Author | Kavita Puri |
---|---|
Audio read by | Kavita Puri [1] |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Subject | Partition of India |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Publication date | 11 July 2019 |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 320 |
ISBN | 978-1-4088-9907-6 |
Partition Voices: Untold British Stories is a non-fiction book by Kavita Puri, published in 2019 by Bloomsbury Publishing. The book includes interviews with British people originating from the Indian subcontinent, who witnessed the 1947 partition of India.
In 2017, Puri produced a three-part documentary series, Partition Voices, for BBC Radio 4, about witnessed the partition and subsequently migrated to Britain. [2] [3] The series won the Royal Historical Society's Radio and Podcast Award and its overall Public History Prize. [2] The book, Partition Voices: Untold British Stories, is based on the series. [2] [4] It contains interviews with about two dozen British people who witnessed partition, including the author's father. [5] [6]
Partitian Voices earned positive critical reviews. In Literary Review , John Keay called it a "heartfelt and beautifully judged book". [5] A review in The Hindu described it as "an important document of those turbulent times — raw and unbiased," [6] while a review from Scroll.in praised it as "an important milestone in the Partition project because it ascribes importance to the British-South Asian dynamic and talks about the shared history of these two nations without villainising or glorifying either side."
The Kama Sutra is an ancient Indian Hindu Sanskrit text on sexuality, eroticism and emotional fulfillment in life. Attributed to Vātsyāyana, the Kama Sutra is neither exclusively nor predominantly a sex manual on sex positions, but rather was written as a guide to the art of living well, the nature of love, finding a life partner, maintaining one's love life, and other aspects pertaining to pleasure-oriented faculties of human life. It is a sutra-genre text with terse aphoristic verses that have survived into the modern era with different bhāṣyas. The text is a mix of prose and anustubh-meter poetry verses. The text acknowledges the Hindu concept of Purusharthas, and lists desire, sexuality, and emotional fulfillment as one of the proper goals of life. Its chapters discuss methods for courtship, training in the arts to be socially engaging, finding a partner, flirting, maintaining power in a married life, when and how to commit adultery, sexual positions, and other topics. The majority of the book is about the philosophy and theory of love, what triggers desire, what sustains it, and how and when it is good or bad.
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