Weekend Reads
- The Naxalbari movement was a continuation of the nationally revered Champaran satyagraha of 1917, argues Dipankar Bhattacharya in Outlook magazine.
- Assembly elections: In the Indian Express, Leena Misra explains why Patidar leader Hardik Patel is drawing such crowds in Gujarat.
- Pogroms in republican India don’t hurt the parties that organise them. They help their cause, writes Mukul Kesavan in the Telegraph.
- Mandatory versus voluntary patriotism: Following JRD Tata, we should make our patriotism deep and substantial, rather than cheap and jingoistic, argues Ramachandra Guha in the Hindustan Times.
- Dadabhai Naoroji, the first Indian elected to the UK House of Commons, lent his energies to causes as diverse as the women’s suffrage movement and Indian self-rule, writes Manu Pillai in the Mint.
- How Kipling helped quell an Indian mutiny in First World War trenches, writes Jamie Doward in the Guardian.
- Ta-Nehisi Coates’ We Were Eight Years in Power fleshes out White supremacy not as a political ideology, but as the defining feature of the US polity – its essential nature, writes Melvin Rogers in the Boston Review.
- Like nationality, the identification with an inside group, to the exclusion of others on the outside, is essential to all religions, argues Time Crane in the Times Literary Supplement.
- The web began dying in 2014, argues Andre Staltz. It was originally a peer-to-peer network with no dependency on a singly part – but now the dominance of Facebook, Amazon and Google threaten that aim.
- Why Einstein just got ranked as history’s greatest hero, explains Brian Gallagher in Nautilus.
- Academic philosophy in the West ignores and disdains the thought traditions of China, India and Africa. This must change, argues Nigel Warburton in Aeon.
- Writing in the New Yorker, Alex Wellerstein remembers Laika, space dog and Soviet hero.
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