The Lives of Sri Aurobindo

The Lives of Sri Aurobindo

Author: Peter Heehs

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2008-05-19

Total Pages: 529

ISBN-13: 0231511841

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Since his death in 1950, Sri Aurobindo Ghose has been known primarily as a yogi and a philosopher of spiritual evolution who was nominated for the Nobel Prize in peace and literature. But the years Aurobindo spent in yogic retirement were preceded by nearly four decades of rich public and intellectual work. Biographers usually focus solely on Aurobindo's life as a politician or sage, but he was also a scholar, a revolutionary, a poet, a philosopher, a social and cultural theorist, and the inspiration for an experiment in communal living. Peter Heehs, one of the founders of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram Archives, is the first to relate all the aspects of Aurobindo's life in its entirety. Consulting rare primary sources, Heehs describes the leader's role in the freedom movement and in the framing of modern Indian spirituality. He examines the thinker's literary, cultural, and sociological writings and the Sanskrit, Bengali, English, and French literature that influenced them, and he finds the foundations of Aurobindo's yoga practice in his diaries and unpublished letters. Heehs's biography is a sensitive, honest portrait of a life that also provides surprising insights into twentieth-century Indian history.


Elusive Ideology

Elusive Ideology

Author: Mark Hager

Publisher: Dorrance Publishing

Published: 2022-01-28

Total Pages: 288

ISBN-13: 1648042945

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Elusive Ideology: Religion and Socialism in Modern Indian Thought By: Mark Hager An intellectual history of modern Indian thought, Elusive Ideology suggests tha t key thinkers juxtapose Western socialist themes with Indian religious themes so as to generate novel political agendas. In that context, Gandhian Socialism merits special attention, pivoting on two of Gandhi’s preoccupations: egalitarian rural communities and nonviolent transformational movements. It exerts substantial sway on Marxist-oriented thinkers initially skeptical of Gandhi.


The Popular Front and the Global Circulation of Marxism through Calcutta, 1920s-1970s

The Popular Front and the Global Circulation of Marxism through Calcutta, 1920s-1970s

Author: Prasanta Dhar

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2022-11-29

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 3031186176

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This book examines the global circulation of Marxism seen from one of its most highly charged sites: Calcutta in India. Building on but also revising existing approaches to global intellectual history, the book presents the circulation of Marxism through Calcutta as a historically-sited problem of mass mediation. Using tools from media studies, the book explores the way that Marxism was presented to the public, the technologies used, and the meanings of Marxism in twentieth-century Calcutta. Demonstrating how the Popular Front was split between the so-called 'people's group' and those whom were called 'intellectuals', the book argues that the people's group generally identified themselves as Marxists and preferred audio-visual media such as theatre, while the so-called intellectuals privileged academic rigour and print media, usually referring to themselves as Marxians. Thus, the author reveals a polyphony of Marxisms in the Popular Front. Tracing Marxism back to the Bengal Renaissance and the Swadeshi and Naxal movements, this book shows how debate around the meaning of 'Marxism' continued throughout the 1970s in Calcutta, and eventually engendered the historiographical movement that has come to be known as Subaltern Studies.


The Gramophone Company's First Indian Recordings, 1899-1908

The Gramophone Company's First Indian Recordings, 1899-1908

Author: Michael S. Kinnear

Publisher: Popular Prakashan

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13: 9788171547289

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This Painstakingly Researched, Unique Volume, A Definitive Discography Of Indian Music, Is A Tribute Not Only To Indian Music, But Also To An Institution Whose Contribution To Indian Music Has Been Monumental -The Gramophone Company. Without Dustjacket In Good Condition.


Bande Mataram

Bande Mataram

Author: Sri Aurobindo

Publisher:

Published: 1997-01-01

Total Pages: 921

ISBN-13: 9788170584162

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Early political writings, most of them editorials and articles from Bande Mataram, a Calcutta daily edited by Sri Aurobindo from 1906 to 1908. During its brief but momentous existence , wrote Sri Aurobindo, Bande Mataram changed the political thought of India . As its editor, his first preoccupation was to declare openly for complete and absolute independence (from British rule) as the aim of political action in India and to insist on this persistently in the pages of the journal . Contents (by subject): Britain; British Rule; Bureaucracy, Repression; Congress, Moderatism, Nationalism, Extremism; Swaraj, Swadeshi, Boycott, National Education; Indian Resurgence; Europe, Asia, Africa. Articles: New Lamps for Old ; The Doctrine of Passive Resistance ; Bhavani Mandir . Subjects: Social and Political Thought, Education, Indology.


