undertow. Decisions about the future of democracy seem to happen at unreachable heights or in the gutter. Maybe no one is making them. Despair can set in, given the political complexity, the frequent indifference, and now sedition including violent treason. All of this can overwhelm any reasonable will to act. Is there anything practical that citizens can do? Yes, there is. Reviving the humanities is one urgent campaign we can join. Harvard College students have already taken up the banner. Concerned about overly concentrated concentrations, editors of The Harvard Crimson note that pressure from parents and peers dissuades most Harvard College students from pursuing the humanities or social sciences, though poet Amanda Gorman 20 is a beacon to the power of art and the humanities. We can contribute our voices and our resources to the power of beauty and the civility of reflecting together.

Consider decisions by university administrators to cut or to gut Ph.D. admissions as a consequence of COVID-19. It may be a blameless response to economic pressures: colleges and universities are victims of financial lossesand some have already closed, while others may not survive. The short-term decisions to bleed graduate programs are understandable. But if expedient decisions turn into long-term policy, they will have unintended political consequences. The effect on the general public will be to further discredit the practices of slow thinking, patient listening, and careful communication that sustain and develop democracy.

Many people have apparently come to consider doctoral degrees elitist or frivolous, a luxury for people who can afford them. Do universities agree? I know that they do not. For years, efforts to raise support for Ph.D. programs have confirmed the commitment. But now those efforts are urgent. Perhaps potential donors will reflect on the political costs of limiting access to the skill set that democracy requires. Deferring or dismissing that cost is to be unwittingly complicit with the disastrous social disintegration that continues, on violent streets, in racially marked statistics of death by disease, and in seditious attacks on the government.

Where else but in universities do citizens train to train more citizens to take time and ask questions, investigate, listen to different points of view, and communicate persuasively? These are humanistic skills that connect body and soul, philosopher Martha Nussbaum argued in Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities (2010). But even she leaves out the pleasures of sociability. From grade schools to high schools, artmaking and interpretation should be integral to educating young citizens who can learn to enjoy thinking in each others company. Yet the humanities have been in decline for decades, cut down or cut out by administrative fiat.

Ph.D.s cost moneyand graduates seldom become major donors, it is true. This has led many university administrators in the United States and elsewhere to think that it makes sense to restrict unproductive programs. (The European Union thinks differently, for now.) Productive means programs that generate external funding, such as the sciences. Streamlining the others allegedly supports current students while responding to economic burdens aggravated by the pandemic. Without resolve for the long term, there is little reason to assume that Ph.D. programs will recover, given the sequel to the 2008 crash. Losses in admissions then were never regained, though the economy recovered. The alarming pattern is clear. It confirms a general (populist?) impatience with higher learning and puts democracy at risk. If the general population continues to dismiss slow thinking and to defend unexamined hunches as political positions, democracy unravels.

Rational administrators ask how many Ph.D.s get professorial jobs. The numbers come up short: the investments dont justify the outputand the conclusion is to cut. This is a case of thinking too fast. And so economic rationality runs over social values.

A civic look at humanistic learning sees that it does more than reproduce a tradition or bore down into specializations that narrow the range of readers. Learning fosters love of the world and of fellow learners through research, speculation, and discussion among peers, whatever the content may be. For centuries, advanced degrees in law, for example throughout Latin America, the Middle East, and elsewhere, have prepared young leaders for careers beyond the courts. Law degrees were welcomed by employers in government and in industry. Today this preparation is the Ph.D. Training in stamina for thinking, for doubt; care for validity; the pleasures of deliberation and sustained communication: these are tastes and skills that can facilitate democratic processes in a range of professions. Inside the academy, we can and should cultivate these connections. Outside, we should identify and expand professional opportunities for slow thinkers. Otherwise, the experts who do our thinking for us will be technicians who calculate economic gains and losses to conclude that sociability, along with democratic participation, are anachronous wastes of time.

The pandemic has been especially disruptive to graduate students education. Travel for field work was impossible last summer. Access to libraries, museums, and collections was curtailed or severely constrained. Teaching experiences were limited in the shift to online instruction. And so the multiyear path to a doctoral degree was beset by delays at best, and insuperable obstacles in many cases.

