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Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

[25th August 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: The new Constitution Bill, the need for a balancing act

Mentor’s Comment

The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025 has sparked intense debate in Parliament and across the country. While it appears to be a strong step toward cleaner politics, it also raises deep constitutional and democratic concerns. For UPSC aspirants, this issue is important not only for its immediate political relevance but also for its intersection with constitutional morality, criminalisation of politics, separation of powers, and due process. This article breaks down the Bill, its context, judicial linkages, and its broader implications for democracy.

Introduction

India has long grappled with the paradox of demanding clean politics while being governed by leaders facing serious criminal charges. The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025, introduced in the Lok Sabha on August 20, seeks automatic resignation or removal of Ministers, Chief Ministers and even the Prime Minister if they remain in custody for over 30 days in offences punishable with five years or more. While aimed at restoring public trust, the Bill risks undermining due process and democratic safeguards.

Why is this Bill in the news?

The Bill marks the first time Parliament has proposed automatic removal of top executive leaders on mere detention without conviction. This is in sharp contrast with the current legal position under the Representation of the People Act, where disqualification begins only upon conviction. The stakes are high: India already faces a staggering rise in criminalisation of politics, with 46% of MPs in 2024 declaring criminal cases, up from 30% in 2009. Against this backdrop, the Bill seeks to restore public trust but also risks political misuse, raising concerns of democratic erosion.

Judicial foundations and constitutional morality

  1. Articles 75, 164, 239AA: Provide for ministerial tenure “at the pleasure” of President/Governor, limited by constitutional morality.
  2. S.R. Bommai case: Stressed that integrity and accountability are core to constitutional morality.
  3. Manoj Narula case: Warned against entrusting power to those with serious criminal charges.
  4. Lily Thomas case: Held that disqualification of legislators must occur upon conviction, striking down earlier appeal window.
  5. Tension: While courts upheld high ethical standards, they stopped short of mandating automatic removal before conviction, the Bill goes further, creating friction with Article 21 (right to life and liberty).

Risk of Bill being misused as a political weapon

  1. Executive discretion: PM/CM advice governs removal; if withheld, automatic removal applies after 30 days. This dual mechanism may be exploited politically.
  2. Selective shield or target: PM may protect allies temporarily, while hostile leaders may allow rivals to fall under automatic removal.
  3. Politicisation of accountability: Instead of insulating governance, it may embed accountability in partisan strategies.

Inconsistency in the treatment of legislators and Ministers

  1. RPA framework: Legislators disqualified only on conviction.
  2. Ministerial paradox: A Minister under arrest is removed after 30 days, but a legislator convicted of corruption may still technically hold ministerial office until disqualification proceedings.
  3. Asymmetry: Creates harsher standards for Ministers than legislators, risking deterrence for capable leaders.

Political instability and the “revolving door”

  1. Reappointment clause: Once released, Ministers can be reinstated.
  2. Cycle of instability: Arrest → resignation → release → reinstatement may lead to political uncertainty without improving accountability.
  3. Tactical misuse: Legal proceedings could be manipulated to weaken opponents through timed arrests.

Why do critics demand a more nuanced model?

  1. Criminalisation of politics: Rising trend demands reform, 251 MPs (46%) with criminal cases in 2024.
  2. Judicial milestone approach: Removal linked to framing of charges by a competent court rather than arrest alone ensures judicial scrutiny.
  3. Independent review: Tribunal/judicial panel could prevent executive misuse.
  4. Interim suspension: Instead of removal, suspension of ministerial functions during trial could balance governance and accountability.
  5. Scope refinement: Apply only to corruption and moral turpitude offences, not all crimes with five years’ punishment (which may include minor offences).

Conclusion

The 130th Amendment Bill embodies India’s long-standing demand for clean politics. However, its blunt approach risks weakening constitutional safeguards like presumption of innocence, creating political instability, and enabling misuse of arrest as a weapon. The Joint Parliamentary Committee must recalibrate the Bill with judicially tested safeguards, narrowing its scope to serious offences and ensuring impartial mechanisms for enforcement. Only then can India achieve the delicate balance where power is exercised with integrity without sacrificing fairness.

UPSC Relevance:

[UPSC]: “There is a need for simplification of procedure for disqualification of persons found guilty of corrupt practices under the Representation of Peoples Act.” Comment.

