At Highgate, remembering Karl Marx
22 March 2026, 15:00 PM
In Focus
Celebrating Eid: Thousand years of history in three embraces
21 March 2026, 10:00 AM
In Focus
Historical glimpses of Eid processions in Dhaka
20 March 2026, 10:00 AM
In Focus
The Biryani excavation
19 March 2026, 10:00 AM
In Focus
My mother’s letter during the Liberation War
16 March 2026, 11:10 AM
In Focus
In Focus / A journey through Bangladesh’s Islamic inscriptions
28 December 2025, 18:00 PM
In Focus
Barisal, beyond, and the making of Bengali literary modernity
2 March 2026, 00:00 AM
In Focus
How does Pakistan write 1971?
17 March 2026, 06:03 AM
In Focus
Leela Nag: A lone tigress who waged war against the status quo
10 March 2026, 17:04 PM
In Focus
The Australian doctor who witnessed what Bangladesh wanted to forget
3 March 2026, 10:01 AM
In Focus
The post throughout the ages
Philately can be a useful means of garnering revenue for the postal department and can also provide young people alternatives to engage themselves in beneficial pursuits than the ills that now surround society at large.
8 October 2017, 18:00 PM
Urban spaces with an environmental commitment
Adnan Morshed, Professor and Chairperson, Department of Architecture, Brac University talks to Moyukh Mahtab of The Daily Star about the idea behind the project, making university students learn from hands-on experience and the need for a developmental approach that is sensitive to the environment, while the designers highlight the core ideas they tried to portray through their designs.
24 September 2017, 18:00 PM
Ethical challenges of documenting Birangonas
There is a need for a descriptive narrative as opposed to a simplistic narrative. The Fhuljaan story is a clear example. Also the issue of anonymity vs confidentiality—do we anonymise these accounts or keep it confidential or publicise these names? I went for anonymising, but many of these women said, "these are my words, why isn’t my name there?"
17 September 2017, 18:00 PM
Post-mortem of the “official story”
Sixteen years after a series of coordinated terrorist attacks by al-Qaeda (as the story goes) shook the United States and the world, the number of questions-raised-left-unanswered has perhaps never been any higher.
10 September 2017, 18:00 PM
Glimpses of Netaji in East Bengal
I had written on Colonel Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon (1914-2006) of the Indian National Army (INA), in an article published in The Daily Star on June 19, 2017 entitled, “A Letter from the Tiger's Den.”
20 August 2017, 18:00 PM
Tareque and Munier: You are always with us
When I think of Tareque and Mishuk, I carry in my mind's eye the image of the two of them bent over a camera monitor reviewing the day's footage or seated together high on a crane surveying the next scene to be shot.
13 August 2017, 18:00 PM
The vision of a coming society
He chose to settle down in Narail, his home village, not to seek refuge in the bucolic distance, but to lend voice to the subaltern and to "talk back to the centre", vigilantly abrogating the colonial legacies that burden us to date.
6 August 2017, 18:00 PM
Bloodless genocide: The allegorical gaze of Ahmed Sofa
Ahmed Sofa, known in his lifetime as a firebrand, now appears to be no less memorable for his poems. I do not know yet how posterity is going to read him. But it is all apparent now.
30 July 2017, 18:00 PM
Confronting life, love, and liberation with a style
Mahmudul Haque wrote and remained silent equally remarkably in his lifetime. And when he wrote, he wrote productively, even intensely, with a peculiar passion untrammeled by momentary vicissitudes. He wrote most of his novels at one stretch, taking a week or two. He wrote one novel even in a single day.
23 July 2017, 18:00 PM
Justice After Nuremberg
When the Nuremberg War Trial began more than 70 years ago, it marked a watershed moment in international law.
16 July 2017, 18:00 PM
Echoes from Old Bengal
Jnanendra Nath Gupta was born in 1869 in colonial Bengal. His father, Ghanashyamdas Gupta, was a district judge and, therefore, he spent his childhood in various parts of Bengal and Bihar.
9 July 2017, 18:00 PM
Consoled by the Brahmaputra
We left my mother's place early to finish packing. Driving through Gulshan Road 75, punctuated by irregular lights and leafy tall trees, we reached home after 8:00pm. I lay down with a headache. Minutes later, came the sound of firecrackers. An hour later came the SMS: "Holey Artisan Bakery is under siege; situation is NOT UNDER CONTROL."
2 July 2017, 18:00 PM
A letter from the Tiger's Den
The advent of the holy month of Ramadan, ever since the year 2000 CE, reminds me of an idealistic soul, a gallant freedom fighter against British colonial rule in India, who so graciously replied to my letter, that too, from an unknown.
18 June 2017, 18:00 PM
Are we going the right way?
In a country of 16 crore people, the central offices of all government bodies and institutions are in Dhaka. The most job opportunities, the best schools, colleges, universities, healthcare options and even the services required by business operators are far more readily available here than any other place in the whole country.
11 June 2017, 18:00 PM
The war that never ended
“The world watched through my camera [as] this soldier shot the boy in cold blood, and his life was not in any danger at all.
4 June 2017, 18:00 PM
Ideological Struggles Within
There is a widely held belief that culture and religion are mutually exclusive entities. And herein lies the primary source of conflict.
21 May 2017, 18:00 PM
The bonds that run deep
In tracing the shifts from joint families of yesteryears to some single-parent households of today, what is happily evident
is that the essence of the family remains the same.
14 May 2017, 18:00 PM
Indelible Imprints: The Genius from Khulna
Khan Bahadur Qazi Azizul Haque was born in 1872, in the village of Paigram Kasba, Phultala, in the Khulna district of Bengal, British
7 May 2017, 18:00 PM
When the blackboard comes to life
Looking up information on underprivileged children's education in Bangladesh, I found a picture online of a classroom that looked far
28 April 2017, 18:00 PM
Prelude to a spreading nightmare
The recent flash floods in the haor regions exemplify the threat of climate change that looms over Bangladesh. It signifies our
21 April 2017, 18:00 PM