Women Unlimited: 5 books

Cover of Engaging with Empowerment

Engaging with Empowerment

An Intellectual and Experiential Journey

by Srilatha Batliwala
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

In this fascinating collection of writings, Srilatha Batliwala, feminist thinker and practitioner, explores the many dimensions of what empowerment means for, and to, women. Looking back on a life lived through commitment to a cause—rather than to an organisation or to a sector—and working for it...
Cover of Distant Traveller

Distant Traveller

New and Selected Fiction

by Attia Hosain
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

The accidental discovery of chapters from an unfinished novel and of unpublished stories, made the publication of this anthology of Attia Hosain’s new and selected fiction an inevitability.Attia’s two worlds the Lucknow she grew up in and the London she later lived and worked in intersect and mesh...
Cover of A Chughtai Quartet: Obsession, The Wild One, Wild Pigeons, The Heart Breaks Free
by Ismat Chughtai
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

The four novellas in this volume span the inimitable Ismat Chughtai’s literary career, from 1939 to 1971. Each one develops the author’s central preoccupation with the lives of women as they experience love, tragedy, societal prescriptions and proscriptions, in collision with their own rebellious...
Cover of Close-Up

Close-Up

Memoirs of a Life on Stage and Screen

by Zohra Segal
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

Zohra Segal’s no-holds-barred memoir is feisty, irreverent and candid — a ringside view of nearly a hundred years of her life on stage and screen, in India and England. In 1930 Zohra Segal struck out and went to Germany to study modern dance at Mary Wigman’s Dance School in Dresden. It was a most...
Cover of Fallen Standing

Fallen Standing

My Life as a Schizophrenist

by Reshma Valliappan
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

Reshma was diagnosed with schizophrenia when she was 22. As she says, she didn’t ‘even know what the darn word meant’. In this extraordinary, first-of-its-kind account she writes about her experience of living with therapies and medication, struggling to make sense of her situation, surviving suicide...
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