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Tears from Iron
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 368

Tears from Iron

This multi-layered history of a horrific famine that took place in late-nineteenth-century China focuses on cultural responses to trauma. The massive drought/famine that killed at least ten million people in north China during the late 1870s remains one of China's most severe disasters and provides a vivid window through which to study the social side of a nation's tragedy. Kathryn Edgerton-Tarpley's original approach explores an array of new source materials, including songs, poems, stele inscriptions, folklore, and oral accounts of the famine from Shanxi Province, its epicenter. She juxtaposes these narratives with central government, treaty-port, and foreign debates over the meaning of the events and shows how the famine, which occurred during a period of deepening national crisis, elicited widely divergent reactions from different levels of Chinese society.

Book History
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 320

Book History

Book History is the annual journal of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing, Inc. (SHARP). Book History is devoted to every aspect of the history of the book, broadly defined as the history of the creation, dissemination, and the reception of script and print. Book History publishes research on the social, economic, and cultural history of authorship, editing, printing, the book arts, publishing, the book trade, periodicals, newspapers, ephemera, copyright, censorship, literary agents, libraries, literary criticism, canon formation, literacy, literacy education, reading habits, and reader response.

Incident Reflects
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 191

Incident Reflects

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A Matter of Conscience
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 132

A Matter of Conscience

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1998
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Pictorial document of the great famine of Bengal in 1943, through the eyes of the contemporary painters.

Woodcut Prints of Nineteenth Century Calcutta
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 136

Woodcut Prints of Nineteenth Century Calcutta

None

Keẏābāt̲ meẏe
  • Language: bn
  • Pages: 264

Keẏābāt̲ meẏe

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1988
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Articles on the social status and conditions of enlightened Bengali women in 19th century Bengal.

Voices in the History of Madness
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 440

Voices in the History of Madness

This book presents new perspectives on the multiplicity of voices in the histories of mental ill-health. In the thirty years since Roy Porter called on historians to lower their gaze so that they might better understand patient-doctor roles in the past, historians have sought to place the voices of previously silent, marginalised and disenfranchised individuals at the heart of their analyses. Today, the development of service-user groups and patient consultations have become an important feature of the debates and planning related to current approaches to prevention, care and treatment. This edited collection of interdisciplinary chapters offers new and innovative perspectives on mental heal...

Texts of Power
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

Texts of Power

Scholars from the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences in Calcutta explore t genealogy of India's contemporary intellectual modernity, concentrating on Bengal the first modern province. The topics include colonial and nationalist literature, art, politics, child rearing, historical memory, and th

Kalakātā
  • Language: bn
  • Pages: 561

Kalakātā

Articles on the history and culture of Calcutta City, India.

The Life of Sharatchandra Chattopadhyay
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 181

The Life of Sharatchandra Chattopadhyay

Sharatchandra Chattopadhyay has been the most popular writer of novels and short stories in his native Bengaland in India at large. Despite this, he remains unrecognized in the English speaking world. Narasingha P. Sil fills this void by presenting a historical critical assessment of his upbringing and the experiences that influenced his masterful and magnificent work. The Life of Sharatchandra Chattopadhyay rescues the authentic man, a caste-conscious and patriarchal Brahmin of colonial Bengal, from the cuckoo land of gratuitous praise and panegyric showered on the Aparajeya Kathasilpi, the "invincible" wordsmith. The author exposes Sharatchandra's innate conservative worldview and his romantic platonic concept of human sexuality that inform all his love stories. In many respects Sharatchandra resembles his formidable European forbear, Jean Jacques Rousseau of Enlightenment France. The concluding chapter of Sil's biographical study introduces this pioneering comparison between the two men--a veritable tour de force.