Assertion

Every Name for the Christian Convert Is Incomplete

Rohan Arthur The Crude Fantasy In the imagination of the Hindu Rashtra, the Christian convert should not exist. Conversion is seen as a betrayal, a deviation from birthright, a wound on the body of the nation. In this worldview, the only acceptable path is return(ghar wapsi). If not return, then erasure. There is no place …

Features

Gentrification of the Night

Umar Nizar The night listens, with its soft palette of shadows. Daylight colours gradually lose their glistening sheen.  Life begins where death abates.  Images lurk in the embers of memory. Shadows emerge. Gazes soften, seeking that solace, beloved of the weary. In the smithy of the heart, intensities cool down, settling into primordial life rhythms. …

Features

Touré F. Reed on Race and Class Reductionism – Part 2

Pradnya Garud Touré F. Reed, professor of 20th-century US and African American History at Illinois State University, speaks with Round Table India on a wide range of topics related to US history and politics. In Part 2, he focuses on Race and Class Reductionism.  Pradnya: Racial identity is often seen as central to understanding social and economic inequalities …

Features Opinion

Touré F. Reed on Contemporary US Electoral Politics and White Nationalism – Part 1

Pradnya Garud Touré F. Reed, professor of 20th-century US and African American History at Illinois State University, talks to Round Table India on a wide range of topics about US history and politics. In Part 1, he delves into US electoral politics, focusing on white nationalism and its roots.  Pradnya: How would you describe the …

Features

Indigenous Muslims and Conversion to Islam: The myth and reality

Dr. Ohi Uddin Ahmed The spread of Islam in the Indian Subcontinent was one of the significant aspects of Indian History, but it received very little attention from historians and scholars at large. The consequent outcome of the absence of critical analysis formed a notable knowledge gap and perpetuated stereotypes as a result of some …

Features

Marital Crimes may have Something to do with the Caste Economy

Anitya Sanket Intimate partner violence (IPV) gained widespread attention during the COVID-19 lockdowns and has continued to feature prominently in public discourse. Mass layoffs, precarious and uncertain working conditions, and poor social security policies were shown to strongly correlate with increased instances of IPV during the pandemic and its aftermath. While the COVID-19 crisis should …

Features

Caste Consciousness and General-Category Youth in University Spaces

Buddhapal Dumane Caste is deeply ingrained in the social fabric of South Asian societies, has been a subject of scholarly inquiry, social activism, and policy debate for centuries. Rooted in historical inequalities and hierarchical structures, caste dynamics continue to shape individuals’ lives, communities, and opportunities in profound ways, despite efforts to address caste-based discrimination. Systemic …

Assertion

Contempt: The Quiet Engine of Caste’s Epistemic Machinery

Subham Malpani Growing up speaking Dakhni in Hyderabad, I often felt that the language did not reinforce the same moral hierarchies as the orthodox Telugu society. Dakhni carried playfulness, respect, and was deeply human in everyday exchanges. This is not to be confused with the sanitized Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb. I rarely remember seeing people getting offended …

Features

India’s Silent Walls: Education, Caste, and the Cost of Inequality

Ashutosh Arke India’s silent walls stand not as mere metaphors but as fortified ramparts of the Brahmanical order—walls built on centuries of caste tyranny, gender subjugation, and class exploitation. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar taught us that “education is the only tool by which you can dismantle the prison-house of caste.” Yet in today’s India, our schools …