
New Books in Communications P. Thirumal and K. A. Nuaiman eds., "Inhabiting Technologies/Modernities: Media and Cultural Practices in South Asia" (Orient BlackSwan, 2025)
Mar 17, 2026
P. Thirumal, a media historian specializing in South Asian print and technology studies, and Carmel Christy K. J., a scholar of urban media and cinema tied to Kochi, discuss how media and technologies have their own lives. They explore telegraphy, archives, script politics, city cinema zones, and how technologies shape modernities across South Asia.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Telegraphy Rewrote 19th Century News Geography
- Telegraphy reshaped 19th-century journalism by turning geographic peripheries into information nodes, not just serving imperial commerce.
- Amiria's chapter links global telecommunication networks and newspaper practice to a broader globalization thesis.
Dalit Digital Archives Reframe Nationalist Memory
- Dalit activists used digital archives to create emancipatory histories challenging nationalist archival monopolies.
- P. Thirumal and Amulya's work shows grassroots digital archival practice reframes who counts in modern media memory.
Singular Modernity Hides Local Media Variations
- The 'singular modernity' narrative treats technologies as arriving fully-formed from Europe and masks how media manifest differently across cultures.
- Thirumal urges replacing a one-size modernity with multiple inhabiting modernities grounded in local practices.

