The News Of Irrfan's Death Has Left Both The Film Industry And His Fans In Shock And Mourning. As We

The News Of Irrfan's Death Has Left Both The Film Industry And His Fans In Shock And Mourning. As We

The news of Irrfan's death has left both the film industry and his fans in shock and mourning. As we grieve the loss of this extraordinary artiste, we look back at his rich career path that bears a testimony of his struggles, triumphs and consistent brilliance over three decades.

More Posts from Prasannachoudhary and Others

9 years ago
IMG_8041 By Pooja Pant

IMG_8041 by Pooja Pant

9 years ago
Untitled By Ivana Stojakovic Via Flickr:

Untitled by Ivana Stojakovic Via Flickr:

12 years ago

Skysoaked: Jibanananda Das

Reblogged from translations:

Suranjana, you better not go there You better not talk to that young man Come back, Suranjana When silver starfire fills the night

Come back to this meadow, this wave Come back here to my heart Don’t go away with him anymore Fa…

View Post

11 years ago

Lacey Roop - “For Billy” (WoWPS 2014)

"Crack the glowsticks in your halo. Burn so beautiful that if the sun ever looked at you he’d go blind." Performing during prelims at the 2014 Women of the World Poetry Slam.

9 years ago
IMG_8020 By Pooja Pant

IMG_8020 by Pooja Pant

9 years ago

(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSal-ms0vcI)

12 years ago

What I went looking for was an answer to a deeper question about the metaphoric holes left in a person, a family or a community by murderous acts, whether by guns, knives, or bare hands. If nothing else, talking about guns can serve as a beacon, starting me on the road toward answering the question: Why do Americans kill so much? […] There are two kinds of social capital—bonding and bridging—and each impact a society differently. Bonding capital is what you get within a given group. These tend to be closer and more reliable bonds that form the foundation of our social capital. Yet bonding social capital is not always positive: Tight-knit groups can turn insular, reaching their logical conclusion in gangs and militias but with negative effects found in everything from families to groups of friends to certain kinds of religious communities. In contrast, bridging social capital reaches across a societal divide such as race, region or religion and is by nature weak. But it also promotes empathy and tolerance and enlarges our radius of trust, allowing us to see other people as people, not as a faceless other. This sense of bridging a divide is especially important in the U.S. because, contrary to popular opinion, we regularly put the needs of the group ahead of the needs of the individual in a way Europeans don’t. In surveys, Western Europeans are more likely than Americans to say citizens should follow their conscience and break an unjust law or that citizens should defy their homeland if they believe their country is acting immorally. On the other hand, Americans are more likely to believe they control their own fate and to believe in a more laissez-faire relationship with the state. It’s a more complex mix than our myths allow for, and the end result is that it can be hard to fathom just how different Americans are from the rest of the world. […] Perhaps, like a true original sin, groups in power in the U.S. have systematically destroyed social capital in vulnerable communities and between groups of all kinds in order to gain wealth and power and deny it to others. And perhaps they have done this in more ruthless fashion than in other comparable cultures. This could explain why the murder rate in New York has been more than five times higher than London’s for 200 years, though the American propensity for violence reaches even farther back than that, going all the way back to frantic religious refugees with visions of the Apocalypse both at their back and before their eyes.

Bad Land – Nathan Hegendus explores the social psychology underpinning gun culture in America.

Also see Stephen King on gun control and violence.

(via explore-blog)

9 years ago
Our Quote Of The Day Is From The Irish Poet W.B. Yeats

Our quote of the day is from the Irish poet W.B. Yeats

9 years ago

"One resists the invasion of armies; one does not resist the invasion of ideas." ― Victor Hugo, born on this day in 1802

"One Resists The Invasion Of Armies; One Does Not Resist The Invasion Of Ideas." ― Victor Hugo, Born
prasannachoudhary - Wandering Mind
Wandering Mind

'Naitaavad enaa, paro anyad asti' (There is not merely this, but a transcendent other). Rgveda. X, 31.8.

210 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags