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They got together for their college reunion after 10 years. The toppers came. The competitive ones came. The married ones came. The ex-lovers came. The back-benchers came. Reyansh (Rey) – ‘The Wolf’ came too. Wolf is the ultimate fixer. A man who operates from the shadows. He is the guy who drove all the women in his batch crazy all those years ago; the swashbuckling kickboxing blackbelt S.P. of Gurgaon, Miss Maya’s Rey. It was like any other reunion. Until Nitya gets killed. Then Yutika. Then Deva. And then in every crime scene, Maya and her team find evidence pointing to Reyansh. Was the relationship with Maya just a means to deflect suspicion? Or are these murders being staged to frame ‘The Wolf’? Or did the reunion kindle old rivalries with Rey, while reigniting old flames? In yet another thriller that rapidly snakes through a tale of passion, murder, love and friendship, Suvika brings alive stories of men and women in new India.
International Conference on Advances in Power Generation from Renewable Energy Sources (APGRES-2020)
ProjectX India | 15th August 2022 edition provides you with power-packed information on 222 projects, contracts and tenders from 72 sectors and sub-sectors of the Indian economy. In this issue we have covered 95 projects in Conceptual/Planning Stage, 27 Contract Awards, 9 Projects Under Implementation, 90 Tenders, and 1 completed project. The project information is provided along with nearest contacts as available in the public domain to facilitate B2B exchange. This e-book serves to all those who are interested to know and tap the project opportunities in the Construction, Infrastructure, and Industrial segment. Our aim is to serve you with the right information on upcoming and ongoing projects, contracts, and tenders from India. The business opportunities are coming to the fore each day, and we, at ProjectX, are eager to grab and provide the information which can make a difference to your business. Thank You and Happy Reading. Note: This is an archival edition, to get the latest issue or know more about us, you can visit our website www.projectxindia.com
Heartwarming story of an air force officer, who sees a poor boy in rags on road, helps him in studies and other worldly needs. The boy with ups and downs of life completes his study, find love of his life and become an air force officer one day. Written by a retired Wing Commander this book gives insights of air force and the lives of the officers.
This book develops a model to examine the language of humour, which is multimodal and accounts for the possibility of transmutation of humour as it is performed through editorial cartoons. By transmutation is meant the transition in the language of humour when it crosses its own boundaries to provoke unprecedented reactions resulting in offensiveness, disappointment or hurt sentiment. The transmutability about the language of humour points to its inherently diabolical nature which manifests in the performance of controversial cartoons. The model is built by borrowing theoretical cues from Roman Jakobson, Roland Barthes, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. The integrated model, then, is developed to examine the cartoons which were recommended for deletion by the Thorat Committee, following a cartoon controversy in India. Through the cartoon analysis, the model discerns the significance of context and temporality in determining the impact of humour. It also examines how the ethics of humour; the blurred lines of political correctness and incorrectness are dictated by the political atmosphere and the power dynamics.
The Purpose of the study becomes relevant and assumes importance by fact that freedom of expression is most important human rights of the democracy, besides which the society will be monochromatic, but this freedom can’t be unrestricted. One can enjoy/ entertain its freedom up to that extent only until it doesn’t violate others freedom. A cartoonist expresses his attitude towards the various figures, characters and situations depicted in his figures, and thus represent the interests of a society, which are not always in harmony in the government. A cartoonist not only has to be creative, but he also has to attempt to be educational. For the latter purpose the cartoonist should conform to moral norms, which might potentially be in contradiction with his style of expression. The authority struggles differently with cartoonists. In some countries cartoonists are beaten, thrown in prison and even killed. In countries where authorities are unable to discreetly dispose of resenting cartoonists in such ways, other subtly coercive methods are applied.