Brahma Prakash’s Body on the Barricades: Life, Art and Resistance in Contemporary India is an astonishing book. The author turns the Covid-19 pandemic and its consequences into a powerful conceptual apparatus and a metaphor to examine the human condition of contemporary India in its entirety, covering almost all aspects of life (and death). Breathlessness, curtailment, confinement, disease, freedom, movement and desire do not remain mere keywords, but modes in which politics and life are experienced in a polity that is at a tipping point. There are now numerous texts available that document and analyse the pandemic—Prakash’s work does all that, but it does so by telling and showing us what it meant to live and die and what people do and feel between that finite period, both individually and collectively. He creates a remarkable assemblage of sources to drive home his argument. The book is replete with references to folk performances, poetry, political philosophy, literary theory and a range of academic literature. But it is the autobiographical anecdotes, almost in the manner of what anthropologists call autoethnography, that give this work a sense of a shared life to the attentive and empathetic reader. This is a consequence of, I think, what the more endearing and interesting aspect of the book is.