This is no mere cosmological fantasy that plays with ideas of culture or belief – it is a dense ecological ethnography that pushes against the limits of thought, opening up new possibilities for understanding human–non-human entanglements. The anthropologist Eduardo Kohn takes seriously the idea of a sentient ecology and crafts a compelling narrative of the forest as a coherent symbolic and communicative system that thinks and talks and conveys its intentions to all the life forms that know how to receive this communication. How Forests Think is a now classic anthropological study of the forests of the Ecuadorian Amazon and one of the communities that live in them, the Avila Runa. How rooftop gardens can potentially reduce the burden on India’s traditional food system.Watch: Domestic staff member gives emotional farewell at home to employer moving to a new city.Farewell to bookseller Mirza Yaseen Baig of Midland, who always greeted readers with recommendations.Bhima Koregaon: Anand Teltumbde walks out of jail after Supreme Court upholds bail order.Watch: Elephant runs amok during wedding photoshoot in Kerala temple. How communalism and climate change destroyed the lives of Muslim fishermen in a Gujarati village.‘Khakee: The Bihar Chapter’ review: In supercop-versus-gangster saga, fiction trumps the facts.How BJP used an Assamese historian’s imagination of the past to push its politics of polarisation.How the princely states, used by Britain to consolidate its empire, faded into obscurity.Hockey, India vs Australia, match 1 as it happened: Govers nets late winner, hat-trick for Akashdeep.Historian Nayanjot Lahiri on encountering Indian emperor Ashoka in a small coastal town in Thailand.
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