Featured books
Beyond the Courtyard: A Sequel to Unveiling India
Author: Anees Jung
Price : $ 18 (Includes shipping)
Book review
Nineteen years ago, Anees Jung embarked on a journey that resulted in the best-selling book Unveiling India, a poignant and revealing look at the women of India. In this sequel, she returns to investigate what, if anything, has altered for their daughters. Have the dramatic changes in the social scene in the wake of liberalization, cable TV and a general opening up of society made any fundamental difference to their lives? Do they possess the resilience of their mothers, or is this a generation hovering uncertainly between two worlds—unwilling to be fettered by tradition and yet lacking the courage to break free? As before, she finds stories of suffering and fortitude, despair and hope: A young Rajput woman in Kutch defies the veil, and her husband’s command, to take up a job; Ameena in Hyderabad, rescued from an ageing Arab sheikh in 1992 when barely twelve, is finally married off to another man more than twice her age; young mothers in Punjab are forced to kill their unborn daughters; a young prostitute in Mumbai fights drug addiction and hate, determined to live with dignity.
Journeying across forgotten landscapes, both human and geographic, Anees Jung paints yet another unforgettable and, at times, harrowing portrait of women in India at the dawn of the new millennium.
HardCover | 176 pages |
Published : 12/24/2003
Nineteen years ago, Anees Jung embarked on a journey that resulted in the best-selling book Unveiling India, a poignant and revealing look at the women of India. In this sequel, she returns to investigate what, if anything, has altered for their daughters. Have the dramatic changes in the social scene in the wake of liberalization, cable TV and a general opening up of society made any fundamental difference to their lives? Do they possess the resilience of their mothers, or is this a generation hovering uncertainly between two worlds—unwilling to be fettered by tradition and yet lacking the courage to break free? As before, she finds stories of suffering and fortitude, despair and hope: A young Rajput woman in Kutch defies the veil, and her husband’s command, to take up a job; Ameena in Hyderabad, rescued from an ageing Arab sheikh in 1992 when barely twelve, is finally married off to another man more than twice her age; young mothers in Punjab are forced to kill their unborn daughters; a young prostitute in Mumbai fights drug addiction and hate, determined to live with dignity.
Journeying across forgotten landscapes, both human and geographic, Anees Jung paints yet another unforgettable and, at times, harrowing portrait of women in India at the dawn of the new millennium.
HardCover | 176 pages |
Published : 12/24/2003
Non-Fiction
Sahibs Who Loved India - By Khuswant Singh
A rare collection of essays that invites the reader to revisit a vanished era of sahibs and memsahibs. more>>
A rare collection of essays that invites the reader to revisit a vanished era of sahibs and memsahibs. more>>
In the Country of Deceit - By Shashi Deshpande
Devayani chooses to live alone in the small town of Rajnur after her parents’ death, ignoring the gently voiced disapproval of her family ...more>>
Devayani chooses to live alone in the small town of Rajnur after her parents’ death, ignoring the gently voiced disapproval of her family ...more>>
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi - By ADITYA MUKHERJEE
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi undertakes the novel experiment of juxtaposing three apparently quite different issuesmore>>
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi undertakes the novel experiment of juxtaposing three apparently quite different issuesmore>>
Superstar India: From Incredible to Unstoppable - By Shobhaa Dé
'This is a story about India. My India. It is a very personal story. You see, I'm exactly as old as India is.'more>>
'This is a story about India. My India. It is a very personal story. You see, I'm exactly as old as India is.'more>>
Splendours of Royal Mysore- The Untold Story of the Wodeyars - By Vikram Sampath
The artistic representation of history,” says Aristotle, “is a more scientific and serious pursuit than the exact writing of history.......more>>
The artistic representation of history,” says Aristotle, “is a more scientific and serious pursuit than the exact writing of history.......more>>









