Thursday, July 14, 2011

Contemporary life of India : Part 3

It is impossible to know India without understanding its religious beliefs, living and    practices, which have a large impact on the personal lives of most Indians and influence public life on a daily basis. Indian religions have deep historical roots that are recollected by contemporary Indians.





Aspiring models pose for the camera.
Many urban teenagers in India get
portfolio photos taken in hopes of a career
in modeling, a very lucrative profession in
India.





In Uttar Pradesh, a roadside
vendor displays a variety of salted savories.




Sunday, July 10, 2011

Contemporary life of India : Part 2

It is impossible to know India without understanding its religious beliefs, living and    practices, which have a large impact on the personal lives of most Indians and influence public life on a daily basis. Indian religions have deep historical roots that are recollected by contemporary Indians.





At a roadside bazaar in Jaipur, framed
images of popular Hindu gods. Thousands of
such prints are sold throughout India each
year for less than U.S. $1 each.





The rickshaw remains the
cheapest mode of transport in India and may
be observed just about everywhere, from congested
city streets as here to dusty country
roads.





The rickshaw remains the
cheapest mode of transport in India and may
be observed just about everywhere, from congested
city streets as here to dusty country
roads.


Sunday, July 3, 2011

Contemporary life of India : Part 1


It is impossible to know India without understanding its religious beliefs, living and    practices, which have a large impact on the personal lives of most Indians and influence public life on a daily basis. Indian religions have deep historical roots that are recollected by contemporary Indians.





Modern-day sadhu (ascetic), wearing only

beads with his face caked in ash, raises his
hand in blessing to the unknown photographer.
According to Hindu mythology, his
beads, or rudraksh, have medicinal powers.





In Calcutta, now known as Kolkata,
the Victoria Museum. Built at the behest
of Lord George Curzon (one of the
British Raj’s most flamboyant and much
derided viceroys) and of marble from the
same quarry that had supplied the builders
of the Taj Mahal in the seventeenth century.





Throughout India’s
numerous and varied states, images of the
old and the new constantly converge.





On a crowded city
street, the multitude of life that is India.