Why Kabaddi still lives in the shadow of Cricket Subscriber Only
More From Research
Nikita MohtaJan 30, 2026
Akhilesh Upadhyay’s book, In the Margins of Empires: A History of the Chicken’s Neck, spotlights the borderland people of the eastern Himalayan region who find themselves caught in the crosscurrents of larger geopolitical rivalries.
Adrija RoychowdhuryJan 28, 2026
From Opium Wars to 1962 Tezpur invasion, Shehnab Sahin opens a fictional window to Assam’s forgotten history Subscriber Only
Shehnab Sahin’s short story collection, ‘Colour My Grave Purple and Other Stories’, seeks to expand Assam’s narrative beyond insurgency and AFSPA.
Aishwarya KhoslaJan 27, 2026
‘Ireland was laboratory for the Empire’: Jane Ohlmeyer on India, Ireland and British rule Subscriber Only
Historian Jane Ohlmeyer reflects on the long and uneasy connections between Ireland and India under British rule, from shared imperial structures and Irish participation in empire to partition, migration, and the politics of historical memory.
Jan 17, 2026
How Kolkata wrote her own history, one year at a time Subscriber Only
19th-century English Directories and Bengali Directory-Panjikas recorded streets, professions and rituals with a precision modern urban history often neglects
Nikita MohtaJan 14, 2026
While US President Donald Trump has reiterated his desire to take control of resource-rich Greenland, he is not the first to harbour such intentions, history shows.
Aishwarya KhoslaJan 13, 2026
The long, uneasy history of women, cigarettes, and freedom Subscriber Only
Once engineered as a symbol of women’s liberation, the cigarette has travelled a long road from corporate manipulation to cinematic cliché, and now, to acts of rebellion under Iran’s authoritarian rule.
Nikita MohtaJan 9, 2026
Why the Monroe Doctrine, meant for Europe, still echoes in Venezuela — and once in India Subscriber Only
The Monroe Doctrine was meant to keep European empires out of the Americas. But it has, scholars argue, become a flexible tool for justifying US intervention instead. President Donald Trump’s invocation of the doctrine over
Rohan BasuJan 8, 2026
Why ‘national’ science has been obsessed with ancient history Subscriber Only
Today, when NCERT textbooks assert that Brahmagupta and Bhaskaracharya developed algebra independently and before Arab scholars, they repeat a logic that has haunted Indian scholarship for nearly two centuries. Such claims are framed as historical
Adrija RoychowdhuryJan 7, 2026
Indira Gandhi’s brief visit to Venezuela reveals how India once sought common cause with Latin America’s post-colonial nations.
Adrija RoychowdhuryDec 31, 2025
‘He hid nothing’: Professor Madhavan K Palat on the 75,000-page archive opening Jawaharlal Nehru’s private thoughts to the public Subscriber Only
In this interview, Madhavan K Palat, editor of The Nehru Archive, reveals a remarkably transparent leader, even in his most controversial moments.
Dec 29, 2025
The Lund International Tagore Choir stands as a testament to how Rabindranath Tagore’s music weaves human connections, fosters friendships, and kindles warmth among those moved by his philosophy.
Arup K ChatterjeeDec 23, 2025
How Christmas became a citywide ritual in Calcutta Subscriber Only
From artillery salutes and ballroom dinners to Bow Barracks lights and Tangra feasts, a history of how Calcutta made Christmas its own.
Adrija RoychowdhuryDec 19, 2025
On the anniversary of Goa’s Liberation Day, revisiting the 1787 Pinto rebellion — an early challenge to Portuguese rule, long before 1961.
Adrija RoychowdhuryDec 17, 2025
Why Indian politicians refuse to talk about what they wear Subscriber Only
Fashion journalist Shefalee Vasudev on the politics of the saree, PM Narendra Modi’s “best-dressed” image, and why denial itself has become a powerful sartorial statement.
Nikita MohtaDec 12, 2025
Why Delhi was chosen as India’s new capital 114 years ago Subscriber Only
Apart from its proximity to the princely states—and Simla—Delhi’s symbolic importance as the seat of India’s erstwhile empires sealed its selection as the new capital.
Arup K ChatterjeeDec 11, 2025
From the making of the Constitution to the courts of today, Shakespeare’s words have shaped India’s legal imagination in surprising ways.
Adrija RoychowdhuryDec 8, 2025
When Dalit demands and upper-caste anxieties collided in the making of India’s Constitution Subscriber Only
Rohit De and Ornit Shani’s new book, Assembling India's Constitution: A New Democratic History, traces the demands put forward by Dalit organisations, upper-caste groups, and individual petitioners — each articulating their fears, ambitions, and visions
Adrija RoychowdhuryDec 4, 2025
Why a Manipur border town is home to a large Tamil community Subscriber Only
A throwaway line in Family Man 3 opens a window into a century of movement between India and Burma—and how Moreh became home to thousands of Tamil-speaking families.
Arup K ChatterjeeDec 3, 2025
An obscure Persian chronicle reveals how a single fire redrew Bombay’s streets — and its future.
Nikita MohtaNov 28, 2025
Birth of IKEA: how Ingvar Kamprad built a global brand with DIY furniture, powered by 40 years of its iconic meatballs Subscriber Only
Furniture is not IKEA’s only claim to fame. It is also their meatballs. As the brand celebrates 40 years of its special dish, we turn back the pages to see the history of IKEA.
Nikita MohtaNov 28, 2025
Trincas: Where Calcutta’s love for Szechuan food and jazz reside Subscriber Only
Approaching its centenary, Trincas on Park Street stands as a symbol of Calcutta’s cosmopolitan past, wartime resilience, and enduring love for food and music.
Adrija RoychowdhuryNov 25, 2025
South Asians are facing a health crisis. Dr Mubin Syed traces it back to British rule Subscriber Only
In his new book, Dr Mubin Syed traces a line between colonial hunger and modern heart disease and diabetes across South Asia.
Adrija RoychowdhuryNov 21, 2025
The first kiss: A new study traces the evolution of one of humanity’s most intimate behaviour Subscriber Only
Researchers analysed 10,000 possible primate phylogenies and reached the stunning conclusion that kissing likely originated between 16 and 21 million years ago.
Nikita MohtaNov 20, 2025
India remains ‘an obscenely unequal country’; scams are operations anchored in caste and community networks: Snigdha Poonam Subscriber Only
In an interview with Nikita Mohta, Snigdha Poonam talks about her latest book, Scamlands, which offers a gripping account of the people and forces behind frauds in India, Asia and beyond, revealing how inequality, discrimination
Nikita MohtaNov 19, 2025
From IPC to ‘Manifesto of English Education in India’: The colonial legacy of Thomas Macaulay Subscriber Only
PM Narendra Modi has questioned Thomas Babington Macaulay’s influence, saying his philosophy on education has caused India to pay a heavy price.
Advertisement


