Please note that the book has been published in India on 17 January 2025, and is due to be published in the UK on 2 June 2025 as well as in North America on 26 August 2025 __
DESCRIPTION:
How on earth did Stephen Huyler find himself pedaling a bicycle rickshaw through the Indian border on his twentieth birthday?
Intriguing stories like this define Huyler’s life and his metamorphosis into a leading documentarian of the cultures and peoples of India.
In the fifty-two years since his unusual first entry, Stephen has traversed the subcontinent dozens of times by a wide variety of transportation in order to conduct a detailed survey of India’s village and other subcultures.
His innate friendliness has always opened doors, while his skills as a writer and photographer have allowed him to create books and museum exhibitions of material never before recorded.
Transformed By India invites the reader to join Dr. Huyler as he navigates this remarkable nation. The chapters revolve around tributes to the individuals he has known from maharajahs to musicians, Dalits to Brahmins, politicians to potters. Tying all the many stories together is the innate strength and creative capacity for improvement expressed everywhere in the subcontinent.
Early in his career as an anthropologist and art historian, Stephen Huyler recognized that most of the world had little access to feeling the pulse of the peoples of South Asia.
Here is a message from Bharati Motwani, a writer based in Delhi, on hearing Dr Huyler’s talk at the India International Centre in Delhi, on February the 8th, 2025:
"What an impression your talk last night made on me! Have been thinking about it ever since.
"Two things mostly:
"Firstly, about your astonishing capacity to love, your ability to drop natural defences.
"Secondly, about the consciously ephemeral nature of so much of the Hindu art-craft-ritual you documented. About how people were putting so much of themselves into things that barely lasted a day. You put that into such a meaningful context. About letting go, not grasping, flowing with change. About how India is changing, and how good that is, and that India has always been changing. It left me feeling so hopeful about India’s future. And you are absolutely right about the explosion of creativity among our young people. The stuff I see on Instagram reels is incredible. Different but equally beautiful.
"I think I see things so much more in context now.
"Thank you."
Dr. Huyler’s seven previous books and dozens of museum exhibitions build bridges of communication between India and countries beyond its boundaries. And this book not only provides his memoirs but also documents and reflects on how India has transformed him.
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
408 pages
Publication:
2025
Publisher:
Pippa Rann Books & Media (imprint of Salt Desert Media Group)
Please note that the book has been published in India on 17 January 2025, and is due to be published in the UK on 2 June 2025 as well as in North America on 26 August 2025 __
DESCRIPTION:
How on earth did Stephen Huyler find himself pedaling a bicycle rickshaw through the Indian border on his twentieth birthday?
Intriguing stories like this define Huyler’s life and his metamorphosis into a leading documentarian of the cultures and peoples of India.
In the fifty-two years since his unusual first entry, Stephen has traversed the subcontinent dozens of times by a wide variety of transportation in order to conduct a detailed survey of India’s village and other subcultures.
His innate friendliness has always opened doors, while his skills as a writer and photographer have allowed him to create books and museum exhibitions of material never before recorded.
Transformed By India invites the reader to join Dr. Huyler as he navigates this remarkable nation. The chapters revolve around tributes to the individuals he has known from maharajahs to musicians, Dalits to Brahmins, politicians to potters. Tying all the many stories together is the innate strength and creative capacity for improvement expressed everywhere in the subcontinent.
Early in his career as an anthropologist and art historian, Stephen Huyler recognized that most of the world had little access to feeling the pulse of the peoples of South Asia.
Here is a message from Bharati Motwani, a writer based in Delhi, on hearing Dr Huyler’s talk at the India International Centre in Delhi, on February the 8th, 2025:
"What an impression your talk last night made on me! Have been thinking about it ever since.
"Two things mostly:
"Firstly, about your astonishing capacity to love, your ability to drop natural defences.
"Secondly, about the consciously ephemeral nature of so much of the Hindu art-craft-ritual you documented. About how people were putting so much of themselves into things that barely lasted a day. You put that into such a meaningful context. About letting go, not grasping, flowing with change. About how India is changing, and how good that is, and that India has always been changing. It left me feeling so hopeful about India’s future. And you are absolutely right about the explosion of creativity among our young people. The stuff I see on Instagram reels is incredible. Different but equally beautiful.
"I think I see things so much more in context now.
"Thank you."
Dr. Huyler’s seven previous books and dozens of museum exhibitions build bridges of communication between India and countries beyond its boundaries. And this book not only provides his memoirs but also documents and reflects on how India has transformed him.
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
408 pages
Publication:
2025
Publisher:
Pippa Rann Books & Media (imprint of Salt Desert Media Group)