Linkage: “The 130th Amendment Bill echoes the long-standing concern flagged in the 2020 PYQ on RPA disqualification: India needs clearer and fairer procedures to ensure accountability in politics. While the PYQ emphasised simplification post-conviction, the Bill risks moving the trigger point too early (mere custody), thereby complicating rather than simplifying the disqualification process.”

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Mother and Child Health – Immunization Program, BPBB, PMJSY, PMMSY, etc.

Nourish to flourish, the nutrition and cognititon link

Introduction

The first 1,000 days of life, from conception to a child’s second birthday, form a once-in-a-lifetime window for shaping lifelong health, learning, and productivity. Science shows that by age two, the brain reaches 80% of its adult size, and missing this phase leads to irreversible losses in nutrition and cognition. Despite progress, India still faces high levels of stunting and poor early learning, making early childhood investment a nation-building priority.

Why is this in the news?

India has reduced malnutrition since the 1990s, but progress is too slow, at the current pace, stunting will fall to 10% only by 2075. To meet the 2047 target, the pace must double. New initiatives like Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi and Navchetana reflect a fresh focus on integrating nutrition with cognitive development, but gaps remain in coverage, quality, and urban reach, making this issue urgent.

Scientific insights on first 1,000 days

  1. Brain Growth: By age two, the brain reaches 80% of adult size; synapse formation and frontal lobe spurts shape planning, memory, and regulation.
  2. Nutritional Deficits: Deficiencies before age three are often irreversible, with lifelong consequences.
  3. Cohort Study Evidence: A Tamil Nadu study linked early childhood iron deficiency to poor verbal performance, slower processing, and weaker expressive language.
  4. Neuroplasticity: Learning acquired in this phase is fast and permanent, e.g., acquisition of regional language or nursery rhymes.

Limits of nutrition-only interventions 

  1. Integrated Development: Stand-alone nutrition programmes show only low-to-moderate outcomes.
  2. Combined Impact: Nutrition + stimulation interventions lead to stronger cognitive and health outcomes.
  3. Example: Birth-cohort studies show poor language skills when nutrition is not coupled with stimulation, underlining the “cut from the same cloth” nature of brain and body growth.

India’s policy response to early childhood development 

  1. ICDS: World’s largest childcare scheme, focusing on nutrition and early learning.
  2. Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi: Seeks to integrate nutrition with learning stimulation.
  3. Navchetana Framework: Offers 140 age-based activities (0–3 years) through a 36-month stimulation calendar; relies on home visits by Anganwadi and caregivers.
  4. Home-based Play Learning: Encourages children to learn through activities, not formal teaching, improving social and cognitive skills.

Persistent challenges in ensuring holistic child care

  1. Stunting Persistence: At current rate, 10% stunting target may take till 2075.
  2. Service Saturation Gaps: ICDS yet to achieve full coverage and quality across states.
  3. Urban Challenges: Services weak in cities despite high demand.
  4. Workforce Empowerment: 14 lakh Anganwadi workers remain overburdened and undertrained.
  5. Women in Workforce: Limited crèche facilities constrain female labour participation; need public-private-community partnerships.

Urgency of investment in the age of automation 

  1. Automation Risk: Future job markets will offer fewer opportunities to low-skilled workers.
  2. Human Capital: Early investment ensures a workforce equipped with cognitive resilience and adaptability.
  3. Intergenerational Impact: Better child development empowers women, reduces poverty, and enhances societal well-being.

Conclusion

The first 1,000 days are the golden window of human development, missing it means irreversible losses. India has the policies, infrastructure, and scientific backing to act, but weak implementation, inadequate urban reach, and insufficient integration of nutrition with learning continue to limit outcomes. With 2047 as a national milestone, accelerating investment in children’s earliest years is not just a welfare necessity but an economic and ethical imperative.

UPSC PYQ Linkage

[2021, GS 2] “Examine the main provisions of the National Child Policy and evaluate its implementation.”

Linkage: Both focus on gaps in child-centric programmes and need for holistic approaches.

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Internal Security Architecture Shortcomings – Key Forces, NIA, IB, CCTNS, etc.

How have deception techniques evolved

Introduction

Modern warfare is no longer about firepower alone; it is equally about deception. As precision-guided missiles, drones, and AI-enabled targeting systems grow deadlier, militaries are turning to decoy technologies to confuse radars, mislead missiles, and protect valuable assets. India’s reported use of the AI-enabled X-Guard decoy during Operation Sindoor shows how deception has become a central element of national security strategy.

