New Delhi, March 22 -- Outrage is everywhere. On social media, on the streets, on television debates, we dig in our heels and assert our positions on religion, morality, sexuality, even whether delivery persons should be allowed to use the elevator. But rage, that simmering intense and often unexpressed fury over inequality and unfairness, is less obvious. Women, especially, carry rage and generational trauma that slow boils against the everyday indignities they endure-and it's always been a bad, shameful and terrible thing to show it. That's been changing in small ways over the last few years. On Reels, in film, books and shows, women are delivering monologues, practicing acts of microfeminism, or allowing their rage free rein-as Shephal...