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The Age of Kali: Indian Travels and Encounters (1991)

Tekijä: William Dalrymple

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioMaininnat
8071227,274 (3.98)18
As he searched for evidence of Kali Yug, the "age of darkness" predicted by an ancient Hindu cosmology in a final epoch of strife and corruption, Dalrymple encountered a region that thrilled and surprised him. Venturing to places rarely visited by foreigners, he presents compelling portraits of a diverse range of figures. His love for the subcontinent comes across in every page, which makes its chronicles of political corruption, ethnic violence and social disintegration all the more poignant. The result is a dark yet vibrant travelogue, and a unique look at a region that continues to be marked by rapid change and unlimited possibilities as it struggles to reconcile the forces of modernity and tradition.… (lisätietoja)
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Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 12) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
The Age of Kali is a grim book that paints a horrid picture of a decadent India and the subcontinent in general. What was once a seat of one of the greatest civilizations in world is now slowly decaying riddled with corruption, crime, casteism, superstition, communal hatred and apathy of its populace as world enters the Age of Kali, last epoch in the cycle of universe when gods are in deep slumber and the annihilation of human race is nearing.

Providing an excellent guide to Indian subcontinent through the 1990s, in this travelogue William Dalrymple probes into the region’s problems and unravels the forces that have shaped them. These make for a very interesting read because Dalrymple leaves no stone unturned to complete his story and in some instances even risking his life to do so. He unveils an India where past co-exists with the present with often bizarre and sometimes horrifying practices being followed till today. From the badlands of Bihar where caste based politics has made the region rife with crime and the man behind it all: Lalu Prasad Yadhav to Rajasthan’s infamous Bhaveri Devi rape case where an agent of progress is gang raped for preventing a child marriage, from another of Rajasthan’s horrifying incident of Sati sacrifice that may have the complicity of an entire village to Kerala where exorcism is practiced and believed by even a highly qualified engineer, from the communal hatred fostered by the demolition of Babri masjid and the Krishna-loving motherly Rajmata who may have had hand in it to Sri Lanka where a two millennia old conflict between Tamil and Sinhalese people still rages on and has turned gruesome giving rise to terrorism, from Bangalore where people are slow and even hostile to the change to Goa where the indigenous population is still wary of Indians Dalrymple writes about it all in his lucid style which is interspersed with humour even in the most serious and possibly dangerous of situations.

The chapters on Pakistan and the North-West frontier were particularly interesting as Dalrymple unravels the region’s history right from the time of Alexander’s invasion and the majesty of the Gandhara era to present day where centuries of warfare has made bloodshed a part of daily life. In this book he takes you on a journey through both time and space and unfolds a subcontinent as seen never before even by the insiders. I just wish he had made an excursion into the Kashmir and the North East too for that would have made the book a complete guide on India.

After reading the book though, one might feel not much hope is left for Indian society which is fast descending into chaos. But a decade and a half since the book came out India has managed to bounce back and is doing surprisingly well, though many of the problems described by Dalrymple still plague the country. The sati is gone but superstition still rears its dirty head every now and then, casteism is still a part and parcel of daily life in the country, communal riots have become rarer but still an air of mistrust exists between the Hindus and Muslims and corruption has become so rampant that it has led to a country-wide revolution. But despite all this India still manages to not only survive but also thrive. Burdened by the weight of history and a million problems the country trudges on towards progress and is poised to become a major superpower in the 21st century.

Age of Kali provides an unbiased view of the subcontinent from the eyes of an outsider.
( )
1 ääni Adarsh_Nargundkar | Jun 12, 2016 |
Very readable travel book. Lots of interesting facts and titbits. Each chapter is devoted to a topic and most of those have to do with the deteriorating political scene in Bihar and UP, the debilitating caste system and other depressing but interesting subjects. In any other country these conditions would have led to revolution but for some reason the Indians grin and bare it.

The author has rubbed shoulders with a diverse set of people, Aristocrats, Politicians, Bourgeois, Proletariat. Former princes, intellectuals, thugs, the really down and out, including a virtual who's who of this part of the world. Imran Khan, Benazir Bhutto, Shoba De, Vijayraje Scindia, elements of the LTTE among others.

