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Quick Take

Quick Take | Popularising the past

The appropriation exercise by the NCERT goes against history and how to approach it

Express News Service

She survived social mores for about 4,500 years—only to be clothed up in the cotton-wool of present-day prudery in 2026. The chutzpah of the tiny bronze figurine of a girl with one hand on her hip—popularly called the ‘Dancing girl’ of Mohenjodaro—has inspired poets as diverse as Faiz Ahmed Faiz and R Balachandra. Mandeep Raikhy even imparted ‘life’ to her through animation at the latest edition of the Kochi Muziris Biennale. But NCERT has now masked her up for a new Class 9 textbook. The national curriculum setter seems to be in denial of the lakhs of brilliantly-carved unclothed figures in temples across the country. What we need instead is a game like Anthropeum, which popularises history with online quizzes on objects from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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