The Woman Who Noticed the Stitch: In memory of Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea (1930-2009)

14/12/2025 1h 9min Temporada 1

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Episode Synopsis

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:19:01Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:35:26Simplified Chinese Podcast Starts at 00:52:25ReferenceMukhopadhyay, M. (2025, December 14). The Woman Who Noticed the Stitch: In memory of Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea (1930-2009). Medium. https://medium.com/@mayukhdifferent/the-woman-who-noticed-the-stitch-f8bd7eb2f77dThe Mira Sinha Bhattacharya Award 2025 https://www.linkedin.com/posts/icsdelhi_18thaiccs-conference2025-18thaiccs-activity-7405277204143792128-pwet‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherConnect on linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/🎙️ Welcome to “Revise and Resubmit.”Today’s episode is a quiet one, a pause between deadlines and drafts, a space held open for memory.🕯️ The essay you are about to hear is titled “The Woman Who Noticed the Stitch: In memory of Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea.”Written by Mayukh Mukhopadhyay and published on Medium on 14 December 2025, it is a personal memorial piece for Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea (1930–2009), a scholar who learned to see the world in fine detail and patient threads.Long before she became a pioneer of China studies in India, Mira’s first glimpse of China arrived in the most ordinary way: through traveling embroidery sellers and their patterns that hinted at distant worlds. From a childhood framed by expectations for Indian women in the 1930s, she chose instead to walk a harder path, pushing past resistance, entering higher education, and later the Indian Foreign Service, even when people in power told her not to.She moved from diplomacy into academia, where she helped build serious and credible China studies in India during years coloured by suspicion and easy headlines. At the Institute of Chinese Studies, which she helped shape, she insisted on something different: careful attention, institutional memory, the discipline of not simplifying what is complex, and the humility to know that a civilization cannot be rushed or reduced.The author, Mayukh Mukhopadhyay, is an Executive Doctoral Scholar at IIM Indore and recipient of The Mira Sinha Bhattacharjea Award 2025 for his paper “Sonic Soft Power: China’s Podcast Diplomacy,” presented at the 18th All India Conference of China Studies. This essay is his tribute to the woman behind that award, to a life that quietly altered how India thinks about China.If you value slow, thoughtful stories like this, please subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify 🎧, and to the Weekend Researcher YouTube channel ▶️. The podcast is also available on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast 🍎🎶, so you can listen wherever you are.Tonight, as we listen to the story of a woman who noticed every stitch in the fabric of nations, one question lingers in the silence between words:✨ When does a single life’s patient work stop being just biography and start becoming the way a whole country remembers another civilization?

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