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Marginlands : Indian landscapes on the brink / Arati Kumar-Rao.

By: Material type: TextTextNew Delhi : Picadar India, an imprint of Macmillan Publishing India, 2023Description: xii, 240 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (black & white) ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9789395624435 (hbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 304.280954 KUM 020821
Contents:
part I. The desert. A liquid memory -- The landscape of loss -- part II. Veins of our land. The Farakka folly -- A fleeting flash of fin -- Hunting with dolphins -- Fading to black -- part III. An eroding margin. On the brink of brine -- Jewels by the sea -- Eating up the coast -- The tiger's lair -- part IV. The third pole. When the glaciers disappear -- A coup on the roof of the world -- Into the hidden land -- part V. The sound of cities. Where the wild things still are -- Listening to landscapes -- Epilogue: Learning to see.
Summary: In the boundless Thar, deemed a ‘wasteland’ by the authorities, miners bulldoze sand dunes guarding life-sustaining water. The Gangetic dolphin, once a thriving apex predator, struggles for survival as its riverine habitat is fragmented by dams and roiled by incessant shipping. Deep in the mangrove forests of the Sunderban, tigers prey on desperate crab-catchers. Encroachments on the Mumbai coastline unleash cataclysmic floods. Along the eroding beaches of Kerala, fishers live in fear of the sea swallowing them whole. As the spectre of climate change compounds these natural and human-induced disasters, India’s most endangered landscapes are pushed to the precipice of destruction. Arati Kumar-Rao journeys to these marginlands, listening intently to their inhabitants, paying close attention to each fissure, fold and ripple, as she documents the misguided decisions, wilfully ignored warnings and disregarded evidence that have brought us almost to a point of no return. But the land is still rich in ancient wisdom, and its cracks hold lessons that may yet aid us in undoing centuries of slow violence – so long as one is willing to attune their senses. Combining enthralling nature writing and journalism with immersive art and photography, Marginlands is an urgent, vital work by a passionate chronicler of our environment.--Publisher's website.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals April 2024
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 304.280954 KUM 020955 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 020955
Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 304.280954 KUM 020821 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 22/05/2024 020821

Includes bibliographical references (pages 234-238).

part I. The desert. A liquid memory -- The landscape of loss -- part II. Veins of our land. The Farakka folly -- A fleeting flash of fin -- Hunting with dolphins -- Fading to black -- part III. An eroding margin. On the brink of brine -- Jewels by the sea -- Eating up the coast -- The tiger's lair -- part IV. The third pole. When the glaciers disappear -- A coup on the roof of the world -- Into the hidden land -- part V. The sound of cities. Where the wild things still are -- Listening to landscapes -- Epilogue: Learning to see.

In the boundless Thar, deemed a ‘wasteland’ by the authorities, miners bulldoze sand dunes guarding life-sustaining water. The Gangetic dolphin, once a thriving apex predator, struggles for survival as its riverine habitat is fragmented by dams and roiled by incessant shipping. Deep in the mangrove forests of the Sunderban, tigers prey on desperate crab-catchers. Encroachments on the Mumbai coastline unleash cataclysmic floods. Along the eroding beaches of Kerala, fishers live in fear of the sea swallowing them whole. As the spectre of climate change compounds these natural and human-induced disasters, India’s most endangered landscapes are pushed to the precipice of destruction. Arati Kumar-Rao journeys to these marginlands, listening intently to their inhabitants, paying close attention to each fissure, fold and ripple, as she documents the misguided decisions, wilfully ignored warnings and disregarded evidence that have brought us almost to a point of no return. But the land is still rich in ancient wisdom, and its cracks hold lessons that may yet aid us in undoing centuries of slow violence – so long as one is willing to attune their senses. Combining enthralling nature writing and journalism with immersive art and photography, Marginlands is an urgent, vital work by a passionate chronicler of our environment.--Publisher's website.

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