That has caused problems for the students institutions, toobut in ways that are not uniform across disciplines. Most support for doctoral work in the humanities (fellowships, living stipends, teaching assignments) comes from institutional funds: typically, endowment distributions and other operating resources. That is largely the case for the social sciences, too. But doctoral training in the sciences and engineering draws to a much greater degree on federal (and foundation and corporate) funding for research, which pays for lab personnel: graduate students and postdocs. And at many schools, including Harvard, laboratories were able to regear for safe operation as soon as early last summer.

Given the disruptions in some graduate students training, many universities have decided to pause doctoral admissions for the coming academic year, to preserve funds so they can support those already enrolled whose preparation was siderailed, thus securing their path toward degree completion. The effect is markedly skewed toward humanities and certain social sciences.

The Chronicle of Higher Education began tallying the announcements last fall. Among three dozen universities for which it gathered data, from Boston University and Brown through Vanderbilt and Yale, the pattern that emerged was a clear focus on halting admissions to school-funded programs while maintaining admissions for students with external funding. Thus Penn, for example, essentially turned off the spigot across internally funded programs in its School of Arts and Sciences. Columbia asked all humanities and social-sciences programs to pause admissions for one year, or reduce them by half over two. And so on.

Even looking at universities that were more selective, the same programs are on the lists at multiple institutions: American studies (BU, Brown, Harvard, Rutgers, Yale, and others), English (BU, Brown, Columbia, Duquesne, NYU, Rice, Colorado, Maryland, Missouri, and others), comp lit, history, multiple European languages, and anthropology and sociology (several institutions apiece). It is small wonder that the humanities professoriatealready struggling with a long shift in societys prioritiesfinds itself even more in a defensive crouch in the wake of the pandemics financial fallout.

~John S. Rosenberg

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Humanities and democratic discourse belong together - Harvard Magazine

Shoshana Zuboff: Facebook’s Oversight Board Is Not Enough. The Government Has to Regulate Big Tech – Democracy Now!

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: Here on Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The Quarantine Report, Im Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh. You can watch, listen and read transcripts using our iOS and Android apps. Download them for free from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store today.

Former President Trumps Facebook account will remain suspended at least for now. On Wednesday, an Oversight Board set up by Facebook upheld the January 7th ban, saying Trumps rhetoric created a, quote, serious risk of violence. But the board said Facebook should review whether the ban should be indefinite.

For more, we go to Shoshana Zuboff, professor emerita at Harvard Business School, author of the book The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power.

Professor Zuboff, welcome back to Democracy Now! Your reaction to the Facebook-appointed boards decision?

SHOSHANA ZUBOFF: Well, you know, it looks like this so-called Oversight Board, which of course, everyone should understand, was set up by Mr. Zuckerberg with a $130 million endowment and really is a device to help keep him free of public law, help keep him free of regulation. So, we know that Mr. Zuckerberg didnt do a very good job taming political speech. He allowed political speech to go free of fact-checking. And the worst example of this, of course, was Mr. Trump, who became a clear and present danger to our democracy. So, rather than grappling with that, this decision was given to this so-called Oversight Board, and now it looks like theyve kicked it back to Facebook.

The real issue here, though, Amy, is that in kicking it back to Facebook, theyve actually kicked it back to the Biden administration. And heres why Im going to say that. First of all, why did Mark Zuckerberg indulge and appease Donald Trump for so many years, and especially in that last year of election season as things became more bizarre, inflammatory and dangerous? Well, there were the key reason was political appeasement. Just as the Oversight Board, so-called, is set up to keep him free of regulation, he showed that he was willing to do just about anything to appease Trump, appease the Trump administration, appease the conservative allies, to keep regulation at bay. And in appeasing Trump, all that Zuckerberg really had to do was not intervene in his economic machine, surveillance capitalism, which is programmed, engineered to maximize engagement and data extraction by circulating and amplifying what turns out to be the most inflammatory, the most bizarre, the most dangerous, the most threatening, the craziest content. So, by keeping Trump going, he satisfied his political goals, and he also satisfied his economic goals.

