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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalSangeeta Kampani is an Indian Revenue Service officer by profession and a raconteur by passion. The vast expanse of tractionless time that retirement brought in, came as a great opportunity for her to relive her teenage romance with words. One chapter ended only to begin a new one. She began by writing for the LiveWire section of ‘The Wire’ on a regular basis. February 2023 saw the release of her book ‘My Daughter’s Wedding’, an anthology of poems on power and patriarchy, issues that she is passionate about. Settled in the hub of Delhi, a monastic retreat is not for her. InterestinRead More...
Sangeeta Kampani is an Indian Revenue Service officer by profession and a raconteur by passion. The vast expanse of tractionless time that retirement brought in, came as a great opportunity for her to relive her teenage romance with words. One chapter ended only to begin a new one. She began by writing for the LiveWire section of ‘The Wire’ on a regular basis. February 2023 saw the release of her book ‘My Daughter’s Wedding’, an anthology of poems on power and patriarchy, issues that she is passionate about. Settled in the hub of Delhi, a monastic retreat is not for her. Interestingly, she never looks for solitude to write, finding inspiration rather in the humdrum of life. For her, the joy of work and the bliss of leisure are complementary, one enhancing the other. She enjoys having her fingers in many pies and is perfectly at ease writing while attending to small household details, for it is these so-called interruptions that shape the rhythms of her mind. A good, sparkling conversation with her husband and two children is her favourite evening pastime, often ending up as a starting point of her lyrical compositions.
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She is Mrs Sharma, shy, reticent, a homemaker. Steeped in tradition, she prioritises everyone’s needs over her own, the quintessential kitchen queen who is mostly taken for granted. Forever mapping the complex architecture of human relationships, she seldom speaks. But on her 70th birthday, she dips freely into the super sanctuary of her memories, allowing us access to the borewells of secrets she carries within. Her story is no anodyne account of the drudge
She is Mrs Sharma, shy, reticent, a homemaker. Steeped in tradition, she prioritises everyone’s needs over her own, the quintessential kitchen queen who is mostly taken for granted. Forever mapping the complex architecture of human relationships, she seldom speaks. But on her 70th birthday, she dips freely into the super sanctuary of her memories, allowing us access to the borewells of secrets she carries within. Her story is no anodyne account of the drudgery of her daily life, it has much heft to it. It is the story of a young girl who marries with dreams in her eyes, all those fragrant queenly vibes, imagining robes of lustrous silks and a lover by her side. After a honeyed honeymoon and that brief drunk-on-love glorious state, her world changes. Torpor settles in quickly, in fact, a deep sense of ennui. Once a vivacious, chirpy girl, she begins to understand that behind the beautiful brocades of the bride, there lies the dirty petticoat of politics. As life settles in, she sees the chasm between her dreams and reality widening and yet suffers her many humiliations with dignity, finding joy in raising her four children. Usually quiet as the evening sky, she speaks for once, her soul, long suppressed, finally finding utterance. So here is Mrs Sharma - part wife, part lover, part mother, part daughter and so much more. Discover her many layers, know her veneer beneath veneer.
What happens when women dream to achieve their highest potential? What are the invisible barriers that come their way as they break the glass ceiling? What kind of struggle awaits them when they marry and raise babies? How tough it is for them to prove themselves in a world that privileges men? ‘She is Shabnam’ tries to look into these key concerns by following the story of three generations of women, their indomitable will, their gentle strength, their un
What happens when women dream to achieve their highest potential? What are the invisible barriers that come their way as they break the glass ceiling? What kind of struggle awaits them when they marry and raise babies? How tough it is for them to prove themselves in a world that privileges men? ‘She is Shabnam’ tries to look into these key concerns by following the story of three generations of women, their indomitable will, their gentle strength, their unstoppable ways, their intuitive bond and the small changes that are creeping in, albeit slowly, as more and more women join the workforce, altering set norms, changing paradigms. Shabnam is at the centre of the story that goes back and forth to fathom the forces that shape her into the woman she is. She is a new age woman - earnest, ambitious, feisty, trying to surge ahead, stroke by relentless stroke. Yet she is no rebel. As she hits mid-thirties and is established at her work, she itches to have a companion to share life with and experience motherhood. Shabnam’s quest is not for a world where men and women are alike or even equal but a world where a vision of mutuality is the ethos shaping men-women interactions. The book is not about war of genders, it is about conciliation of genders. About pluralities and possibilities. Meet the very versatile Shabnam as she breaks her own mould to embody the essence of a woman in command. Unbothered, moisturised, happy, in her lane, focused, flourishing.
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