Ānandamaṭh, Or, The Sacred Brotherhood

Ānandamaṭh, Or, The Sacred Brotherhood

Author: Bankim Chandra Chatterji

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13: 0195178572

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Winner of the A.K. Ramanujan Prize for Annotated Translation This is a translation of a historically important Bengali novel. Published in 1882, Chatterji's Anandamath helped create the atmosphere and the symbolism for the nationalist movement leading to Indian independence in 1947. It contains the famous hymn Vande Mataram ("I revere the Mother"), which has become India's official National Song. Set in Bengal at the time of the famine of 1770, the novel reflects tensions and oppositions within Indian culture between Hindus and Muslims, ruler and ruled, indigenous people and foreign overlords, jungle and town, Aryan and non-Aryan, celibacy and sexuality. It is both a political and a religious work. By recreating the past of Bengal, Chatterji hoped to create a new present that involved a new interpretation of the past. Julius Lipner not only provides the first complete and satisfactory English translation of this important work, but supplies an extensive Introduction contextualizing the novel and its cultural and political history. Also included are notes offering the Bengali or Sanskrit terms for certain words, as well as explanatory notes for the specialized lay reader or scholar.


Anandamath, or The Sacred Brotherhood

Anandamath, or The Sacred Brotherhood

Author: Bankimcandra Chatterji

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2005-08-23

Total Pages: 331

ISBN-13: 0195346335

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This is a translation of a historically important Bengali novel. Published in 1882, Chatterji's Anandamath helped create the atmosphere and the symbolism for the nationalist movement leading to Indian independence in 1947. It contains the famous hymn Vande Mataram ("I revere the Mother"), which has become India's official National Song. Set in Bengal at the time of the famine of 1770, the novel reflects tensions and oppositions within Indian culture between Hindus and Muslims, ruler and ruled, indigenous people and foreign overlords, jungle and town, Aryan and non-Aryan, celibacy and sexuality. It is both a political and a religious work. By recreating the past of Bengal, Chatterji hoped to create a new present that involved a new interpretation of the past. Julius Lipner not only provides the first complete and satisfactory English translation of this important work, but supplies an extensive Introduction contextualizing the novel and its cultural and political history. Also included are notes offering the Bengali or Sanskrit terms for certain words, as well as explanatory notes for the specialized lay reader or scholar.


Anandamath

Anandamath

Author: Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay

Publisher: DigiCat

Published: 2022-07-21

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

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Anandamath is a Bengali fiction, written by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay and published in 1882. It is inspired by and set in the background of the Sannyasi Rebellion in the late 18th century and is considered one of the most important novels in the history of Bengali and Indian literature. The book is set in the years during the famine in Bengal in 1770 CE. It starts with by introducing the readers to a couple, Mahendra and Kalyani, who are stuck at their village Padachinha without food and water in the times of famine. They decide to leave their village and move to the next closest city where there is a better chance of survival. During the course of events, the couple gets separated and Kalyani has to run through the forest with her infant to avoid getting caught by robbers. After a long chase, she loses consciousness at the bank of a river.


The Black Hole of Empire

The Black Hole of Empire

Author: Partha Chatterjee

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 2012-04-08

Total Pages: 440

ISBN-13: 0691152012

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When Siraj, the ruler of Bengal, overran the British settlement of Calcutta in 1756, he allegedly jailed 146 European prisoners overnight in a cramped prison. Of the group, 123 died of suffocation. While this episode was never independently confirmed, the story of "the black hole of Calcutta" was widely circulated and seen by the British public as an atrocity committed by savage colonial subjects. The Black Hole of Empire follows the ever-changing representations of this historical event and founding myth of the British Empire in India, from the eighteenth century to the present. Partha Chatterjee explores how a supposed tragedy paved the ideological foundations for the "civilizing" force of British imperial rule and territorial control in India. Chatterjee takes a close look at the justifications of modern empire by liberal thinkers, international lawyers, and conservative traditionalists, and examines the intellectual and political responses of the colonized, including those of Bengali nationalists. The two sides of empire's entwined history are brought together in the story of the Black Hole memorial: set up in Calcutta in 1760, demolished in 1821, restored by Lord Curzon in 1902, and removed in 1940 to a neglected churchyard. Challenging conventional truisms of imperial history, nationalist scholarship, and liberal visions of globalization, Chatterjee argues that empire is a necessary and continuing part of the history of the modern state.


Swadeshi Movement

Swadeshi Movement

Author: V. Sankaran Nair

Publisher: Mittal Publications

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 140

ISBN-13:

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Role of students in the freedom movement in south India, 1905- 1942.