A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote The End of Imagination. The essay attracted worldwide attention as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity and conscience against nuclear weapons. Over the next three and a half years, she wrote a series of political essays on a diverse range of momentous subjects: from the illusory benefits of big dams, to the downside of corporate globalization and the US Governments war against terror. First published in 2001, The Algebra of Infinite Justice brings together all of Arundhati Roys political writings so far.
This revised paperback edition includes two new essays, written in early 2002: Democracy: Whos She When Shes at Home, that examines the horrific communal violence in Gujarat, and War Talk: Summer Games with Nuclear Bombs, about the threat of nuclear war in the Subcontinent.
A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote The End of Imagination.
The essay attracted worldwide attention as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity and conscience against nuclear weapons. Over the next three and a half years, she wrote a series of political essays on a diverse range of momentous subjects: from the illusory benefits of big dams, to the downside of corporate globalization and the US Governments war against terror.
First published in 2001, The Algebra of Infinite Justice brings together all of Arundhati Roys political writings so far. This revised paperback edition includes two new essays, written in early 2002: Democracy: Whos She When Shes at Home, that examines the horrific communal violence in Gujarat, and War Talk: Summer Games with Nuclear Bombs, about the threat of nuclear war in the Subcontinent.
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A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote The End of Imagination. The essay attracted worldwide attention as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity and conscience against nuclear weapons.
Over the next three and a half years, she wrote a series of political essays on a diverse range of momentous subjects: from the illusory benefits of big dams, to the downside of corporate globalization and the US Governments war against terror. First published in 2001, The Algebra of Infinite Justice brings together all of Arundhati Roys political writings so far.
This revised paperback edition includes two new essays, written in early 2002: Democracy: Whos She When Shes at Home, that examines the horrific communal violence in Gujarat, and War Talk: Summer Games with Nuclear Bombs, about the threat of nuclear war in the Subcontinent. Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
A few weeks after India detonated a thermonuclear device in 1998, Arundhati Roy wrote The End of Imagination.
The essay attracted worldwide attention as the voice of a brilliant Indian writer speaking out with clarity and conscience against nuclear weapons. Over the next three and a half years, she wrote a series of political essays on a diverse range of momentous subjects: from the illusory benefits of big dams, to the downside of corporate globalization and the US Governments war against terror.
First published in 2001, The Algebra of Infinite Justice brings together all of Arundhati Roys political writings so far. This revised paperback edition includes two new essays, written in early 2002: Democracy: Whos She When Shes at Home, that examines the horrific communal violence in Gujarat, and War Talk: Summer Games with Nuclear Bombs, about the threat of nuclear war in the Subcontinent.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
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