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Stories the State Tries to Erase

Some lives exist only in files, headlines, or accusations. How do paperwork, policing, and media narratives quietly decide who belongs? What does democracy look like from below? Drawing on the book The Many Lives of Syeda X, this talk explores how journalism can recover erased histories, expose routine violence, and hold power to account. It examines media influence, gendered surveillance, majoritarian politics, and the slow erosion of democratic rights in contemporary South Asia. The talk also highlights the struggles of urban poor workers, precarious labor, and income inequality, showing how economic marginalization intersects with political and social exclusion. It will reflect on the hidden struggles and the everyday realities of citizens caught in the machinery of the modern state, amid shrinking media freedom and democratic backsliding.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

4:00 PM
Bunche 10383


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Neha Dixit is an independent journalist and author based in New Delhi. For over two decades, she has reported on politics, gender, labor, and social justice in South Asia, producing investigative, narrative, and long-form journalism for Al Jazeera, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Caravan, The Wire, and others. Her work has exposed extrajudicial killings, hate crimes, human trafficking, unethical clinical trials, and sectarian majoritarian violence. She has won over a dozen national and international awards, including the International Press Freedom Award (2019), the Chameli Devi Jain Award (2017), and the Lorenzo Natali Prize for Journalism (2011). Her debut book, The Many Lives of Syeda X (Juggernaut), traces 30 years in the life of a migrant Muslim woman navigating Delhi’s informal labor economy, holding over 50 jobs without minimum wage. The book, a vivid portrait of urban India’s invisible workforce, was named Book of the Year 2024 by The Hindu and Deccan Herald. It won the Ramnath Goenka Sahitya Samman and Kalinga Best Debut Award and a Special Jury Mention by the CG Moore Prize for Human Rights Writing.

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