The Caravan is India’s first narrative journalism magazine. Stories are reported in a style that uses elements usually reserved for fiction—plot, characters, scenes and setting—to bring the subject to life. Like The New Yorker, The Atlantic and Granta, the context of a Caravan story is something more substantial. In India, this niche—one for the intellectually curious, the aesthetically inclined and the upwardly mobile, has remained vacant. That is, until The Caravan.
The Caravan
True media needs true allies. • India needs bold, fair journalism more than ever. We need allies like YOU.
The Intruders • How the oldest Hindi literary magazine made space for outsiders
Growing Pains • The Tunisian media navigates a nascent democracy
Still Life • A veteran photojournalist reflects on her itinerant career
True media needs true allies. • India needs bold, fair journalism more than ever. We need allies like YOU.
The Ministry of Truth • Why journalists will not notice the defanging of the RTI Act
Something Rotten • The Adityanath government’s targeting of journalists in Uttar Pradesh
Exporting Censorship • Tactics used to intimidate journalists in India are being replicated abroad
Block List • How Facebook helps silence Kashmiri voices
Missing a Beat • The state of writing about Hindustani classical music
JBIMS CELEBRATED PRATYAKSHYA 13.0
MAKING NEWS • How Anjana Om Kashyap, a star of Hindi news television, sells the new normal
MANUFACTURING NORMALCY • How the Indian media covered Kashmir
Make-in-India in Defence will help realise Pm’s $5 trillion economy dream • The ‘Indian Defence and Aerospace Summit 2019’ provided the perfect platform for Indian defence and global diplomatic sectors’ top names to interact on various issues.
BRITISH ENVOY SAYS SORRY
'INDIA , FRANCE TIES BASED ON TRUST'
DEATH OF A POLITICAL PRISONER • The unscathed humanity of SAR Geelani
In the Eye of the Storm • Revisiting a Chinese photographer’s work in the wake of his arrest
Resident Outsiders • Imagining homeland through Kipling and his contemporaries in colonial Bengal
THE BOOKSHELF
SHOWCASE
Editor’s Pick