From the iconography of India Inc, Kaur moves to ‘Incredible India’, a tourism promotion campaign that tried to update standard yogi-yoga-tiger-Taj visual representations. Although her close reading of advertisements is insightful, it doesn’t fit as well into the larger argument about how, in the 21st century, success for a nation-state is defined by its ability to attract foreign capital. Other chapters deal with ‘India Shining’, the BJP’s disastrous media campaign of 2004, and ‘Lead India’, the Times Group’s marketing blitz to gain credibility by adding ‘activism’ to the pap it serves readers. These chapters reveal a more complex—even contradictory—set of claims being made. Global capital is not at stake here. Instead, the discourse travels the familiar terrain of nation-building and national belonging. Thus ‘India Shining’ addressed a proud, prosperous populace (only to be repudiated by those excluded and disappointed). The subtitle, ‘Capitalist Dreams and Nationalist Desires’, suggests such a conjugation of old and new ideas. But these cannot be neatly packaged into the globalisation story. The book also argues that “it is no coincidence” that globalisation led to the emergence of Modi, since India Inc craves a strong leader. This does not explain the illiberal roots of the Modi phenomenon, which draw upon a substrate of social prejudices around religion, caste and gender. Political economy alone cannot account for the rise of social conservatism and authoritarian leaders in India, Turkey, Brazil and the US. The cultural politics at work are more complex. PM Modi’s strongman image routinely invokes threats to national security. The idea of India as territory to be defended from foreign enemies, which probably won the BJP the 2019 elections, may be absent in advertisements but is one of the oldest and most influential nationalist stances.