Archive for the ‘Research’ Category

Coffee with Cultural History


2008
10.13

In Those Days There was No Coffee: Writings in Cultural History by A.R. Venkatachalapathy

I had been searching for this book for quite a long time and got hold of this last week.

Book Cover

Book Cover

Reasons for searching for it – my interest in food writing, coffee, history and south India. And yes, I had heard about the author in my university days. Well, the book did not disappoint me. I had read about the history of tea in the book I reviewed earlier: Curry. Coffee had something different to offer.

We read enough about how coffee houses became cultural institutions in Western history, how coffee was taken as a drink that stinks to how it became a drink of prestige. This book tells you about South Indian history. The book comes in the larger context of cultural practices of consumption. Coffee, Tobacco, Cartoons, Modernity.

Coffee, the stereotype of Tamil Nadu and South India, is not an innocent icon – the book tells us. Again, it was also one of the material for the elite to process and negotiate modernity, in some sense. From a drink that corrupted the women and the youth, it became a symbol of hospitality and cultural attainment. Coffee clubs turn modern spaces.

There were a few essays on literature, which I skipped. But I was also surprised to see that a book on coffee could completely avoid the most common person who brings the coffee to the drinker, the housewife. Yes, there are a couple of references to how other men deplored the coffee-addiction of women and hints at the Partha Chatterjee bifurcation of the cultural and the political. But wont there be more in history – like how did the women start making coffee, did they welcome the new product or resisted it, did coffee come to houses from hotels or the other way round? Which women started making coffee for men, community, caste?

The parallel between histories of coffee and tobacco is also interesting. Both came to India and became part of India. But when coffee was appropriated by the elite, though with lots of resistance from the conservatives, tobacco after an era of eulogies and celebration, became completely a corruption.

You need not be a historian to read this book. If you happen to be one, this is a must-read.

Biafran Yellow Sun


2008
09.18

A book which you want to read again and again. At the same time, you don’t want to read again for a false fear of losing your first impression. Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi is that book.

A camp during civil war

A camp during civil war - The writer gathered it during her research for the book.


Very sensitive characterization, deliberate mix up of calendar in plot, Biafrian history that has to be told again and again, politics that invariably interlaces with the personal, old world superstitions, post colonial anger, intense moments of pain and helplessness, stoic resistance, love, betrayal, lust,

Luckily I was unaware of the huge hype the book had got. The book caught me unawares. I often stopped reading to take a break and to let it settle, but always wanted to come back fast to see what happened next. The book kept of taunting me for a long time. I searched the Net and went through some of the horrifying disturbing pictures of Biafran war that caused billions of deaths in war or hunger. Thanks, Chimamanda Ngozi.
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A Delicious History


2008
05.15

Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors by Lizzie Collingaham, Vintage Books 2005.

A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors

Food and writings on food always fascinate me. Be they food served on table or recipes and scholarly documents I read. Anything to do with food, other than cooking it myself! That is how I came upon this book, surprisingly not in the History section of the bookstore, but in the Recipe section! The mix was too heady and appealing not to pickup – spice, gossip, culture, history,
Indian history through Indian food.
It was a birthday gift from my colleagues that I was suppossed to select myself. Thank you friends!
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Bitter Chocolate - Read this Book


2008
04.22

Bitter Chocolate by Pinki Virani. Penguin.

Bitter Chocolate Cover

I had read a few reviews of the book before I picked it up in one of the book festivals. I had only sociological interests when I heard about the book, but when I picked up to read it finally, I was more a parent.

The book is about Child Sexual Abuse in India, as the subtitle says. But what the book has in it is not just information. Once you read this book, you cannot just glance over newspaper headings like 8 yr old raped by uncle. It hurts you. You cannot ignore your daughter’s silences. It beats you.

Bitter Chocolate is extremely bitter. A very apt title.

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Movies Based on famous Plays


2006
07.14

I have been looking for some movies that are based on well-known plays. So far I could find only these:

Macbeth [English] - Maqbool [Hindi] -Throne of Blood [Japanese]
Hamlet Othello [English] - Kaliyattam [Malayalam] - Omkara [Hindi]
King Lear[English] - Gunasundari Katha [Telugu] - Ran [Japanese]
Romeo and Juliet [English]- Reshma Aur Shera [Hindi]- Chicken Rice War [Chinese]
Midsummer Night’s Dream - Oh My Goddess[Japanese]
Antony and Cleopatra [English] - Kannaki [Malayalam]
Comedy of Errors[English]- Angoor [Hindi]- Ulta Palta [Telugu]
Hamlet [English] - Gamlet [Russian] - Kadamayin Ellai [Tamil] -Khoon Khoon [Hindi]-Hamlet Goes Business in the USA[Finnish]- The Bad Sleep Well [Japanese]
Glass Menagerie [English] -Akale [Malayalam]

Can anyone help me with more of these? And the list need not be restricted to Shakespeare or English. It would also be helpful if you can tell me where are these movies available.
Thanks in advance.