D.R. Nagaraj  (1954–1998) has been widely recognized as among India’s most important thinkers  in the broad area of cultural politics. Until now, his English writings have  only been available in book form as The Flaming Feet and Other Essays (1993; 2nd revised edition, Permanent Black, 2010), a work centred  on the Dalit movement in India. 
  Now, for the  first time, a largely unknown and unavailable corpus of Nagaraj’s ideas and  essays, amplifying and supplementing those in The Flaming Feet, are published in Listening to  the Loom. This book provides  Nagaraj’s most important writings on literature, politics, and violence. Some  of the thirteen pieces here are translated from Kannada into English for the  first time, while others long unavailable have been hunted out from scattered  sources.
  The title of  this book, Listening to the Loom, derives from a story recounted by the  novelist U.R. Ananthamurthy. Walking in Kathmandu with Nagaraj, once, his  companion asked him to stop and listen to the sound of a weaver’s loom that  only he had heard. Ananthamurthy recalls saying to Nagaraj that so long as he,  Nagaraj, retained this ability to hear the sound of a loom, he would never  become a ‘Non-Resident Indian’ intellectual. In the present volume, Nagaraj’s  ear for the sound and sense of things quintessentially Indian is everywhere  apparent.
  Part I  comprises essays on Kannada’s cultural experiences, Part II contains essays on  politics and violence. All of them were mostly written between 1993 and 1998,  the period when Nagaraj emerged as a mature thinker and produced some of his  most important insights.
  For  anyone interested in vernacular cultures, subaltern histories, hinterland  political discourses, metropolis-periphery relations, and D.R. Nagaraj’s  distinctive insights into all these, the present book is essential.