The Growing Relevance of Deception in Modern Warfare:

  1. Evolving threat environment: Precision-guided munitions, drones, and AI-enabled targeting systems make military platforms highly vulnerable.
  2. Strategic asset: Decoys create confusion, waste enemy munitions, and buy crucial time for retaliation.
  3. Game-changing event: Operation Sindoor showcased India’s successful use of an AI-enabled decoy, termed by experts as “the best instance of spoofing and deception ever seen.”

Inside the X-Guard Fibre-Optic Towed Decoy 

  1. Lightweight & reusable: At just 30 kg, retractable and deployable in flight.
  2. Radar mimicry: Replicates the Rafale’s Radar Cross Section (RCS), doppler velocity, and spectral signature across multiple bands.
  3. 360-degree jamming: Works seamlessly with the Rafale’s SPECTRA suite to form a layered defensive shield.
  4. Operational success: Reports suggest Pakistan’s J-10C fighters misidentified decoys as actual aircraft, wasting advanced PL-15E missiles.

Global landscape of comparable decoy systems: 

  1. BriteCloud (Leonardo UL): Used on Eurofighter Typhoons, Gripen-Es, and some F-16s.
  2. AN/ALE-50/55 series (Raytheon/BAE Systems): Deployed on U.S. Navy F/A-18E/F Super Hornets.
  3. Adaptability to UAVs: Modified for platforms like Israeli Herons and U.S. MQ-9 Reapers.

Battlefield deception on Land Forces: 

  1. Inflatable & heat-emitting decoys: Simulate tanks, artillery, and missile batteries to divert strikes.
  2. Ukraine’s wooden & 3D-printed fakes: Exhaust Russian drone and missile stocks.
  3. Russia’s Inflatech decoys: Create entire armoured formations in minutes.
  4. Indian Army initiative (2025): Issued a request for decoys mimicking T-90 tanks, including thermal and acoustic signatures.

Naval countermeasures and Decoy strategies

  1. Layered naval countermeasures: Chaff, acoustic decoys, and offboard active deception protect against missiles and submarines.
  2. Nulka decoy (Australia–U.S.): Self-propelled system mimicking large ship radar signatures to mislead missile guidance.

Conclusion

Deception, once limited to camouflage and dummy equipment, has evolved into a sophisticated digital-age shield. Airborne fibre-optic decoys, inflatable ground tanks, and naval missile deflectors now define modern survivability. India’s reported use of the X-Guard highlights its adaptation to the evolving battlefield. For a relatively low investment, such systems deliver high-impact protection, proving that in the wars of tomorrow, deception may be as decisive as destruction.

PYQ Relevance

“How is S-400 air defence system technically superior to any other system presently available in the world?”

Linkage: This question shows UPSC’s focus on defence technology and comparative capability analysis. The same lens applies to India’s deployment of AI-enabled decoys like the X-Guard FOTD, which enhance survivability against advanced missile systems. Both highlight the importance of evaluating cutting-edge military technology for national security.

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Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

In news: Women Revolutionaries of Bengal 

Why in the News?

This newscard is an excerpt from the original article published in the Indian Express.

Women in Revolutionary Movements:

Pritilata Waddedar:

  • Early Life: Born on 5 May 1911 in Chittagong. One of the first Bengali women to lead an armed revolutionary group.
  • Education: Graduated in philosophy from Bethune College, Kolkata; became a school teacher.
  • Inspiration: Influenced by revolutionary literature and women’s activism; joined Deepali Sangha.
  • Role: Collected bomb cases, distributed pamphlets, gathered jail intelligence by posing as relatives.
  • Legacy: Left a suicide note explaining her cause; remembered as a fearless martyr.

Kalpana Datta:

  • Early Life: Born in 1913 in Sripur, Chittagong; studied at Bethune College, joined Chhatri Sangha.
  • Activities: Conducted reconnaissance before the European Club attack; arrested a week earlier.
  • Later Role: Joined bombing attempt to free Surya Sen; sentenced to life, released in 1939.
  • Post-freedom: Became a Communist Party leader, focused on social activism.

Bina Das:

  • Early Life: At 21, attempted assassination of Governor Stanley Jackson (1932) with a revolver supplied by Kamala Das Gupta.
  • Networks: Part of secret revolutionary student circles.
  • Court Statement: Famous for her passionate resistance plea before Calcutta High Court.