Now, as we saw yesterday, very, very quickly, Trump is back on his microphone not on Facebook, not on Twitter, but hes got plenty of other outlets. And what was the first thing he started to do? Threaten Zuckerberg with regulation. Threaten Zuckerberg with Republican retaliation. Right? So, now we are back in the political arena. And this means that the Biden administration, that team, is going to have to take a stand, because the thing thats going to keep Mr. Trump off Facebook and save American democracy is going to be a situation where Mr. Zuckerberg fears the Democrats as much as he fears the Republicans. And so far that has not been the case. So, we are now back into a political power match. And thats going to really change the dynamics of these next few months.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Professor Zuboff, could you respond to those who have criticized the decision by Facebook to indefinitely suspend Trumps account? Its not just conservatives in this country, but also several European leaders who have said that tech companies have no place in making decisions like this; this decision and decisions like it should be in the hands of governments.

SHOSHANA ZUBOFF: Well, that is absolutely true. You know, Mr. Zuckerberg and his so-called Oversight Board are running around the rim of a donut chasing each others tails, looking for solutions, when the solution space is in the hole. And the problem is that surveillance capitalism, companies like Facebook that depend upon the secret extraction of behavioral data, which gets turned into targeting and targeted ads, you know, this is a very pernicious, extractive, dangerous, anti-democratic economics that has taken hold in the last 20 years, the last two decades.

And its done so because democracy has failed to act. And its not only true in America, but the liberal democracies around the world have failed to develop a distinct vision of how do you design and deploy and apply the digital world, digital technology, in a way that advances democracy and allows democracy to flourish. So, were not China, but instead weve allowed these private companies to create a different kind of surveillance state in our surveillance society in America and in the West that operates under private capital.

So, we are long overdue for the same kind of period of tremendous creativity and invention that we saw in the 20th century. You know, the first part of the 20th century, the employers, the owners of the great industrial enterprises, they had all the power. They had all the decision rights. Everything that happened, happened based on their private property rights. Thats the same situation were in today. And in the 20th century, you know, we created these huge behemoths, the monopolies, the cartels, the trusts, and it looked like ordinary citizens, and even democracy itself, had no chance. And we were looking forward to a century of extreme inequality and serfdom. But, ultimately, beginning in the third and especially the fourth decades of the 20th century

AMY GOODMAN: We have 10 seconds.

SHOSHANA ZUBOFF: democracy fought back. And we created the rights, laws and institutions we needed to tame industrial capitalism, tether it to democracy. We can do the same thing today. This third decade is now. Our opportunity for citizens and lawmakers to come together, we need to bring the digital into democracys house. And

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Zuboff, were going to do Part 2 of this discussion, post it online at democracynow.org. Her book, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. Im Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh.

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Shoshana Zuboff: Facebook's Oversight Board Is Not Enough. The Government Has to Regulate Big Tech - Democracy Now!

I dont know why the migrant crisis surprised us – The Indian Express

In an interview, youve said that the film Meel Patthar (Milestone, released on Netflix on May 7, premiered at last years Venice International Film Festival) tells you where you are and how much further you have to go. Could you explain?

That was about why Id named the film Meel Patthar (Milestones). Milestones tell you where you are and how far you have to go. But in the film, its a weird sort of milestone, because even after 500,000 km, Ghalib has absolutely no idea hes achieved that. Theres just uncertainty.

Your debut feature Soni (2018) came as a reflection on the aftermath of the 2012 Delhi gang-rape case. How did the idea for your second feature come about?

I was always interested in writing about the world. There are people in my extended family who have been truck drivers at some point in their lives and then went on to become transporters. Growing up, I had heard stories and this whole idea fascinated me that there is this individual whos just travelling all his life, but still kind of stuck within this little box. So, travelling but not really, travelling. This idea was an interesting paradox. Living outside India, I got a chance to discover more about this world. A lot of the transportation in the trucking business, especially in the US, is dominated by the Indian community. Originally, the idea was that of an immigrant truck driver. When I moved here (to India) after Soni, the idea then was to work in north India, especially Delhi. Delhi has Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar, which, I think, is the biggest transportation zone in all of Asia. The place is quite appealing just from the image perspective alone. So, the film eventually became a film about a Punjabi truck driver who was working in Delhi.

