50 episodes

The history of India told through the lives of 50 phenomenal people.

Incarnations: India in 50 Lives BBC Radio 4

    • History

The history of India told through the lives of 50 phenomenal people.

    Dhirubhai Ambani: Fins

    Dhirubhai Ambani: Fins

    Professor Sunil Khilnani from the King's India Institute in London, on the life and legacy of the Indian business tycoon Dhirubhai Ambani, founder of Reliance Industries. The son of a penurious schoolteacher, Ambani credited himself with an almost animal instinct for trading, coupled with a steel trap memory and an appetite for audacious risk. Today fifteen per cent of all India's exports go out in his company's name. It's the ultimate rag to riches story, mixed with street cunning and dazzling deals. In one case, which began with a tip from an underworld don, Ambani executives were accused of violating the Official Secrets Act by possessing sensitive Cabinet documents, including a draft national budget. A joke quickly did the Delhi rounds: the budget wasn’t leaked to Reliance; Reliance had leaked the budget to the ministry.
    Producer: Mark Savage
    Editor: Hugh Levinson

    • 14 min
    MF Husain: Hindustan Is Free

    MF Husain: Hindustan Is Free

    Professor Sunil Khilnani, from the King's India Institute in London, looks at controversy over the Indian artist MF Husain, who spent the last days of his life in exile. Husain is considered by some to be the face of modern art in India but not necessarily by people in India itself. Husain died in his nineties having completed around ten thousand works. His paintings often attracted high prices but he became a target for mob anger over his portraits of Hindu goddesses and Indian feminine icons. Female deities had often shown nude in traditional art, but what enraged right-wing Hindus was that these images were created by a Muslim artist. "Had Husain been less popular beforehand, he probably would have been less hated." says Professor Khilnani.
    Producer: Mark Savage

    • 14 min
    Charan Singh: A Common Cause

    Charan Singh: A Common Cause

    Professor Sunil Khilnani, from the King's India Institute in London, explores the life and legacy of Charan Singh, the lawyer turned politician who championed the cause of India's farmers. Singh is remembered today as the politician who took on Indira Gandhi in the Congress Party’s heartland state. Uttar Pradesh. He redistributed power and altered the social structure of Northwest India, non violently. And he helped the world see the potential of the Indian farmer a bit more clearly. He succeeded in becoming India's first peasant prime minister but went from the highest office in a flash, replaced by his nemesis Indira Gandhi. Although today he is most often remembered for being a leader of his own caste, Professor Khilnani argues that Charan Singh has a unique status in Indian history.
    Producer: Mark Savage

    • 14 min
    Satyajit Ray: India without Elephants

    Satyajit Ray: India without Elephants

    Sunil Khilnani explores the life and work of filmmaker Satyajit Ray.
    In the history of Indian cinema, there is a Before Ray, and an After. As Sunil Khilnani says, “he’s the first truly modern filmmaker we have.” But Satyajit Ray’s career in India might not have continued past its first few films had he not been celebrated in the West.
    In his native Bengal, several of his films were popular. More were loathed. In today’s thriving Bengali film culture, he’s often held at arm’s length: the guy who served it up for the West, and served it up a little sweet.
    But Ray’s films made ideas hanging in the air feel fresh, for he brought to them an unusually large range of small gifts: psychological and sensory acuity, humour, humanism, a deep appreciation of family relationships, an ability to withhold judgement, an ear equally adept at dialogue and sound, and the visual imagination of a third-generation illustrator and photographer. These were sufficient to allow him, time and again, to achieve a realism few in Indian cinema wanted to meet.
    “It’s the truth in a situation that attracts me,” he told his actors. “And if I’ve been able to show it, that's enough for me.”
    The result was a body of work of which the director Akira Kurosawa would remark, “Not to have seen the cinema of Ray means existing in the world without seeing the sun or the moon.”
    Producer: Martin Williams

    • 13 min
    Indira Gandhi: The Centre of Everything

    Indira Gandhi: The Centre of Everything

    Professor Sunil Khilnani, from the King's India Institute in London, looks at the life of Indira Gandhi, India's first woman prime minister, whose darkest moment was a two year period known as "the emergency". Jails filled up with her critics while journalists and editors were detained alongside the political opposition. Those arrested could be held without trial and and she attempted to reduce the birth rate by offering men incentives to be sterilized. "Indira Gandhi in many ways issued the greatest threat to democracy in independent India’s history," says Professor Khilnani, "weakening constitutional regularities established by her father. Yet the enduring effect of her rule was to open the state to a deeper and more accessible democracy".
    Producer: Mark Savage
    Music: Talvin Singh

    • 14 min
    Subbulakshmi: Opening Rosebuds

    Subbulakshmi: Opening Rosebuds

    Sunil Khilnani explores the life of south Indian singer MS Subbulakshmi.
    Subbulakshmi’s singing voice, striking from the start, would ultimately range three octaves. A perfectionist, she had the capacity to range across genres but narrowed over the years to what another connoisseur of her music has called a ‘provokingly small’ repertoire. In time, the ambitions of those who loved and profited from her combined with her gift to take her from the concert stage to film to the All-India Radio to near-official status as an icon of independent India.
    But, as Professor Khilnani says, “what was required of Subbulakshmi, in moving from South Indian musical celebrity to national cultural symbol, is deeply uncomfortable when considered through the prism of contemporary feminism.”
    Producer: Martin Williams

    • 14 min

Top Podcasts In History

Mandela: The Lost Tapes
Richard Stengel
Real Survival Stories
NOISER
Not Just the Tudors
History Hit
In Our Time
BBC Radio 4
Stuff You Missed in History Class
iHeartPodcasts
The History of Sri Lanka
The Ceylon Press

You Might Also Like

Empire
Goalhanger Podcasts
The Rest Is History
Goalhanger Podcasts
The Minefield
ABC listen
The Daily
The New York Times
The Rest Is Politics
Goalhanger Podcasts
Leading
Goalhanger Podcasts

More by BBC

6 Minute English
BBC Radio
6 Minute Vocabulary
BBC Radio
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
The English We Speak
BBC Radio
6 Minute Grammar
BBC Radio
BBC Inside Science
BBC Radio 4