EPW and the Thinking Indian

A magazine that represents an emphatic triumph of content over form has just lost an editor.
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The British historian EP Thompson once remarked that 'India is not an important country, but perhaps the most important country for the future of the world. Here is a country that merits no one's condescension. All the convergent influences of the world run through this society: Hindu, Moslem, Christian, secular; Stalinist, liberal, Maoist, democratic socialist, Gandhian. There is not a thought that is being thought in the West or East which is not active in some Indian mind'.

Thompson must have been reading the Economic and Political Weekly, the Bombay journal where these thoughts and influences converge and meet. Rich in information and glowing with polemic, its pages are an index to the life of India. On subjects as diverse (and important) as the economy, caste politics, religious violence, and human rights, the EPW (as it is fondly known) has consistently provided the most authoritative, insightful and widely cited reports and analyses. Among the journal's contributors are scholars and journalists, but also activists and civil servants—and even some politicians.

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