
‘Digitisation of cartoons has made cartoonists accessible as well as vulnerable’ Premium
The Hindu
Ritu Gairola Khanduri, author of Caricaturing Culture in India, is a historian and anthropologist. An Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Texas, Arlington, Ms. Khanduri spoke to The Hindu on the exhibition, the changing landscape of cartoons, and the future of editorial cartoons.
Ritu Gairola Khanduri, author of Caricaturing Culture in India, is a historian and anthropologist. An Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Texas, Arlington, she is also the curator of an exhibition featuring the works of renowned cartoonist Enver Ahmed at the Indian Institute of Cartoonists, Bengaluru. The exhibition is on till 5th of August.
Ms. Khanduri spoke to The Hindu on the exhibition, the changing landscape of cartoons, and the future of editorial cartoons.

Over the decades, the Anglo-Indian Grand Christmas Ball in Chennai has stepped into many venues, from Railway enclaves to private halls. It has left an indelible mark on some of these venues, Faiz Mahal and Shiraz Hall, both in Egmore, counted among them. This Christmas Day (December 25), Faiz Mahal is playing host to yet another Grand Christmas Ball. The soiree is organised by Anglo-Indians but by no means restricted to them. In these times of dwindling Anglo-Indian presence even in enclaves with a distinctive Anglo-Indian flavour, this event signifies an effort to preserve a cultural tradition that has enriched Chennai