Begum Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain:

  • Early Life: Born on 9 December 1880; pioneer of women’s rights and education.
  • Writings: Authored “Sultana’s Dream” (1908), envisioning a feminist utopia.
  • Institutions: Founded the first school for Muslim girls in Kolkata; formed Muslim Women’s Association (1916).
  • Activism: Led women’s conferences, challenged purdah, advocated education.

Kamala Das Gupta:

  • Early Life: Born in Dhaka; completed MA in history at Kolkata. Initially Gandhian, later joined Jugantar.
  • Role: Provided shelter, weapons, and materials; arrested multiple times.
  • Connection: Supplied Bina Das with revolver for her assassination attempt.
  • Legacy: Wrote “Rakter Akshare” and “Swadhinata Sangrame Nari”; led refugee relief and vocational training.

Nanibala Devi:

  • Early Life: Disguised as a revolutionary’s wife; spied in prisons for intelligence.
  • Sacrifice: Endured brutal police torture (including red chili powder) without revealing secrets.
  • End: Died in poverty but symbolised courage and resilience.

Labanya Prabha Ghosh:

  • Early Life: Born on 14 August 1897, Purulia.
  • Contribution: Helped establish Shilpashram, hub of revolutionaries like Subhas Bose, C.R. Das.
  • Political Role: First woman MLA from Purulia; wrote and edited nationalist journals.
  • Later Activism: Led movements for land rights, justice for the poor.

Matangini Hazra (“Gandhi Buri”):

  • Early Life: Born in 1870, Hogla village, Midnapore; widowed young, lived in poverty.
  • Freedom Struggle: Joined Salt Satyagraha, arrested for making salt; resisted chowkidari tax.
  • Repression: Imprisoned and beaten; served the sick during epidemics.
  • Martyrdom: Killed by police firing while leading Quit India procession (1942), holding the tricolour until death.
[UPSC 2009] During the freedom struggle, Aruna Asaf Ali was a major woman organizer of underground activity in

Options:

(a) Civil Disobedience Movement

(b) Non-Cooperation Movement

(c) Quit India Movement*

(d) Swadeshi Movement

 

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Urban Transformation – Smart Cities, AMRUT, etc.

Census 2027 and Urban Area Definition

Why in the News?

The Registrar General of India (RGI) has announced that the same definition of “urban area” used in Census 2011 will be retained in Census 2027 to ensure comparability of data and analysis of urbanisation trends.

Background and Urbanisation Trends:

  • Census 2011 Data: India’s population was 121 crore – 68.8% rural (83.3 crore) and 31.2% urban (37.7 crore).
  • Trend: Urban share grew from 17.3% in 1951 to 31% in 2011, showing rapid urbanisation.
  • Units: 6,40,867 villages and 15,870 urban units recorded in 2011.

Definition of Urban Area:

  • Statutory Towns: Include municipal corporations, nagar palikas, town panchayats, cantonment boards, and notified town area committees.
  • Census Town Criteria:
    • Minimum population of 5000;
    • Population Density ≥ 400 persons per sq. km;
    • Workforce: ≥ 75% of male workers in non-agricultural activities.
  • District HQs: Headquarters not legally notified as towns will be Census Towns only if they meet criteria.
  • Exclusions: Plantations and orchards outside statutory towns will not be treated as “forests” under this definition.

Special Features of Census 2027:

  • Caste Data: For the first time, caste enumeration included (approved April 2024).
  • Worker Classification: Male agricultural workers (cultivators, labourers, livestock, forestry, fishing, hunting, plantations) excluded when calculating non-agricultural engagement.
  • Error Correction: Grouping multiple villages into one Census Town discontinued; identification now at village level.

Preparatory Work and Timelines:

  • Jurisdiction Updates: All changes in villages/towns/wards updated till 31 December 2025.
  • Boundary Freeze: Administrative boundaries fixed on 1 January 2026.
  • Village Review: Villages with 4,000+ population in 2011 re-examined to meet 5,000 threshold by 2027.
  • Phases:
    • Houselisting & Housing Census (HLO) – April 2026.
    • Population Enumeration (PE) – February 2027.
[UPSC 2002] Consider the following statements about the megacities of India:

I. Population of each megacity is more than 5 million.

II. All the megacities are important sea ports.

III. Megacities are either national or State capitals.

Which of these statements are correct?

(a) I, II and III

(b) I and II

(c) II and III

(d) I and III *

 

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Innovations in Biotechnology and Medical Sciences

Asgard Archaea and the Evolution of Complex Cells

Why in the News?

