The algebra of infinite justice

By: Arundhati RoyMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi Viking 2001Description: 299pISBN: 97806749115Subject(s): Nuclear weapons--Moral and ethical aspects | India | Ethics | Nuclear weapons--Political aspects | Dams--Political aspects | Dams--Social aspects | Politics and government | Economic history | Political essaysDDC classification: 824.914 Summary: A stunning collection of Arundhati Roy’s most powerful and controversial journalism. A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote the essay ‘The End of Imagination’, in which she said: “My world has died. And I write to mourn its passing.” The essay, as have all its successors, attracted worlwide attention, debate and acclaim as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity, conscience and passion. In the years since, the essays she has published in magazines and newspapers worldwide have reinforced this impression of a writer uniquely prepared in the modern world to use her fame and gifts in the cause of the voiceless and the overlooked. Those essays are gathered together here for the first time. Carefully revealed and closely argued, they demand to be read and discussed; they dispute, they challenge, they provoke and they uplift.
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A stunning collection of Arundhati Roy’s most powerful and controversial journalism.

A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote the essay ‘The End of Imagination’, in which she said: “My world has died. And I write to mourn its passing.” The essay, as have all its successors, attracted worlwide attention, debate and acclaim as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity, conscience and passion. In the years since, the essays she has published in magazines and newspapers worldwide have reinforced this impression of a writer uniquely prepared in the modern world to use her fame and gifts in the cause of the voiceless and the overlooked.

Those essays are gathered together here for the first time. Carefully revealed and closely argued, they demand to be read and discussed; they dispute, they challenge, they provoke and they uplift.

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