PUBLIC ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH LECTURES
Rising Phenomenon of Urban Flooding: Causes, Consequences and Sustainable Solutions
Speakers: Manu Bhatnagar, Principal Director, INTACH; Shyamal Sarkar, IAS (retd.), Distinguished Fellow and Director, Water Resources Division, The Energy Resource Institute (TERI); and Shri Jaideep Chatterjee, Dean, Jindal School of Art and Architecture, O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat
Flooding in urban areas is a growing concern worldwide as it is causing significant damage to human lives, the environment and economy. The damage is more evident in India because of the growing density of population in urban areas, including in the Tier – 1, 2, 3 and 4 cities. The discussion will discuss the possible solutions and strategies to mitigate and manage urban flooding with policy –level changes; green infrastructure; flood-resistant construction; planned well-maintained drainage system; and community involvement and alertness.
(Collaboration: Toxics Link)
Concert - Piano Recital
By Maestro Izumi Tateno
The artist will present a concert programme of works by Bach/Brahms; Scriabin; Nordgren; Koichiro Mitsunaga; and Takashi Yoshimatsu
(Collaboration: Embassy of Japan; and Delhi Music Society)
Book Discussion Group
Ukraine, Gaza, Taiwan…A World at War
By Ajay Singh (Pentagon Press: 2024)
Discussants: Lt. Gen. Syed Ata Hasnain (Retd.), PVSM, UYSM, AVSM, SM, VSM and former General Officer Commanding, 15 Corps (Srinagar) & Military Secretary; Amb. Anil Trigunayat, Distinguished Fellow, Vivekananda International Foundation and former Ambassador to Jordan, Libya and Malta; Ms Joyeeta Basu, Editor, The Sunday Guardian; and Col. (retd.) Ajay Singh, former Indian Army Officer and author of the book
Echoes of the Past: The Rock Art of Ladakh
Illustrated lecture by Ahtushi Deshpande, photographer and author of the recently published book Speaking Stones: Rock Art of Ladakh
Chair: Dr. Arshiya Sethi, dance scholar and author
Ahtushi Deshpande will present a journey through Ladakh’s hidden petroglyph galleries. These ancient imprints, scattered across Ladakh’s sprawling and often remote open-air galleries, offer tangible evidence of a history that predates recorded accounts. She will also draw comparisons with rock carvings from other regions, such as Utah and Arizona, to highlight the similarities and share intriguing stories.
Maharashtra Sanskritik Divas 2024
Outhouse (97 min; Hindi with English subtitles)
Director: Sunil Sukthankar
Produced by Dr. Mohan Agashe who will introduce the film
With Sharmila Tagore, Dr. Mohan Agashe, Jihan Hodar
Screening will be followed by a discussion with Hema Devare and Suhas Borker, co-conveners of the Maharashtra Sanskritik Divas
Nana, a retired single adamant old man, has no idea that an unwelcomed guest on his four - a puppy is going to change the course of his life. Aadima, a senior graphic designer artist, doesn’t have the faintest inkling that the same puppy is going to force her to go on adventures she otherwise wouldn’t. And Neel, her grandson has no clue that he is going to help Nana and Aadima understand the needs of elderly singles.
(Collaboration: Maharashtra Sanskritik ani Rannaniti Adhyayan Samiti)
Ending with a Crow: Bhushundi in the Ramcaritmanas of Tulsidas (and Beyond)
Illustrated lecture by Prof. Philip Lutgendorf, scholar of South Asia, Emeritus Professor of Hindi and Modern Indian Studies, University of Iowa and author of the award winning book The Life of a Text: Performing the Ramcaritmanas of Tulsidas (University of California Press: 1991), Hanuman's Tale: The Messages of a Divine Monkey (Oxford University Press, New York: 2006) among others
Chair: Prof. Ananya Vajpeyi, Fellow, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies
The poet-saint Tulsidas’s immensely popular retelling of the Ramayana saga, Ramcaritmanas (ca.1574 AD), is structured as an allegorical Himalayan sacred lake symmetrically bounded by four seven-tiered ghats. The narrators (in order of appearance) are the human author Tulsidas, the Vedic sage Yajnavalkya, the god Shiva, and a crow named Bhushundi. Whereas the first three are either human or (in Shiva’s case) divine-anthropomorphic, the final one is an avian form. Why did the poet choose this unusual figure to conclude whose epic narrative and to deliver, in effect, the “last word”?
(Collaboration: American Institute of Indian Studies)
Hindustani Vocal Recital
By Dhananjay Hegde from Mumbai, disciple of Pt. Venkatesh Kumar and Pt. Vinayak Torvi. Recipient of the Sanskriti-Madhobi Chatterji Memorial Fellowship
(Collaboration: Sanskriti Pratishthan)
Celebrating 25 Years of Music
With Susmit Sen, well-known music composer, guitarist and the founding member of the iconic band, Indian Ocean; and Krishnendu Bose, the National Award and multiple award winning documentary filmmaker. Together they will recreated some of the pieces that Susmit has composed for the films of Krishnendu, along with film clips and ending with the chilling Bay of Blood, the film on the Bangladesh genocide of 1971.
11TH CREATIVE THEORY COLLOQUIUM
Technology and Society: Hierarchies and Contestations
Inaugural session panel discussion: Technology of Future and Future of Humanity
Coordinator: Savita Singh
Speakers: Andrew Feenberg, American philosopher, Canada Research Chair in the Philosophy of Technology, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver; Douglas Kellner who works at the intersection of "third-generation" critical theory, George Kneller Chair in the Philosophy of Education, the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles; Andrew T. Lamas who teaches urban studies and critical theory at the University of Pennsylvania; Immaculada Kangussu, Faculty, Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Brazil; T.K. Naveen, Associate Professor (Multi. Disc.), Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT-Delhi; Anita Gurumurthy, Executive Director and Senior Fellow (Research & Policy Engagement), IT For Change; Ashok Vajpeyi, Hindi-language poet, essayist, literary-cultural critic, noted cultural and arts administrator, and a former civil servant; Manoranjan Mohanty, well-known political scientist, China scholar, and Distinguished Professor, Council for Social Development; Savita Singh, Professor and Director, School of Gender and Development, India Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), Delhi; and Manindra Nath Thakur, Associate Professor, Centre for Political Studies, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University
Chair: Manoranjan Mohanty
For details of the Colloquium, kindly please visit: https://fcsr.in
(Collaboration: Association of Creative Theory & Foundation for Creative Social Research; International Herbert Marcuse Society, USA; The Raza Foundation; and Shanti Sahyog)
Book Discussion Group
Celebrating Time Travel: An Anthology of Poems of Poets’ Childhood Memories
Edited by Amarendra Khatua and Mandira Ghosh (Authorspress: 2024)
Discussants: Dr. Usha Mujoo Munshi, Chief Librarian, IIC; Dr. Amarendra Khatua, Former Secretary, MEA & DG, ICCR & Poet, Diplomat & Editor of the book; and Ms. Mandira Ghosh, poet, researcher, writer, and co-editor of the book
Chair: Ms Rajni Sekhri Sibal, Writer & Former IAS Officer
