The Sunday Guardian

A book about men who broke the mould

- VISHNU MAKHIJANI

Aparna Jain is not only a certified Integral Master Coach but has also authored two female-centric books—one that takes a searching look at women in the workplace and the other showcasing role models for young girls, as also their parents—and a volume on family recipes. She has now turned her attention to men who broke the mould as males are also subject to partiarchy and tropes.

“Since the publicatio­n of Like A Girl (in 2018), there have been a number of books about Indian women. There was a time I was thinking of doing a Volume Two of Like a Girl. But Karthika, my publisher, rightly observed that there what we needed now were some stories about incredible and inspiring men,” Jain told IANS in an interview of the just-published Boys Will Be Boys

“I thought about it, and you know, men are also subject to the patriarchy. Not just tropes like “Boys Don’t Cry” or “Boys Don’t Wear Pink” but how men are subject from a very young age to be ‘successful’ to live their lives; to pursue a certain type of career; to be a certain type of man; toxic masculinit­y actually. So, it was important to showcase men who broke the mould,” Jain added.

To this end, the book chronicles the lives of 45 Indian men who followed their heart and dared to be different—soldiers (Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, 2nd Lt. Arun Khetrapal), a sailor who circunavig­ated the globe (Commander Abhilash Tomy), a designer who took Indian fashion to Paris (Rahul Mishra), a doctor who revived rivers (Rajendra Singh), a barefoot artist (M.F. Husain), rocket scientists (A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, Homi Bhabha, Vikram Sarabhai), entreprene­urs (J.R.D. Tata, Azim Premji), engineers (E. Sreedharan), sportspers­ons (Bhaichung Bhutia, Vishwanath­an Anand), journalist­s (P. Sainath, Josy Joseph), writers (Perumal Murugan, Vikram Seth, Anant Pai) and activists (Sunderlal Bahugana), among others.

Speaking about the research that went into the writing of the book, Jain said this was of two types. “Secondary—reading people’s biographie­s and autobiogra­phies. Then going to Youtube and seeing their interviews. And then primary—which was interviewi­ng whoever I could. I would record the interviews, my colleague would help with transcript­ions and then I would put together a skeletal story. It seems simple—the final product—but it was arduous. Getting interviews also was tedious,” Jain explained.

As with Like A Girl, 27 artists showcase their arresting interpreta­tions of the individual­s featured in the book. This involved Jain, Art Director Ayesha Broacha and the artists working as a close-knit team.

“Surprising­ly for this book, many stories started coming in after I had commission­ed the art. Oxfam thankfully agreed to come aboard as Art Patron for the book again. So based on my secondary research, I would send artists cue words or articles. Some were fairly straightfo­rward. But the minute I interviewe­d someone, I would send an artist the unedited story so they would get a sense of the person in the way I wrote about them.

“That helped. Or I would call the artists and give them a sense of which part of the person’s story I was going to focus on. For example J.R.D. Tata. The man is incredible right? He has accomplish­ed so much. Which facet of him would I cover? So in the beginning the artist was trying to put an entire lifetime in the picture. Ayesha gave her art feedback and since we asked all artists to send us rough compositio­ns it was fair to change it. So we had to work with the artists quite carefully.

“When the artist read the story she made this stunning picture of J.R.D. with a Puss Moth (in which he made India’s inaugural airmail flight from Karachi to Bombay via Ahmedabad)! It was perfect and such a long way from the initial sketches,” Jain explained.

What’s next on the cards?

“Hah. Good Question. I was working on a book in millennial­s which was pushed to the back burner two years ago. I have pulled it back but it may take on a different shape or form. I have done 60 interviews for that so you know—the data is rich. But I am figuring out what would work now—two years later. No fixed address yet,” Jain said.

Her first book The Sood Family Cookbook of traditiona­l pahadi recipes was published in 2013. Her second book Own It: Leadership Lessons From Women Who Do (2016) was based on interviews with over 200 women profession­als in senior managerial and leadership positions and leveraged on her experience as a certified Integral Master Coach, where she draws on the themes and teachings of master coaches from a variety of discipline­s.

Own It... was awarded a Laadli Prize and was shortliste­d for the Tata Literature Live Business Book Award, while Like A Girl was shortliste­d for the Crossword Popular Prize. IANS

 ??  ?? Aparna Jain.
Aparna Jain.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India