Recent research by IISc on Asgard archaea — the closest living relatives of eukaryotes — has shed new light on how simple prokaryotic cells evolved into complex eukaryotic cells with nuclei, cytoskeletons, and organelles.

About Asgard Archaea:

  • Nature: Tiny microbes living in deep-sea mud and extreme environments.
  • Evolutionary Link: Closest relatives of eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, humans).
  • Importance: Help explain how simple prokaryotic cells (bacteria/archaea) evolved into complex eukaryotic cells.
  • Significance: Considered the “missing link” in the origin of complex life.

Findings from Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Study:

  • Focus: Scientists studied a subgroup called Odinarchaeota.
  • Discovery: Found two FtsZ genes (most microbes have one) and a tubulin-like gene.
    • FtsZ1: Works like bacterial proteins → forms straight filaments and attaches to cell membranes.
    • FtsZ2: Builds spiral structures but needs helper proteins to stick to membranes.
  • Division of Labour: Cooperation of FtsZ1 and FtsZ2 shows early signs of cellular specialisation.
  • Clue for Evolution: Suggests Asgard microbes were already experimenting with primitive “cytoskeleton” systems, paving way for complex cells.
[UPSC 2012] Which one of the following sets of elements was primarily responsible for the origin of life on the Earth?

Options:

(a) Hydrogen, Oxygen, Sodium

(b) Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen*

(c) Oxygen, Calcium, Phosphorus

(d) Carbon, Hydrogen, Potassium

 

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Indian Missile Program Updates

Integrated Air Defence Weapon System (IADWS) 

Why in the News?

The DRDO has successfully conducted the maiden flight-tests of the Integrated Air Defence Weapon System (IADWS) off the coast of Odisha.

Integrated Air Defence Weapon System (IADWS) 

About the Indigenous Air Defence Weapon System (IADWS):

  • Overview: A multi-layered indigenous system developed to neutralise a wide spectrum of aerial threats.
  • Integration: Combines 3 components viz. Quick Reaction Surface-to-Air Missiles (QRSAM), Very Short Range Air Defence System (VSHORADS), and Directed Energy Weapon (DEW).
  • Control: All systems are networked through a Command-and-Control Centre developed by the Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL), Hyderabad.

Key Components of IADWS:

  1. QRSAM:
    • Short-range missile system for protecting moving Army armoured formations.
    • Range: 3–30 km.
    • Equipped with 360° surveillance and tracking radars.
    • Fully automated, mobile, and capable of “search on move” and “track on move.”
  2. VSHORADS:
    • Fourth-generation man-portable air defence system (MANPAD).
    • Range: 300 m – 6 km.
    • Targets include drones, UAVs, and low-altitude aerial threats.
    • Deployable across Army, Navy, and Air Force.
  3. Directed Energy Weapon (DEW):
    • Vehicle-mounted laser system.
    • Range: <3 km.
    • Proven in field trials against UAVs and drone swarms.

Strategic Significance:

  • Multi-Layer Defence: Provides aerial protection up to 30 km against threats from drones to fighter jets.
  • Self-Reliance: Enhances indigenous capability, reducing dependence on imported defence systems.
  • National Security: Strengthens preparedness for Mission Sudarshan Chakra — India’s planned national air defence shield.
  • Technological Integration: Demonstrates India’s leap in combining missile and laser-based defence on a single platform.
  • Geostrategic Importance: Seen as a milestone in India’s path to advanced, self-reliant defence systems.
[UPSC 2018] What is “Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)”, sometimes seen in the news?

Options:

(a) An Israeli radar system

(b) India’s indigenous anti-missile programme

(c) An American anti-missile system*

(d) A defence collaboration between Japan and South Korea

 

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Wildlife Conservation Efforts

Nepal officially joins IBCA

Why in the News?

Nepal has officially joined the International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA), an India-led global initiative to protect seven species of big cats.

About the International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA)

  • Overview: A global multi-country, multi-agency alliance of 95 countries (range and non-range) focused on conserving big cats and their habitats.
  • Launch: Proposed by PM Modi in 2019; officially launched in April 2023 on Project Tiger’s 50th anniversary.
  • Conservation Scope: Works to protect 7 species of big cats — tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, cheetah, jaguar, and puma.
  • Functions: Operates through advocacy, knowledge-sharing, eco-tourism promotion, and resource mobilisation.
  • Conflict Mitigation: Aims to reduce human–wildlife conflict and restore degraded habitats.
  • Institutional Structure:
    • Governance: Managed by a General Assembly, elected Council, and Secretariat headed by a Secretary-General.
    • Headquarters: Permanent base established in India following ratification of the HQ agreement.

