-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-
-
-
Meeting Maria
The bottles clanked. I hadn’t met her in years. But I was no longer able to take what was happening to me. And so, I gathered the courage and asked Maria for the meeting. This arrangement was meant to take the edge off. She chose something light for the occasion, but knowing the context of…
-
Covid-19: A win for disaster capitalism and loss for the climate
If six months ago someone had proposed shutting down the whole world to resolve a crisis, they would have been laughed off. In times of shock, impossible ideas suddenly seem possible and, more often than not, it’s the corporations that reap the benefits of that possibility. This theory of disaster capitalism was discussed by Canadian…
-
The Team
Stormageddon is quite pissed at the boy. “What the heck is taking him so long?” he wants to yell into thin air but reserves himself at the last moment. Instead he makes a livid growling sound. He is lying down on the dirty jagged sidewalk. Stormageddon looks up at the waning crescent moon competing with…
-
A millennial’s tribute to Rabindra Sangeet
Scientists are still trying to invent time machines. But it has been here for a while now, hidden in plain sight. Remember that song which was the very first thing your father played in the morning when you were 6? Right now it’s raining cats and dogs and the whole city is immobile and kind…
-
Why are our guardianship laws still so patriarchal?
This week, the High Court ruled that student information forms for examinations with the name of the student’s mother or any legal guardian instead of the father must be accepted, and that the refusal to provide admit cards to students who have not used their father’s name in forms was illegal and unconstitutional. This is…
-
HC on Narsingdi assault: A country for the ‘civilised’?
Famous mountaineer Wasfia Nazreen popularly said that it was more difficult to walk on the streets of Dhaka as a woman than it was to scale a mountain. I have not done anything nearly as brave as climbing a mountain, but I know how mentally taxing and stress-inducing it is to simply exist as a…
-
Durga Puja as I Remember It
“Is this how it’s going to be from now on?” I asked myself before making peace with the fact that Puja doesn’t feel the same anymore. In a full somersault from denial to acceptance, I have let the inescapable monotony of adulthood set in. I remember the time when I used to wait for Durga…
-