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The book is a natural outgrowth of research, the author has pursued over the past one decade on agrarian interests related to land tenures, peasant movements or anti-British revolts and in general the economic history of Andhra Pradesh in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Having written sporadically on various themes of agrarian and peasant history of Andhra region his efforts were directed towards pulling some of these strands together into a coherent history of agrarian relations and peasants in Andhra Pradesh in general and in Kalahasti Zamindari, in particular with its historical account from the beginning. The book contains eight chapters. In the first chapter the establishment o...
The book deals with the social, political, cultural and economic conditions of India in the eighteenth century against the backdrop of the historical processes that had in earlier times shaped the life and history of Indian people.
Written over a period of time, in between her busy schedule as a senior Science teacher of a leading Educational Institute of central India, the title ‘World Through My Lens’, is a collection of short write-ups by Sandhya Deshpande who is an all-rounder with a unique observational skill and a lot of wits. Her creative impulses have tackled multifarious single-handed experiences from a vast career of twenty-five years in the field of education. This book will take readers down the memory lane of their school days, it will also help them cherish the best days of their life. The author’s observations are wide-ranging from nature to natural, manual to the digital, classrooms to the haunting backstage, from picnic to panic, from a need to greed, the imposition of unusual expectations to real-life conditions, from an under-confident student to a successful adult, etc. The write-ups can be a guide for parents and teachers to understand minute details and the hidden beauty of this profession. The written language is simple and will help readers relate easily. As said by Rabindranath Tagore Ji, ‘It’s simple to be happy, but difficult to be simple’.
The first sustained analysis of the relationship between women's contemporary painting and feminism. This international collection of specially commissioned pieces brings together writing both by theorists engaged with the process and practice of painting and practitioners engaged in theory, to bring into question what has been a neglected area within feminist literature on visual culture. Looking at gender, subjectivity, spectatorship, the gendered audience and maternal subjectivity and painting, Unframed encourages reflexivity about the practice and includes in its scope a range of processes including drawing, printing, collage and installation. The process of painting and the materiality of paint, haptic vision and the contemporary sublime are all discussed. Lavishly illustrated in black and white, Unframed will be of interest to practitioners and students of fine art, art history and women's studies.
Stranded in the Sahara desert, Dirk Pitt and his friends uncover the truth about the fate of 1930s aviator Kitty Mannock and the secret behind Lincoln's assassination. Reissue.