IN A CHAPTER titled ‘Love’, Miniya Chatterji writes: ‘In this regard, we have a peculiar sense of modernity, where many families consider themselves modern in giving their sons and daughters the worst lessons of hypocrisy.’ This sentence in a sense captures the thematic thread that ties each of the 15 essays of this book. Addressing Survival, Evolution, Exploration, Procreation, Love, Parenting, Values, Nationalism, Democracy, Religion, Corporations, Money, Decibels, Aesthetics and Freedom, these essays try to understand how in each of these spaces we have diminished our ‘instincts’ for freedom and equanimity. They explore a palpable tension, or even a conflict, between tradition and modernity in our everyday lives. In trying to straddle both, we have, instead of evolving a synthesis, become saddled with a dysfunctional form of both.
Chatterji has…