Global Participation

  • Membership: Includes 95 countries across Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Europe/Central Asia. Examples:
    • Asia: India, China, Nepal, Pakistan, Iran.
    • Africa: Kenya, Congo, Ghana.
    • Americas: Brazil, Ecuador, United States.
    • Europe/Central Asia: Russia, Kazakhstan.
  • Ratification: Bhutan, Eswatini, Cambodia, Guinea, India, Liberia, Nicaragua, Somalia, and Suriname have deposited ratification instruments.

India’s Role:

  • Biodiversity Hub: India hosts 5 of the 7 big cats — tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, and cheetah — and holds 70% of global tiger population.
  • Funding: Government committed ₹150 crore for 2023–2028; mobilising international contributions.
  • Leadership: India sets global benchmarks in wildlife conservation and ecological stewardship, positioning itself as a leader in big cat protection.
[UPSC 2024] Consider the following statements:

1. Lions do not have a particular breeding season.

2. Unlike most other big cats, cheetahs do not roar.

3. Unlike male lions, male leopards do not proclaim their territory by scent marking.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

(a) 1 and 2 only * (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 2

 

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Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

NCERT textbooks introduce Indian Art Forms

Why in the News?

For the first time, the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has introduced Indian classical music, dance, theatre, and visual arts into primary and middle school textbooks (Classes 3 to 8).

About Classical Arts in School Textbooks

  • For the first time, NCERT has integrated Indian classical arts (music, dance, theatre, and visual arts) into textbooks for Classes 3 to 8.
  • The reform aligns with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, which mandates rooting education in India’s ethos and cultural heritage.
  • Music content includes swar, laya, shabd, Sanskrit shloka recitations, folk songs, ragas from Hindustani & Carnatic music.
  • Dance content covers 8 classical dance forms — Bharatnatyam, Kathak, Kathakali, Kuchipudi, Manipuri, Mohiniyattam, Odissi, and Sattriya.
  • Draws from ancient texts like Natyashastra, Brihaddeshi, Sangita Damodara, Abhinaya Darpanam.
  • Pedagogy: Emphasis on exposure, appreciation, and creativity rather than mastery. Includes storytelling, abhinaya (expressions), theatre, group performances.

Classical Dance Forms Mentioned:

Dance Form Details
Bharatnatyam (Tamil Nadu) Oldest dance form; temple origins; fixed torso, bent legs, intricate footwork; emphasis on abhinaya and mudras; devotional themes (Bhakti rasa).
Kathak (North India) Storytelling tradition (katha = story); features fast spins (chakkars) and rhythmic footwork; evolved in temples & Mughal courts; uses ghungroo.
Kathakali (Kerala) Dance-drama with elaborate costumes, makeup, masks; based on Ramayana, Mahabharata, Puranas; strong gestures, expressions (navarasas).
Kuchipudi (Andhra Pradesh) Blend of dance & drama with dialogue; famous Tarangam item (dance on brass plate); Vaishnav themes (Krishna stories); brisk, graceful movements.
Manipuri (Manipur) Graceful, devotional form linked to Ras Lila of Krishna; lyrical movements, cylindrical skirt for women; avoids forceful footwork; spiritual style.
Mohiniyattam (Kerala) “Dance of the enchantress”; soft, feminine style; gentle swaying movements; solo, mostly by women; white-golden costume; mood of lasya (grace).
Odissi (Odisha) Temple dance linked to Jagannath worship; tribhangi posture and chauka stance; sculptural quality like temple carvings; strong Vaishnava themes.
Sattriya (Assam) Introduced by Srimanta Sankardev in monasteries (sattras); devotional Vaishnava themes; combines dance, drama, music; recognised as classical in 2000.

 

[UPSC 2012] How do you distinguish between Kuchipudi and Bharatanatyam dances?

1. Dancers occasionally speaking dialogues is found in Kuchipudi dance but not in Bharatanatyam.

2. Dancing on the brass plate by keeping the feet on its edges is a feature of Bharatanatyam but Kuchipudi dance does not have such a form of movements.

Options:

(a) 1 only*

(b) 2 only

(c) Both 1 and 2

(d) Neither 1 nor 2

 

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