The WIP Contributors
February 2010

February 25, 2010

Dancing The Divide: Interview with Pakistani Peacemaker Sheema Kermani

Aditi Bhaduri

by Aditi Bhaduri
- India -


With her large flashing eyes rimmed with kohl and flowing hair, she is the quintessential dancer. Despite her chain-smoking, she is the picture of health and surprisingly agile. But then again, she has been breaking down traditional stereotypes for years as an acclaimed dancer in a country where dancing is frowned upon. Moreover, she has distinguished herself by performing "Hindu" dances in a country whose arch-rival is “Hindu India”.

February 22, 2010

Jeopardizing Children’s Health: Indian Markets Overrun with Toxic Toys

Lesley D. Biswas

by Lesley D. Biswas
- India -


The annual Bidhannagar Fair at Kolkata’s Central Park is a swarm of enthusiastic children and their parents. Amidst the tangle of toy vendors and the squeaking and jarring sounds of their toys, seven-year-old Khushi picks out a plastic doll. Brightly colored, the doll is Barbie’s clone, the only difference is that it costs a mere INR 30 (0.64 USD). It’s a cheap substitute for the popular brand and it’s dangerously toxic.

February 18, 2010

“Deeply Divided”: Sri Lanka through the Eyes of Adele Barker

Mandy Van Deven

by Mandy Van Deven
- India -


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During the year she taught Russian literature at the University of Peradeniya in Kandy, Sri Lanka, Arizona University professor Adele Barker found herself more comfortable in the role of perpetual learner than educator. Barker’s apt and thoughtful descriptions of being a fish out of water provide an excellent place of departure for the detailed exploration of the current social, cultural, and political struggles of her temporary home. In Not Quite Paradise: An American Sojourn in Sri Lanka she offers a profound historical reflection written with accessible prose and a desire to present an evenhanded look at the country’s precarious past—a past we continue to see play out in the immediate aftermath of a 26-year civil war and last week’s dissolution of the country’s Parliament.

Barker is aware of her own complicated position as a colonial outsider in the bittersweet story she shares, and smartly uses her power to leverage an increasing awareness of the challenges faced by this small South Asian country that has been persistently ravaged by conflict and a recent natural disaster that stunned the world.

February 15, 2010

Veteran Suicides: The Toll of Service and Search for Answers

Melissa Hahn

by Melissa Hahn
- USA -


In the USA, Memorial Day is to honor America's war dead. In recognition of Memorial Day, The WIP is re-featuring Melissa Hahn's February article on veteran suicides. These very brave men and women should not be forgotten. -Ed.

“The one thing you can never ask yourself is ‘why’, because with suicide there is never an answer.” Though my 83 year-old grandmother’s advice rings true, the question haunts me nonetheless: why did my cousin Kevin, a 26-year old Marine Lance Corporal, take his own life after returning from his second tour in Iraq?

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U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to the Arizona National Guardwork security on a street in Sharana, Afghanistan. Photograph by Staff Sgt. Dallas Edwards, flickr user The U.S. Army used under Creative Commons licenses.
I search for answers with his immediate family, but few clues are forthcoming. My father’s brother, a retired Navy pilot, is grieving quietly. My aunt, so proud of my cousin when he wore his dress uniform, is angry at him for being “so stupid.” Meanwhile, my own family stands lamely on the periphery – wanting to show our love and support, but incapable of entering that inner sanctum shared by those in the armed forces.
February 11, 2010

If There is Something to Desire:
Interview with Russian Poet Vera Pavlova

Anna Clark

by Anna Clark
- USA -


Why is the word yes so brief?
It should be
the longest,
the hardest,
so that you could not decide in an instant to say it,
so that upon reflection you could stop
in the middle of saying it.

So goes the entirety of the 17th untitled poem in Vera Pavlova’s new collection, If There is Something to Desire: 100 Poems. A bestselling poet in her native Russia, with her work translated into 19 languages, this is the first full collection of Pavlova’s to appear in English (though her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, and Tin House). Born in Moscow in 1963, Pavlova studied music at the Schnittke College of Music and the Gnessin Academy before turning to poetry in her twenties. The change was a rapid one: Pavlova published 72 poems in Segodnia, a Russian daily, which started a buzz that she was a literary hoax.

February 8, 2010

U.S. Stimulus Plan to Boost Geothermal Energy Prospects

Kimberly N. Chase

by Kimberly N. Chase
- USA -


In an unmarked meadow by the side of the road at The Geysers, the 30-square-mile steam field about 70 miles north of San Francisco, California, the air smells like sulfur. Clouds of steam drift up from fumaroles, or open holes of rapidly boiling brown water, and waft across the landscape carrying the smell of rotten eggs.

February 4, 2010

2010 Sundance Film Festival: A Cinematic Rebellion

Jessica Mosby

by Jessica Mosby
- USA -


Rebel was the theme of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. The message was everywhere: On screen before every film; on the front cover of the film schedule, which read “This Is Your Guide to Cinematic Rebellion”; and in the originality and creativity of almost every film selected by Sundance Institute President and Founder Robert Redford and Festival Director John Cooper for this year’s festival. Rebellion meant great films, particularly documentaries.

In addition to established competitive categories (U.S. Documentary, U.S. Dramatic Competition, World Cinema Documentary Competition, World Cinema Dramatic Competition, and Shorts) and non-competitive categories (Premieres, Spotlight, New Frontier, and Park City at Midnight), there was a new category for low-budget independent films appropriately titled Next. In every category, there were films whose themes seem particularly relevant for our time – films about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the recession and resulting unemployment, political revolutions, the search for environmental alternatives, and the incredible resilience of people when faced with extreme adversity.

February 1, 2010

India Sets Its Sights on Higher Education

Priyanka Bhardwaj

by Priyanka Bhardwaj
- India -


Education remains an emotional subject in a poor and developing country like India, where it is seen as the primary means for social and economic mobility. Indian families are known to sell land and spend their life’s savings to educate their children, especially males. Such desperation means that any change in the sector is a highly debated subject.