All Reviews - Moebius Trip
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Giti’s passion for architecture, sculpture, mythology, iconography and artistic heritage are infectious. A travelogue unlike any other, Moebius Trip is at once a road journal, a collection of musings and a cry for respect and preservation of one of the world’s oldest civilisations. One hopes that this elegant book might herald a new awareness, even restoration, of a forgotten or suppressed aspect of India’s historical richness.’
Inez Baranay,
Journal of Australian Studies
The title of the book is an inspiration, the subtitle apt. Moebius band or strip is a mathematical curiosity in which the inner and outer surfaces run seamlessly. Moebius strip becomes Moebius Trip of the title and the subtitle Digressions from India's Highways reflects her penchant for the exploration of byways - not only in a physical sense but also in the choices she makes to bypass places linked to the cultural mainstream. It is both an exterior as well as an interior journey, encompassing as much of herself as her travels.
Samra Rahman
For those to whom the title of the book sounds unfamiliar, Moebiustrip or rather, Moeibus strip, is a strip of paper with neither a beginning nor an end. And it is in a way apt for this book, because this book is not just an account of traveling on India's roads. This book is more about metaphysical aspects of such a journey undertaken by Giti Thadani. I loved the tagline Digressions from India's highways wow what a lovely phrase, because that is essentially what the book is.
Hari,
www.books365.blogspot.com/2007/05
I recommend Moebius Trip to all curious about inner and outer India, to those interested in female images of the divine, and to those open to new understandings that reach beyond the dichotomies of post-Enlightenment western thought.
Me, You, and Books
Review of Giti Thadani's previous book, Sakhiyani:
The rediscovery of gynocentric traditions and reconstruction of lesbian histories that Thadani calls for on the part of Indian women echo the principles and practices so familiar to Western lesbians as well. With Sahkiyani, she makes a voluptuous contribution to Indian society, to GLBT discourse, and to the global community of women who love women.
Cynthia Cavalcanti,
International Gay and Lesbian Review, Los Angeles