This is not your normal feel good, lovey dovey tourist book. He has exposed the virtual anarchy that goes for politics in Northern India and Pakistan. Some of the readings are truly grim and does not bode well for that part of the world. I only pray that this cancer is limited to that area and does not spread to the rest of the country. More importantly the people should band together to root out this cancer and the only way I see that happening is through some revolution.

In parts of UP and Bihar the exact conditions prevail as did in pre-revolution France and USSR which is a very autocratic and landed gentry in the form of landlords and the true have nots in the form of landless peasants or serfs who are forever bonded to their landlords. The whole family is bonded, the children receive no education and hence there is no light at the end of the tunnel for these people.

Bourgeios? Forget it, they have all fled this hell long ago. More frightening is this total anarchy where the roles of Politician, Thug/Murderer/Mafia Don and Policeman are totally interchangeable. A total breakdown of the entire system. The only way I see this change is through a revolution. The naxalite and maoist movements may be pre-cursors to this and I can only see this gaining momentum and exploding into some sort of full scale civil war and/or revolution.
  danoomistmatiste | Jan 24, 2016 |
Very readable travel book. Lots of interesting facts and titbits. Each chapter is devoted to a topic and most of those have to do with the deteriorating political scene in Bihar and UP, the debilitating caste system and other depressing but interesting subjects. In any other country these conditions would have led to revolution but for some reason the Indians grin and bare it.

The author has rubbed shoulders with a diverse set of people, Aristocrats, Politicians, Bourgeois, Proletariat. Former princes, intellectuals, thugs, the really down and out, including a virtual who's who of this part of the world. Imran Khan, Benazir Bhutto, Shoba De, Vijayraje Scindia, elements of the LTTE among others.

This is not your normal feel good, lovey dovey tourist book. He has exposed the virtual anarchy that goes for politics in Northern India and Pakistan. Some of the readings are truly grim and does not bode well for that part of the world. I only pray that this cancer is limited to that area and does not spread to the rest of the country. More importantly the people should band together to root out this cancer and the only way I see that happening is through some revolution.

In parts of UP and Bihar the exact conditions prevail as did in pre-revolution France and USSR which is a very autocratic and landed gentry in the form of landlords and the true have nots in the form of landless peasants or serfs who are forever bonded to their landlords. The whole family is bonded, the children receive no education and hence there is no light at the end of the tunnel for these people.

Bourgeios? Forget it, they have all fled this hell long ago. More frightening is this total anarchy where the roles of Politician, Thug/Murderer/Mafia Don and Policeman are totally interchangeable. A total breakdown of the entire system. The only way I see this change is through a revolution. The naxalite and maoist movements may be pre-cursors to this and I can only see this gaining momentum and exploding into some sort of full scale civil war and/or revolution.
1 ääni kkhambadkone | Jan 17, 2016 |
The writing is nice, to start with. After a while, it began to pall on me. I agree that William has traveled all over the sub-continent, and has met people from all walks of life. However, a book full of anecdotes about the crap that happens in the Indian sub-continent, South Asia, palls after a while. It is a little bit like "Slum Dog Millionaire", the guys who make the stuff get rich about writing about India's crappy side, a side that is not hidden from the world's view.

In the English, the word "Kali" is confusing, I thought it was about the Goddess Kali, not about India's KaliYug. It certainly is not about the flower - Kali either!

You cannot write Hindi in the English script and hope to achieve clarity.

In my view, while well written, this book does not provide clarity about anything Indian. ( )
  RajivC | Jul 29, 2012 |
Very interesting read, a series of articles on India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Reunion. They are grouped together in themes, which makes it a good book to dip into or to read in a oner. I particularly recommend Caste Wars, Up the Tiger Path, Imran Khan: Out for a Duck. ( )
  soffitta1 | Jan 27, 2010 |
Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 12) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
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The Age of Kali is a collection of peripatetic essays, a distillation of ten years' travel around the Indian subcontinent.
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As he searched for evidence of Kali Yug, the "age of darkness" predicted by an ancient Hindu cosmology in a final epoch of strife and corruption, Dalrymple encountered a region that thrilled and surprised him. Venturing to places rarely visited by foreigners, he presents compelling portraits of a diverse range of figures. His love for the subcontinent comes across in every page, which makes its chronicles of political corruption, ethnic violence and social disintegration all the more poignant. The result is a dark yet vibrant travelogue, and a unique look at a region that continues to be marked by rapid change and unlimited possibilities as it struggles to reconcile the forces of modernity and tradition.

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