The double tragedy of Palestine ~ by S Prasannarajan; The truth about vaccination ~ by PR Ramesh and Siddharth Singh; Did China get away with creating a pandemic? ~ by Brahma Chellaney; The power of rudraksha ~ by Bibek Debroy; The hardest lesson ~ by Amita Shah; The cost of long Covid ~ by Ullekh NP; Whisperer ~ by Jayanta Ghosal; Loss and longing ~ by Nikita Doval; A passage to the void ~ by Madhavankutty Pillai; Roth unbound ~ by Sudeep Paul; ‘Writing is diving into the chaos’ ~ by Nandini Nair; The tragedy of a few good men ~ by Ullekh NP; The walking wounded ~ by Ira Mukhoty; Stargazer ~ by Kaveree Bamzai and more…
Open, a well-lit-window on India, addresses the progressive, globally minded reader, and tries to stay faithful to its promise of not dishing up regurgitated news or majoritarian opinion. Its clutter-free, vibrant design and superior visual content position Open among the best looking magazines in the world. Open set out to be original and stimulating, and stays true to that secret covenant with its readers. Written and edited for the sophisticated minds of modern India, Open, every week, captures the political, economic and cultural spirit of our times and tries to stay faithful to its promise of not dishing up recycled news or opinions. A smart magazine that makes its readers feel smarter, Open presents the best of narrative journalism in India. Cutting edge writing on politics, economy, society, culture, books, art, cinema, and sport makes it a magazine that is in a permanent conversation with India. Open is aimed primarily at the global-minded resident Indian reader, though its online offering (this website) gives its readership a more commanding geographical sweep, adding a loyal following outside India to its growing subscriber base and readership in the country. In some ways, Open is three magazines rolled into one neat, organic bundle. The first section of the magazine, called Openings, is a zippy selection and short analysis of the most relevant and interesting news of the week from around the world. The middle section has sharp features on politics, economy, society, international affairs, sports and much more. The final section, Salon, carries essays on culture, arts, books, cinema, music, theatre and food—plus a popular gossip column on Hindi cinema.