With the first decade of this century has come a growing realization that corruption is not limited to the state and its affiliates. Films like Life in a Metro and Page Three present the possibility of the existence of social and moral corruption outside the immediate purview of politicians and bureaucrats. As the aura of the state recedes from the urban imagination we begin to find more and more depictions of a structured and structural social corruption in which the line between corruption backed by political or administrative power and corruption backed by other kinds of power begins to get blurred. But Raag Darbari, Shrilal Shukla's classic novel, had already demonstrated 40 years ago--when the socialist state and its particular brand of putrefaction were beginning to come into their own in a big way--that corrupt governments, like corrupt people, spring from corrupt societies.