You named your protagonists after poets Ghalib (Suvinder Vicky) and Pash (Lakshvir Saran), and theres a cameo by the young poet Aamir Aziz, too. How important was poetry to the film?

Initially, I wanted the driver to be an aspiring poet. But then that train of thought ran a bit hollow. I chose to stick with the names because I wanted to explore this thought, what if nobody mentions their names in the poetic context in the film. The names by themselves are meaningless in the story. Chances are, for the majority of the young audiences, barring those into literature and poetry, these names dont mean much, they will not know who these names belong to or what they mean. I felt it would be an interesting experiment to see how many people actually notice. But, overall, it was a cynical, pessimistic thought at work that the names are meaningless in the story. As for Aziz, we wanted someone who could play a union leader, who came from Bihar or Jharkhand, because most people who do the loading-unloading work are from there. When we got his (Azizs) audition, we didnt register who he was even though his face seemed familiar. Then, people were not familiar with his poetry yet.

Why arent the trucks in your film colourful and quirky like the ones we see on the roads and in Bollywood films?

There are both kinds of trucks in the trade. I decided not to show ostentatiously decorated trucks in the film because Ghalib isnt a kind of truck driver whos interested in doing that. He lives with a sense of detachment, does his work, and thats all. Hes aloof, not interested in making places he inhabits attractive. We had a whole casting process for the truck. Bollywood sees things in a different way and a certain kind of truck driver and bright trucks are a part of their film experience. They choose to portray them in that way: happy, loud and gregarious.

You finished shooting the film right before the lockdown last year. How do you think the truck drivers community has been dealing with the situation?

The truckers suffered immensely last year, because everything stopped. I think there was a period of almost two weeks when they didnt even allow many of the truck drivers to come on to the highways. I dont know why the migrant crisis surprised so many of us. What were they (migrant workers) supposed to do? This is the kind of thing that happens when you do things just out of pure impulse, without even understanding the consequences for a large majority of the country. This showed that people are only interested in saving themselves, even if it comes at the cost of throwing the ball under the bus. That they (migrant labourers) dont matter.

With rural-urban migration and woes of the urban working class as the films dominant themes, are you critiquing capitalism through Meel Patthar?

Ive always felt that they (truck drivers) are the backbone of our economy. The transportation business is essentially what makes civil life possible. The whole capitalistic system is still very much dependent on this industry, and yet, the sector ends up being at the receiving end of the injustices of the system. It is ironic that people who are probably at its core, end up becoming probably its biggest victims. A lot of them dont even realise it until its too late. You see that in the film through the strike of the loader (porters) and a veteran truck driver friend of Ghalib being laid off.

But Ive also tried to highlight other things, like how we expect too much from the urban working class. The scene where Ghalib is trying to walk up the stairs as the lift is out of use, he encounters the lift repairman, and the gas-cylinder-delivery man, I wanted to expose the world that exists outside of Transport Nagar, and how that world is also infested with the same injustices and tension. Its hard to pin down whose fault it is. Its the whole complexity of our modern Indian society. These are just observations that Im just trying to share with the audiences.

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I dont know why the migrant crisis surprised us - The Indian Express

Sunday Long Reads: Elderly in the pandemic, migrant crisis, seduction in the plant kingdom, and more – The Indian Express

How the elderly, among the most vulnerable victims of COVID-19, are braving the pandemic

After 57 years of marriage, she is newly single. Her husband died of COVID-19 in the last week of April. Her son, who was in the ICU at the time, is better now. The Pune-based senior citizen (who does not wish to be named) is aware that several members of her yoga club have also passed away. Nobody knows who will be next, so I have started calling up everybody, whose number I have, to talk. I dont know if I will get the chance to meet them again, she says.

