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Description
Housing the Republic is the unparalleled biography of India's Parliament House, narrating its lived history as shaped by the founding fathers and mothers of the nation and others who have walked its corridors.
From tracing its origin in 1919, when its designs were first approved, to the making of the new Parliament House in 2023, Sobhana K. Nair chronicles the spirit of a nation perpetually in flux.
As a witness and participant, the Parliament has seen many a momentous event in India's journey as a democracy – from the hour of its christening as a republic to surviving a gruesome terror attack attack. Sobhana recounts several heated parliamentary debates that went on to define India's past, present and imminent futures, through the nine decades of its pre- and post-Independence political life.
Alongside the story of India's parliamentary life we get glimpses into the making of modern Delhi – the bustling capital city of the world's largest democracy. Blending biography, history and contemporary politics, Housing the Republic is a stellar portrait of a country found between horizons.
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Product details
| Published | 21 Jul 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 256 |
| ISBN | 9789369524846 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury India |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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An engrossing and lively account of the people and times that have shaped the Indian Parliament building, a landmark that has now been consigned to the dusty pages of history.
Ira Mukhoty
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Housing the Republic tells a fascinating tale – of how a single stately building encapsulates within it so many stories, of the petty egos of the men involved in its making, of imperial hierarchies and conflicting agendas, of nationalism and its negotiations with power, of symbols and their powerful meanings and ultimately of India's history itself. A thoroughly interesting portrait of one of our most iconic national structures, this is a book that will appeal to many.
Manu S. Pillai
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Among the finest pictures of popular reactions to India's Independence in August 1947 are those of people claiming the day, gathering around the Parliament building. The regal and dignified structure has been central to India's quest to fulfil its constitutional promise of “one man, one value”. Now, it stands on the sidelines of a new building, but not for the thoughtful Sobhana K. Nair. In Housing the Republic, she has captured the times – hers and those gone past – eloquently and in ways that compel you to be with her for the ride from start to finish.
Seema Chishti
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A book like this was waiting to be written. India's old Parliament building, the site of legislative work for over nine decades, has given way to a new building. After reading this book, it is clear to me how little I knew about the building. As a journalist, Sobhana has covered India's Parliament for fifteen years. This book, she says, is a “love story... with all its warts and blemishes”. In elegant prose, she renders an account of what went on in the old Parliament building, from which we can all learn a lot. A piece of history eminently worth a visit through her felicitous pen.
Ashutosh Varshney

























