Endosulfan Tragedy: The Inheritance of AfterBodies
An activist couple insists that making visible the invalids, the sick and the dying, and offering them as symbols of tragedy, is doubly unfair: a needless violence.
An activist couple insists that making visible the invalids, the sick and the dying, and offering them as symbols of tragedy, is doubly unfair: a needless violence.
Internet artist and entrepreneur Prayas Abhinav argues that an organic engagement with technology is possible only if we adopt it more fully and in a balanced manner.
A Body-Earth Rights activist examines the body in the macro and micro universes as well as in relation to Planet Earth.
A dancer and yoga practitioner reflects on the body’s happy state as an ideal to follow.
When Play Becomes Work, and Work, Play
A submariner, marathoner, Everest climber, social activist–this man pushes the body’s limits and seeks adventure in myriad forms
How have political narratives been able to brainwash citizens of our nation into developing a sense of fear and distrust? Why have we lost the conviction to have faith in our neighbours and why do we grow increasingly distant from them?
A collection of Priya’s art works showing her engagement with weaving, rafoogari, indigo dyeing, paper, natural fibres.
P.R.M as a haptic artist who was an unmatched promise, a thread of connection, in our divisive times
This ‘Basic Conversation’ is a part of the critical response of INTER-ACTIONS to the contemporary development models that have radically altered the way we deal with the basic human need of food. Our speed-infested time has filled the realm of food with exploitative, gendered, and even fatal enterprises. So, we find sodas and maggis selling best in the market, even as everyone knows they are harmful, and that their advertisements misrepresent. We see food processing centres becoming major agents of environmental pollution and degradation of nature. But what is the way out? Does critiquing alone help? Do protests bring awareness to producers or consumers of new age foods?
This ‘Basic Conversation’ is a part of the critical response of INTER-ACTIONS to the contemporary development models that have radically altered the way we deal with the basic human need of food. Our speed-infested time has filled the realm of food with exploitative, gendered, and even fatal enterprises. So, we find sodas and maggis selling best in the market, even as everyone knows they are harmful, and that their advertisements misrepresent. We see food processing centres becoming major agents of environmental pollution and degradation of nature. But what is the way out? Does critiquing alone help? Do protests bring awareness to producers or consumers of new age foods?