
Her Kama: Women, Intimacy and Identity is a fearless reinterpretation of Kama Kalpa—a 1924 work by P Thomas that boldly explored the rituals, sensuality, and spiritual power of love in Indian life. Long before prudishness crept in, India wrote poems about pleasure, worshipped desire in temples, and saw the body as a gateway to the divine. Drawing from Sanskrit classics like the Kama Sutra, Ananga Ranga, Rati Rahasya, the Mahabharata, Ramayana, and the writings of Kalidasa and Kautilya, this book presents a vivid portrait of love in all its dimensions—spiritual, social, and sensual. It is also a bold exploration of gender and society across millennia, tracing the arc of Indian womanhood from the empowered Vedic era to the constraints of medieval norms. When did we begin to fear what we once revered? Why did sex, once sacred, become shameful? And what might it mean to reclaim it now? Her Kama is not just a book. It is an awakening—to the power of the feminine, to the spiritual roots of intimacy, and to a culture that once dared to celebrate both.
P Thomas was a visionary thinker and writer far ahead of his time. In 1924, he authored Kama Kalpa, a rare and courageous exploration of love, sensuality, and spiritual intimacy in Indian culture. With deep scholarship and bold clarity, he drew upon classical Indian texts to remind a changing nation of its ancient, unapologetic embrace of desire—not as sin, but as sacred. Through his work, P Thomas reclaimed the body as divine and intimacy as a path to liberation.
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