Listening To Grasshoppers : Field Notes On Democracy
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Synopsis of Listening To Grasshoppers : Field Notes On Democracy
In Eleven Powerful, And Closely Argued, Linked Essays, Arundhati Roy Takes A Hard Look At The Underbelly Of The World'S Largest Democracy. Beginning With The State-Backed Killing Of Muslims In Gujarat In 2002, She Writes About How Progress' And Genocide Have Historically Gone Hand In Hand; About The Murky Investigations Into The 2001 Attack On The Indian Parliament; About The Dangers Of An Increasingly Powerful And Entirely Unaccountable Judiciary; And About The Collusion Between Large Corporations, The Government And The Mainstream Media. The Volume Ends With An Account Of The August 2008 Uprising In Kashmir And An Analysis Of The November 2008 Attacks On Mumbai.
The Briefing', Included As An Appendix, Is A Compelling Fictional Text That Brings Together Many Of The Issues Central To The Collection
>About The Author
Arundhati Roy Is The Author Of The God Of Small Things, Which Won The Booker Prize In 1997. Two Volumes Of Her Non-Fiction Writing, The Algebra Of Infinite Justice And An Ordinary Person'S Guide To Empire, Were Published By Penguin India In 2001 And 2005 Respectively. She Lives In New Delhi
Product details
- Published: 02/07/1905
- Language: English
- ISBN: 9780143415213
- Category: History