This book is an enthralling journey through time, exploring the Golden Age, the rise of Bollywood, the Parallel Cinema movement, global acclaim, and technological advancements that shaped one of the world's most prolific film industries.
Designed as a textbook for undergraduate students of Economics and Commerce (Pass and Hons.), this uptodate book provides a comprehensive coverage of Microeconomics and systematically analyzes all the important topics. The book is also intended for students appearing in Indian Civil Services (IAS), Indian Economic Service (IES) and various State Civil Services examinations. The text is based on the model UGC syllabus and the chapters confirm to the UGC modules, which will greatly benefit the students. The authors present a masterly analysis of important topics such as the role of price mechanism and market equilibrium, factor pricing, and the concept of social welfare functions. The text emphasizes some of the current topics, for example, international financial environment, globalization, market failure and externality, public goods and rational expectation hypothesis. Key Features: • The book contains both numerical and logical questions at the end of each chapter. • Each chapter is followed by a list of major concepts and their brief elaborations. • Charts and diagrams have been frequently used to complement textual analysis. • Some numerical problems are worked out on important topics.
In The Summer Of 1999, While The Kargil War Was Being Fought, Amitava Kumar Married A Pakistani Muslim. That Event Led To A Process Of Discovery That Made Kumar Examine The Relationship Not Only Between India And Pakistan But Also Between Hindus And Muslims Inside India. The Result Is This Fiercely Personal Essay On The Idea Of The Enemy. Written With Complete Honesty And With No Claims To Journalistic Detachment, This Book Chronicles The Complicity That Binds The Writer To The Rioter. Unlike Both The Fundamentalists And The Secularists, Kumar Finds Or Makes Utterly Human Those Whom He Opposes. More Than A Travelogue Which Takes The Reader To Wagah, Patna, Bhagalpur, Karachi, Kashmir, And Even Johannesburg, This Book, Then, Becomes A Portrait Of The People The Author Meets In These Places, People Dealing With The Consequences Of The Politics Of Faith. With A Writer'S Eye For Detail, Kumar Has Drawn A Map Of Violence. Informed More By A Traveller'S Sense Of Observation Than A Safe, Academic Moralism, Husband Of A Fanatic Refuses To Monumentalize Suffering Instead, It Presents Tragedy As Ordinary, And Hence, More Difficult To Accept Easily. In A Village Beside The Ganges Near Bhagalpur, In A Psychiatric Ward In Srinagar, In A Classroom In Ahmedabad ... Everywhere That The Author Goes, The Reader Is Compelled To Accompany Him On A Journey To The Heart Of Hatred.
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