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The Dialectic of Enlightenment: The Bengal Renaissance and the Forged Foundations of Postcolonial Indian Science and Technology

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The Hidden Price of Academic Leadership: Why Neutrality Should Not Be the Cost of a Voice

Throughout my academic journey, I have been fortunate to be offered several leadership roles. Each one has been deeply fulfilling, and each has come with a profound sense of humility. Yet every role has also carried an unspoken price—one that is rarely discussed openly in public or scholarly conversations about academic leadership. That price is the expectation of performative neutrality. Because leaders are seen as speaking for the institution, we are implicitly—or sometimes explicitly—told to relinquish a public voice. No provocative social media posts. No sharp public commentary on matters deemed “controversial.” The assumption is that institutional representation demands silence on the issues that matter most. Consider, for example, the ongoing Israeli military campaign in Gaza, which many scholars of decolonization and international law have described as genocidal. Or the broader pattern of U.S.-backed Israeli settler-colonial violence and aggression, including recent actions invo...

The Pedagogy of Pujarini

  The Pedagogy of Pujarini On Babasaheb's birthday, a note on the only literacy that matters: the literacy of our own investment in caste. A Savarna influencer's "media literacy" reels against a rural Bengali creator, read step by step, turn out to be an unintentional master class in caste, gatekeeping, and the feudalism at the heart of Internet 5.0 in India. I made myself watch every single one of Aishwarya Subramanyam's Instagram reels on Pujarini Pradhan. All of them. Twice, in some cases, because I wanted to be sure I was not being uncharitable. I was not. What Aishwarya — who posts as @otherwarya and has built a tidy following as an "internet-appointed truth speaker," to borrow a phrase from a glossy profile of her — calls "media literacy" is not media literacy. It is the sound of Savarna anxiety dressed in the borrowed vocabulary of critical theory, performed for an audience that has been trained to mistake vocabulary for analysis. ...