kapoorekta.com

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home

Ekta Kapoor Awared Most Promising Entrepreneur of the Year 2009

E-mail Print PDF
Your Ad Here

Well-known television producer Ekta Kapoor will be presented the ‘Most Promising Entrepreneur of the Year 2009’ by Governor S C Jamir on Saturday at the Golden Jubilee Celebrations of Indo-American Society.

The function would be held at the Darbar Hall of Raj Bhavan in south Mumbai. The Indo-American Society has during the last 50 years promoted Indo-US relations in diverse areas and has facilitated people to people contact through cultural and educational exchanges.

Keshub Mahindra, Chairman of the Board of Patrons of the Indo-American Society, V. Rangaraj, President of the Society, Paul Folmsbee Consul General of the United States of America in Mumbai, V. Shankar, President of South Indian Education Society, Nana Chudasama, Past President and other invitees will remain present on the occasion.


Your Ad Here
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 

Key Concepts

Polls

Are You Waiting For Ekta's New Surprise
 

Who's Online

We have 18 guests online

Celebrities Photo

Kareena Kapoor Vogue Magazine Photoshoot_5
Description: Kareena Kapoor Vogue Magazine Photoshoot
Shilpa Anand_5
Description: Shilpa started her career as a software developer. Her sister name is Sakshi Anand, who pushed Shilpa to become an actress.
Anita Hassanandani_6
Description: Anita Hassanandani Aks
Kareena Kapoor Vogue Magazine Photoshoot_3
Description: Kareena Kapoor Vogue Magazine Photoshoot

Newsflash

Your Ad Here

SITA HAS NEVER been a particularly interesting female icon, especially to a city-bred generation that grew up with the alternately coy and weepy Deepika Chhikalia who was Ramanand Sagar’s version. The Mahabharata and its women, the strong-minded Kunti, the feisty Draupadi, have always seemed far more arresting, more complicated. But the Mahabharata was not “the book kept at home” – that privilege was (and is) accorded, as Namita Gokhale points out, to the Ramayana. The Sita trope recurs throughout Indian popular culture, from the pregnant Leela Chitnis thrown out of the house by a suspicious Prithviraj Kapoor in Awara to the heroines of Ekta Kapoor serials today. The submissive, self-sacrificing Sita we owe to Tulsidas became the nationalised version. “But Sita has been multifarious all along,” says Malashri Lal. “We just haven’t paid attention.” So she and Gokhale set out to reexamine Sita’s place in the Ramayana – and in our lives.

In Search of Sita forces the damsel-in-distress to jostle for space with the child strong enough to lift up the Bow of Shiva with one hand even as she swabbed a floor with the other. It places the model wife against (or alongside) the independent single mother. There’s an earthy Sita and an ethereal one; the lovelorn girl and the articulate spouse. Like the Bhojpuri women who sing their lives through her, we can all now have a Sita of our choosing.


IN SEARCH OF SITA: REVISITING MYTHOLOGY
Ed. Namita Gokhale and Malashri Lal
Penguin / Yatra

270 pp; Rs 399