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I dont know why the migrant crisis surprised us

In an interview, youve said that the film Meel Patthar (Milestone, released on Netflix on May 7, premiered at last years Venice International Film Festival) tells you where you are and how much further you have to go. Could you explain?

That was about why Id named the film Meel Patthar (Milestones). Milestones tell you where you are and how far you have to go. But in the film, its a weird sort of milestone, because even after 500,000 km, Ghalib has absolutely no idea hes achieved that. Theres just uncertainty.

READ MORE

Three books to remember childrens author Subhadra Sen Gupta by

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Why it is timely to read Bhaswati Mukherjees fresh look into how Bengal negotiated Partition in Bengal and its Partition: An Untold Story

An impassioned and deeply-researched work, Bhaswati Mukherjees Bengal and Partition: An Untold Story is an invaluable contribution to the particular issues that animated politics in Bengal, a marginally Muslim-majority province, that distinguished it from the freedom movement in much of the rest of the country. It was not only, or indeed most significantly, the Hindu-Muslim demography of the province that gave it a unique perspective, but, overlaying these religious differences was the proud linguistic unity and syncretic cultural heritage that made Bengal different. (I would rate Chapter 6, The Struggle for identity: Language and Religion, as the most outstanding in the book).

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How seduction works in the world of flora

In the animal kingdom, its usually the male of the species that struts its stuff and tries to seduce the ladies, who will pick the most handsome, rugged and tough as her mate, checking out his looks and fitness and fighting capabilities. In the botanical world, a plant, rooted to the ground cannot wander around showing off, singing and dancing to seduce a mate. So, it employs the services of, what one could roughly say is, a marriage bureau to get itself a mate. This bureau has a host of mammals, insects and birds (and even the wind) on its rolls. And as there are no free lunches, these services have to be paid for in sweet nectar (sugar water, really), produced in glands called nectarines, and nourishing pollen.

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How Hindustani classical singer Aditya Modak trained to play the lead in The Disciple

Chaitanya Tamhanes film The Disciple opens with Pt Vinayak Pradhan (essayed deftly by Jaipur-Atrauli gharana classical singer Pt Arun Dravid) on the stage. The ageing vocalist, from Alwar gharana, is immersed in the glorious Jaunpuri (Jhanana bichhua baje), a raga that evokes wonder and bhakti bhaav. His accompanying disciple looks on in reverence, with eager nods and eyes that capture his desire to perform like his guru one day. Moments later, the setting shifts to the gurus room, who, with a teacup in hand, breaks down the raga to his promising shishya as Sharad Nerulkar (played by Hindustani classical artiste Aditya Modak), tanpura in hand, rote-learns and sings.

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How Raza Mirs Murder at the Mushaira looks back at the rebellious days of 1857

On a dark night in May 1857, a solitary man on horseback makes his way towards Shahjahanabad. Unrest had been fomenting in the countryside, bitter resentment spilling over from years of humiliation and abuse by the British, who had, since an obscure battle in Plassey, come to control greater parts of the country. Sarfaraz Laskar, the rider, knew that the time was ripe to flame that seething animosity into a full-blown rebellion if he could make his way to the seat of the etiolated Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, that is.

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Why Sanjaya Baru looks at the dismantling of an old order of power elites for a new ideological hegemony in Indias Power Elite: Caste, Class and Cultural Revolution

Debate on the constantly evolving power elite in India is not a new concept. The strength of Sanjaya Barus latest book, however, is its topicality. Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the term power elite has acquired a new, thought-provoking, somewhat sinister inference. Modi, as Baru sees it, has dismantled the old order of power elites in Delhi and seeks to impose an unquestioning hegemonic domination on an ideological basis. Globalised upper-class intellectuals and liberals are suspect and to be replaced by middle-class Hindu nationalists who serve, ostensibly, the larger cause of Bharat as opposed to that of India. Any negation of the new faith is viewed with unconcealed hostility.

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Sunday Long Reads: Elderly in the pandemic, migrant crisis, seduction in the plant kingdom, and more - The Indian Express

US and Mexico vow to cooperate on border crisis – DW (English)

US Vice President Kamala Harrisheld a virtualmeeting with Mexican President Andres Manuel LopezObradoron Friday to discuss immigration policies.It was their second meeting in a month.

