Sunday, 7 October 2012

Caffeine for a City

The Mumbai Suburban Railway network, referred as the "Local, by Mumbaikars, has the highest passenger density compared to any other urban railway system in the world, and is the oldest railways system in Asia.
Rightly called the 'Pulse of Mumbai', the four railway lines comprising the network act as arteries and veins of the city, transporting populations where they are required.
The Local is the caffeine that keeps Mumbai awake to make it the city that it is.
I'd heard Bombay never sleeps



















Sunday, 30 September 2012

Trance Ganesha

Every Ganapati Visarjan, Mumbai comes alive. While the city bids adieu to its beloved elephant god, its citizens throng the streets - singing and dancing in joy.
As you manouver the city in a taxi, which you know you're gonna pay double than you normally would, waves of Bollywood remixes, house music, Justin Beiber and dhol beats combine to produce energy that pulsates, vibrates, breathes through you.
                                           And then you reach Haji Ali.
This pandal and the devotees who come here groove to music few would associate with Ganapati, religion or even India for that matter; for these choose to express their devotion for the Lord through - Trance.


Devantakanashakarin: Destroyer of Evils and Asuras
Rudrapriya: Beloved of Lord Shiva
Shadows in trance
Lamakarna: Large-eared Lord
Vignaharta: Demolisher of obstacles
Manomay: Winner of hearts
Until next year...
--
Help me continue bringing you untold stories through photos and films. Become my Patron. Follow the link: https://www.patreon.com/prashansa

Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Out! My first book cover!

Edited by Minal Hajratwala, Out! is the latest anthology of Queer literature to come out of India. Published by India's first queer publishing house Queer Ink, readers have called it 'One of the best things that happened in the field of queer publication. A collector's item!' Follow this link to get a copy for yourself here.


In Bengaluru, a law student falls in love as the nation’s highest courts decide whether his love is legitimate. In Mumbai, a film star and a parent discuss their own journeys of “coming out” as advocates of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender movement. In rural Kerala, two girls row a small boat and feel their hearts open. These are the lives of queer Indians today: poignant, gripping, and occasionally even hilarious. Through their original and unforgettable stories, penned by the community’s master storytellers as well as emerging writers, Out! offers a glimpse beyond the closet doors – and into the lives and dreams of India’s most misunderstood minority. Editor Minal Hajratwala is the author of Leaving India: My Family’s Journey From Five Villages to Five Continents. The book won a Pen USA Award, an Asian American Writers Workshop Award, a Lambda Literary Award, and a California Book Award, and was shortlisted for the Saroyan International Writing Prize. She spent the 2010-2011 academic year in Mumbai as a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar researching a novel, while also writing poems about the unicorns of the ancient Indus Valley. She is a writing coach, and her own creative work has received numerous awards. As a journalist, Minal has worked for eight years at the San Jose Mercury News and was a National Arts Journalism Program fellow at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. She is a graduate of Stanford University. Minal spends her time between Bangalore and San Francisco.