Featured Book: Auroville: Dream and Reality

Auroville has a reputation as a cosmopolitan, spiritual township, but it remains an enigma to outside observers. What is life really like in the community? What do its residents believe in, and what are they aspiring toward? This anthology of writing from the community, edited by a long-time resident and representing forty-odd authors from around the world, seeks to shed light not only on Auroville’s ideals but also on its lived reality. The polyphonic narratives in this eclectic collection-including fiction, essays, poetry and drama-capture something of the dreams, hopes, disappointments and sheer hard work that make up this complex, layered and constantly evolving place.

Enlivened by cartoons and accompanied by rare archival photographs, Auroville: Dream and Reality is a view from the inside of this remarkable experiment in communal and intentional living.

Akash Kapur

Akash Kapur is an author and journalist—among other things: He also has a few other vocations—born and brought up in the intentional community of Auroville, in South India. His first book, India Becoming: A Portrait of Life in Modern India, was published in 2012 by Penguin-Riverhead, and a French edition, titled L’Inde de Demain, came out in 2014 from Albin Michel. Better to Have Gone, published by Scribner in 2021 in the USA, UK and India, received a Whiting Nonfiction award, was shortlisted shortlisted for the Tata LitLive Prize, and longlisted for the Chautauqua Prize. A Catalan and Tamil edition are forthcoming.  

He is a former columnist for the New York Times, and writes or has written for various publications, most frequently The New Yorker (some articles), the Wall Street Journal (a recent Week in Review cover piece), The Atlantic, The Economist, Granta, The Hindu, Outlook, and more. Among other topics, he writes about utopia (here, and here), technology policy and regulation (here , and here), and sometimes about tennis. He is a Senior Fellow at New York University’s The GovLab, where he works on a range of issues, including open data, Internet governance, and technology law and policy. He also teaches courses at Princeton University, including on utopia and technology policy. 

He got a bachelor’s degree at Harvard University in Social Anthropology, and a DPhil at Nuffield College, Oxford University, which he attended as a Rhodes Scholar. The DPhil was in the Law faculty, and was on the regulation of technology for economic development and the public good. He consults in this field for both the private and public sectors, including, among other places, for UNDP, The Markle Foundation, and Network Dynamics Associates. Some of this work is online (see, for example, a Primer on Internet Governance I prepared for UNDP).

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Featured Book: Everyday Utopia: What 2000 Years of Wild Experiments Can Teach Us About the Good Life