During the meeting, Harris and Lopez Obrador pledged to cooperate on resolving the roots ofillegal migration into the US.

Harrissaid the US and Mexicomust combat violence and corruption together, to help cut back migration from Central America.

"Most people don't want to leave home and when they do it is often because they are fleeing some harm or they are forced to leave because there are no opportunities," she said.

The two countries saidthey should work together on helping"Northern Triangle" countries El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras improve conditions and persuade migrants to stay home.

"It is in our countries' mutual interest to provide immediate relief to the Northern Triangle and to address the root causes of migration,"Harrissaid.

Lopez Obrador referred to the long-running issues of US-Mexican tensions over migration and said "we need to understand one another and avoid fighting."

"We are in agreement when it comes to the policies that you are undertaking when it comes to migration and we will help. That is what I can say as of now. You can count on us," he added.

The meeting comes at a time the Biden administration grapples with a surge in people crossing into the US at the southern border.

In March, President JoeBidentasked Harris with leading diplomatic efforts to decrease immigration from Mexico and Central America.

Biden raised the US's annual refugee cap on Monday to 62,500. It followedpressure from the Democratic party and refugee agencies after initially sticking by the historically-low Trump-era figure of 15,000.

Shortly before the scheduled call with Harris, Lopez Obrador sent a diplomatic note asking Washington to explain funding for Mexicans Against Corruption and Impunity, a group critical of the Mexican government.

"It's promoting a form of coup," LopezObrador said,adding that the funding, which includes money from USAID, undermines Mexico's government and sovereignty.

"It is an interventionist act that violated our sovereignty That's why we're asking that (the U.S. government) clarifies this for us. A foreign government can't provide money to political groups," he said.

Later asked if he believed Washington was seeking to remove him from office, he said he did not think that was the case.

A large wall stretches into the Pacific Ocean at the beaches of San Diego and Tijuana, two populous cities separated by the US-Mexico border. It is one of the most secure areas of the frontier and is part of the 1100 kilometers (700 miles) of fencing that have been completed thus far.

The fight over how to secure the border has divided Republicans, who support more fencing, and Democrats, who argue that using technology is more effective. Experts estimate it would cost $15-25 billion (13-22 billion) to fully wall off the entire southern frontier.

Large swaths of the border are covered in desert, desolate and uninhabited. Many migrants try to cross these areas, where they fall victim to disorientation, dehydration and where the risk of death is high. Activists often leave water (pictured) and other supplies to help migrants survive the dangerous trek.

Roughly half of the 3,000-kilometer border falls along the snaking Rio Grande. Migrants regularly attempt to cross the river, either by swimming or on rafts. The calm appearance of the Rio Grande is deceitful, as it is a fast-moving river with dangerous currents.

The US-Mexico border is considered the most transited frontier in the world. Most of the movement takes place at the various points of entry, where lawful back-and-forth traffic and asylum-seekers meet. The Matamoros-Brownsville International Bridge (pictured) is one of 44 official points of entry and the last one before the border ends at the Gulf of Mexico.

Author: Jenipher Camino Gonzalez

Washington has expressed concern over record number of undocumented immigrants arriving at the southern border. An influx is expected to increase as the weather warms.

Border authorities stopped around 170,000 people trying to enter the US illegally in March, a 20-year high.

The number of unaccompanied children in particular have surged, with photos of migrant shelters showing children crammed together in poor conditions circulating on media platforms.

In February, the White House said it would start phasing out Trump's Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP). The program had forced thousands of asylum seekers to wait in Mexico for their asylum cases to be heard.

The US border remains closed to most asylum seekers under the Trump administration's COVID-19-related order. Biden has not revoked the order.

About two-thirds of US adults said the Biden administration was doing a very bad or somewhat bad job of dealing with the increased number of people seeking asylum, according to a May survey from the Pew Research Center.

Harrishas said she will visit Mexico and Guatemala on June 7-8 for her first trip abroad as vice president.

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US and Mexico vow to cooperate on border crisis - DW (English)