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The Indian Edit

Personal JournalsPodcastsSociety & CultureArtsDesignEN-USunited-states
5 / 561 ratings
Welcome to the Indian Edit, a new series of in-depth interviews with inspiring entrepreneurs, educators and culture-makers. Subscribe here on iTunes and stay updated at http://theindianedit.com and on instagram @theindianeditpodcast
Top 36.6% by pitch volume (Rank #18304 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

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N/A
Episodes
100
Founded
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Category
Personal Journals
Number of listeners
Private
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Audience: Under 4K / month
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Latest Episodes

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Ep. 100: Bringing Indian Classics to us all with Harvard University Press's Editorial Director Sharmila Sen

Sat Jan 17 2026

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“There's nothing dead about the Indian classics. It's not a revival of anything. It's not a museum piece. I think our classical tradition is alive through the stories our parents and grandparents told us…[and through popular culture]…..but with few exceptions, we don't know about the classics from our neighboring state, right? I always hope that the girl in Chandigarh can read a Mangal Kavya from Bengal, a boy in Patna can read a Telugu classic. Someone sitting in your old hometown, Pune can read Bulleh Shah.” 🎙️ In this episode (100!) of The Indian Edit, join me with writer, scholar, and Editorial Director of Harvard University Press, Sharmila Sen. We explore Sharmila’s personal journey from growing up in Bengal to immigrating to the United States as a child, her reflections on race, belonging, and visibility, and her work stewarding the linguistically ambitious literary project: The Murty Classical Library of India. Shownotes for Episide 100: Growing Up Between Worlds Sharmila’s childhood in Calcutta (Kolkata) and her move to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1982 Assimilation, accent, and the desire to “disappear” as a young immigrant Learning Americanness through television, language, and cultural mimicry Race, Privilege, and Visibility Coming to understand race in the U.S. as an immigrant from India The contrast between being part of a dominant group in India and a racial minority in America The persistent “foreignness” assigned to Asian Americans Passing, names, and the refusal to erase one’s identity Language as Identity Bengali as a lived, literary, and emotional language Experiences living and working in Pakistan and Bangladesh Learning Urdu (including Nastaliq script) and Punjabi The cultural and political significance of language in South Asia The Murty Classical Library of India Founded in 2010 with support from Rohan Murty Inspired by Harvard’s Loeb Classical Library (Greek & Latin classics) Publishes bilingual editions (original text + English translation) Covers 2,500 years of writing across 19 South Asian languages Aims to make Indian classics accessible to scholars, general readers, and future generations Ten Indian Classics (10th Anniversary Anthology) Curated selections from the Murty Classical Library Spans 2,500 years and 9 languages Includes: Poems of the early Buddhist nuns (Therīgāthā) Tulsidas’s Ramayana Sufi poetry by Bulleh Shah Guru Nanak’s hymns Persian chronicles of Emperor Akbar Urdu, Tamil, Sanskrit, Punjabi, and more Explores the idea of classics as living traditions, not museum artifacts Why Indian Classics Still Matter Classics as “background noise” that continues to shape culture Stories and verses that live on through oral tradition, popular culture, and daily life Reading across regions and languages as an act of cultural connection and nation-building 📚 Books & Resources Mentioned Not Quite Not White – Sharmila Sen (memoir) The Murty Classical Library of India (Harvard University Press) Ten Indian Classics – Edited by Sharmila Sen Amar Chitra Katha The Ramayana and Mahabharata (regional retellings) 🔗 Find all books and resources at theindianedit.com 📢 Stay Connected If you enjoyed this episode: Share it with a friend Follow the podcast on Instagram @theindianeditpodcast Visit theindianedit.com for full show notes and links

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“There's nothing dead about the Indian classics. It's not a revival of anything. It's not a museum piece. I think our classical tradition is alive through the stories our parents and grandparents told us…[and through popular culture]…..but with few exceptions, we don't know about the classics from our neighboring state, right? I always hope that the girl in Chandigarh can read a Mangal Kavya from Bengal, a boy in Patna can read a Telugu classic. Someone sitting in your old hometown, Pune can read Bulleh Shah.” 🎙️ In this episode (100!) of The Indian Edit, join me with writer, scholar, and Editorial Director of Harvard University Press, Sharmila Sen. We explore Sharmila’s personal journey from growing up in Bengal to immigrating to the United States as a child, her reflections on race, belonging, and visibility, and her work stewarding the linguistically ambitious literary project: The Murty Classical Library of India. Shownotes for Episide 100: Growing Up Between Worlds Sharmila’s childhood in Calcutta (Kolkata) and her move to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1982 Assimilation, accent, and the desire to “disappear” as a young immigrant Learning Americanness through television, language, and cultural mimicry Race, Privilege, and Visibility Coming to understand race in the U.S. as an immigrant from India The contrast between being part of a dominant group in India and a racial minority in America The persistent “foreignness” assigned to Asian Americans Passing, names, and the refusal to erase one’s identity Language as Identity Bengali as a lived, literary, and emotional language Experiences living and working in Pakistan and Bangladesh Learning Urdu (including Nastaliq script) and Punjabi The cultural and political significance of language in South Asia The Murty Classical Library of India Founded in 2010 with support from Rohan Murty Inspired by Harvard’s Loeb Classical Library (Greek & Latin classics) Publishes bilingual editions (original text + English translation) Covers 2,500 years of writing across 19 South Asian languages Aims to make Indian classics accessible to scholars, general readers, and future generations Ten Indian Classics (10th Anniversary Anthology) Curated selections from the Murty Classical Library Spans 2,500 years and 9 languages Includes: Poems of the early Buddhist nuns (Therīgāthā) Tulsidas’s Ramayana Sufi poetry by Bulleh Shah Guru Nanak’s hymns Persian chronicles of Emperor Akbar Urdu, Tamil, Sanskrit, Punjabi, and more Explores the idea of classics as living traditions, not museum artifacts Why Indian Classics Still Matter Classics as “background noise” that continues to shape culture Stories and verses that live on through oral tradition, popular culture, and daily life Reading across regions and languages as an act of cultural connection and nation-building 📚 Books & Resources Mentioned Not Quite Not White – Sharmila Sen (memoir) The Murty Classical Library of India (Harvard University Press) Ten Indian Classics – Edited by Sharmila Sen Amar Chitra Katha The Ramayana and Mahabharata (regional retellings) 🔗 Find all books and resources at theindianedit.com 📢 Stay Connected If you enjoyed this episode: Share it with a friend Follow the podcast on Instagram @theindianeditpodcast Visit theindianedit.com for full show notes and links

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
18
From PodPitch users
Rank
#18304
Top 36.6% by pitch volume (Rank #18304 of 50,000)
Average rating
5.0
From 61 ratings
Reviews
17
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
N/A
Episode count
100
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
3.3K

Public Snapshot

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Country
United States
Language
EN-US
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
N/A
Latest episode date
Sat Jan 17 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
Under 4K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
Under 2%
Public band
Response time band
1–2 days
Public band
Replies received
1–5
Public band

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Presence & Signals

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Social followers
3.3K
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Yes
Guest format
Yes

Social links

No public profiles listed.

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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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5 / 561 ratings
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Frequently Asked Questions About The Indian Edit

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What is The Indian Edit about?

Welcome to the Indian Edit, a new series of in-depth interviews with inspiring entrepreneurs, educators and culture-makers. Subscribe here on iTunes and stay updated at http://theindianedit.com and on instagram @theindianeditpodcast

How often does The Indian Edit publish new episodes?

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