Ellipsis
A podcast by Ravneet Bawa
66 Episodio
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#43 - A meditation on love, work and time and is art even work?
Pubblicato: 04/09/2020 -  
#42 - A poem that campaigns for slow dances with lovers and strangers
Pubblicato: 01/09/2020 -  
#41 - A poem for if you knew this is the last time...
Pubblicato: 28/08/2020 -  
#40 - Marriages are Made, she says
Pubblicato: 25/08/2020 -  
#39: Akhil Katyal navigating identity and the Delhi Metro
Pubblicato: 21/08/2020 -  
#38 - An introduction, of all women by Kamala Das
Pubblicato: 18/08/2020 -  
#37 - Do Kadam Aur Sahi - #RIP Rahat Indori Sahib, a man of many words
Pubblicato: 14/08/2020 -  
#36 - A poem of neglect, from one son to one mother
Pubblicato: 11/08/2020 -  
#35 - Goodness comes in many colours, hate is all the very same
Pubblicato: 07/08/2020 -  
#34 - a poem in lowercase, square parentheses and invented language
Pubblicato: 04/08/2020 -  
#33 - A ghazal between hope and hopelessness, salvation and sin
Pubblicato: 31/07/2020 -  
#32- A funky poem that petitions for freedom from clasps
Pubblicato: 28/07/2020 -  
#31 - A poem to say kindness births from sorrow and both are at hand
Pubblicato: 24/07/2020 -  
#30 - When fairy tales get their wires crossed the unexpected happens
Pubblicato: 21/07/2020 -  
#29 - Ah, finally some Neruda with his love that makes us hopeless
Pubblicato: 17/07/2020 -  
#28 - A poem about conversations that tug at you long after they are over
Pubblicato: 14/07/2020 -  
#27- More Emily Dickinson poems for no one can have but one
Pubblicato: 10/07/2020 -  
#26: A poem for all the times you had a thought and lost it..
Pubblicato: 07/07/2020 -  
#25: Gulzar asks what happens to memories when a relationship dies
Pubblicato: 07/07/2020 -  
#24 - A birthday poem for ex-boyfriends everywhere
Pubblicato: 30/06/2020 
Deconstructing poetry from around the world in a simple conversational style. Each episode is less than ten minutes (or thereabouts) - Find words here that calm, resonate, move or heal. Published every Wednesday and Saturday night. Hosted by Ravneet Bawa, from Mumbai - caught between the sea and all time.
