The IIC Experience: A Festival of the Arts 14 to 20 October 2022
TREASURES OF KHUDA BAKHSH ORIENTAL PUBLIC LIBRARY
An interactive walkthrough conducted by Dr. Shayesta Bedar, Director, Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Public Library
TREASURES OF KHUDA BAKHSH ORIENTAL PUBLIC LIBRARY
An interactive walkthrough conducted by Dr. Shayesta Bedar, Director, Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Public Library
A Historical view of Vindhyan Rock Art and its Significance
Illustrated lecture by Dr. Ajay Pratap, Senior Professor and former Head of the Dept. of History, Banaras Hindu University
Chair: Shri B.M. Pande
The lecture introduces the idea of rock paintings being not simply archaeological but also historical source material. This, it is argued, is because rock paintings continued to be the main means of symbolic recording of things and events, well-after scripts and writing came in being. The main common purpose of painting on rocks from prehistory to history, seems to be ‘remembering’, ‘commemorating’ and ‘memorializing’. The painted spaces constitutes socially and cognitively charged material which by means of being contemporary to the times of their creation is open to historical interpretation.
Prof. Apoorvanand and Dr Ananya Vajpeyi In Conversation with Suhas Borker
Prof. Apoorvanand is Professor of Hindi, University of Delhi. He is also a regular columnist and political commentator.
Dr Ananya Vajpeyi is Fellow and Associate Professor, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies. She works at the intersection of intellectual history, political theory and critical philology.
Suhas Borker is Convener Jan Prasar and Editor, Citizens First TV (CFTV)
This conversation marks the 32nd Anniversary of the Presidential Assent to the Prasar Bharati Act, 1990 and is the 29th discussion in the annual series.
(Collaboration: Jan Prasar)
Illustrated lecture by Dr. Charmaine O’Brien who researches and writes about the social and cultural history of food and eating. Internationally recognized for her work on Indian food history and culture, her books include The Penguin Food Guide to India, Recipes from an Urban Village and Flavours of Delhi and a forthcoming book on India’s changing foodways, Routes of Connection: Journeys through India’s contemporary foodscape
Chair: Rajesh Luthra
The talk will draw on Dr. O’Brien’s twenty-five years of experience researching and writing about India’s food and the transformation she witnessed in India’s foodways over that time, exploring how factors such as urbanisation, the changing role of women, globalisation and technology, have affected this change. The key theme of the talk will be the movement of food in India from its preparation and eating ‘inside’ the home to the increasing use of ‘outside’ food: pre-prepared convenience foods and meals, online food delivery, boom in cafes and restaurants, etc.
From Shanties to School: A Silent Movement
By Manimala Roy (Konarak Publishers: 2019)
Discussants: Amb. Reena Pandey, former Ambassador to Armenia; Prof. C.B. Sharma, Professor, School of Education, IGNOU and former Director, NIOS; Prof. Prasannanshu, Professor of English, National Law University, Delhi; and Dr. Manimala Roy, Principal, Basava International School, Delhi and author of the book
Moderator: Dr. Renu Tomar, Assistant Registrar, GGSIPU, Delhi
Lifestyle and Liver
Speaker: Dr. Ajay Kumar, Chairman and Head of Department, BLK-Max Institute of Digestive & Liver Diseases, Chairman – Pan Max – Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Liver like the heart, kidney, and lungs is a vital organ of the human body. Thus to keep the body healthy, it is important to also keep the liver healthy. For this, it is important to be aware of and practice what is good for the body. Liver diseases are on the rise in India and across the world. A large number of these diseases can be prevented, if we practice the right lifestyle, consume clean water, nutritious food & practice selective prevention by immunization.
Dr. Ajay Kumar has wide knowledge and experience in this field. He will reflect upon the importance of all the issues which impact our liver and thus impact our body's health and well-being.
A talk by Dr. Jahnavi Phalkey, filmmaker and historian of science and technology, Founding Director, Science Gallery Bengaluru
And In Conversation with Amb. Bhaskar Balakrishnan, former Indian Ambassador to Greece and Cuba, Science Diplomacy Fellow, RIS
Chair: Amb. Bhaskar Balakrishnan
Nothing to See Here: Situating the Study of Nagpur Bhosle Architecture within Indian Heritage and History
Illustrated lecture by Dr. Cathleen Cummings, Associate Professor, The University of Alabama at Birmingham
Chair: Shri K.N. Shrivastava, Director, IIC
When the 1904 Ancient Monuments Preservation Act was passed, the temples of the Bhosle family of Nagpur were little more than a century old. Many were still “living sites”, rather than archaeological monuments no longer in active use. The Act, although making provision for Hindu temples still in worship, was overarchingly concerned with the discovery, classification, and preservation of India’s deep historical past. To the present day, almost all of the eighteenth and early nineteen-century temples and wadas if Nagpur remain neglected: it is not under the protection of any heritage “register”; is unknown even to many Nagpurkars; and has been largely left unstudied by historians of art and architecture. As a case study, this presentation explores some of the key ideas affecting our classifications of “heritage”, “history”, “monument”, and “living”, site in India
The Arab Spring that Was and Wasn’t
By K.P. Fabian (ICWA & Macmillan Education, New Delhi: 2022)
Discussants: Amb. T.C. A. Raghavan, former diplomat and Director General, Indian Council for World Affairs; Amb. Talmiz Ahmad, former diplomat, Visiting Distinguished Fellow, Observer Research Foundation and author; and Amb. K.P. Fabian, author of the book
Chair: Prof. Gulshan Dietl
Panelists: Amb. Rajiv Bhatia, Distinguished Fellow, Foreign Studies Programme at Gateway House, author of Indo-Myanmar Relations and former Indian Ambassador to Myanmar and Mexico and High Commissioner to Kenya, South Africa and Lesotho; Shri Kallol Bhattacharjee, Senior Assistant Editor, The Hindu, author of The Great Game in Afghanistan: Rajiv Gandhi, Gen. Zia and the Unending War; and Mr. Jaffarullah, Founding Member, Rohingya Human Rights Initiative who is presently a teacher at The National Institute of Open Schooling
Chair: Amb. K.P. Fabian, Distinguished Fellow, Symbiosis University and former diplomat
Myanmar is experiencing a time of trouble following the coup d’état carried out by the military on 1st February 2021 after the party it supported lost the election to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi whose party won the election. Since then the military has used brutal violence to put down resistance to its regime. So far, the international community, including the UN Security Council has failed to assist Myanmar in restoring democracy