It was the world of divided minds. A brilliant scientist and his greatest innovation in Nano Technology are about to change the world of medicine. But is the world ready for it? A girl divided between a man who stood by her through thick and thin, and another man who evokes deep feelings. Can she fight her own mind? An Army General's dilemma of saving the nation, by risking his very job of saving the nation! Can he fight his own tribe to save them? It was the greatest war they fought: A war within!
A dear friend was about to embark on a remarkable journey, but little did they know just how extraordinary the path he had already traversed had been. It left them questioning their very essence—was this truly the journey of a mortal, or perhaps an elaborate ruse played upon them?
The Way Indians Were Being Indian, Someone Had To Take Notes, Explains Sanjay Suri, Whose Wanderings Through The Indian Corridors Of England Began Quite Unceremoniously With His Rather Unsuccessful Search For A Wife At A Marriage Mela In Wembley. Although Years Of Curious Probing Failed To Produce An Indian Story , Suri S Encounters With An Extraordinary Variety Of Indian Lives Enabled Him To Unearth A Treasure Trove Of Tales. So We Hear Of Dhanjibhai, Whose Vigorous Nods To A Customs Official At The Karachi Airport In 1956 Eventually Got Him And His Companions Their First Jobs In England In The Textile Mills Of J.W. Bastard & Co.; Of A Thread-And-Buttons Retailer Promoting A New Religion To Counter Caste Walls That Remain Firmly In Place 4000 Miles From Home; And Of The Punjabi Agony Aunt Who Engages In Startlingly Candid Exchanges With Southall Singhs, Counselling Them On, Among Other Things, The Matter Of Size. As Suri, Armed With The Objectivity Of A Seasoned Reporter Yet Intimately Involved With His Own Kind, Steps Right Into The Thick Of Things, We Also Catch Him Participating In A Unique Protest March Led By Ram , Krishna And Hanuman Down Kingsway; Attending A Secret Public Meeting Ostensibly Arranged To Champion The Evergreen Kashmir Cause; And Playing Appreciative Audience To A Group Of Seven-Year-Olds Belting Out Jhatkas At Their Weekly Bollywood Dance Class. " A Spirited Revelation Of The Exuberant Mosaic Of Life In Post-Immigration Britain " A People S Search For An Anchor In The Alien Land They Have Made Their Home.
Despite 58 years experimentation with the policy of protective discrimination and planned development a large majority of the 80.2 million tribal people languish in abject poverty, landlessness, powerlessness, illiteracy and malnutrition. Being caught in the hangover of the strong patriarchic tradition the women of nearly 700 marginalized tribal communities find themselves highly exploited, subjugated and voiceless. The present book, first of its kind on tribes living in northern districts of West Bengal (popularly known as North Bengal), explores the areas of subjugation of tribal life and particularly that of the tribal women and analytically presents the case of tribal women in a tea garden locale in the Dooars region of Jalpaiguri district. The focus of the study has been education, i.e. how the tribes in general and tribal women in particular are doing in the field of education. The field of education is chosen because it is generally considered the most important force of empowerment, enlightenment and social transformation and because it provides us with a field to explore the areas of gender discrimination subsumed in tribal patriarchy. The book has approached the problem of tribal education and the gender question in education against the backdrop of the dialectics of dominant-subordinate relationship between the state and the dominant society on the one hand and the marginalized tribes on the other. The uniqueness of the book lies in its critical approach to the state-sponsored development strategies and its emphasis on a ‘cultural approach’ for a better understanding of the problem and for working out alternative development strategies for improving the educational status of the tribal communities. Sanjay K. Roy, Reader, Department of Sociology, North Bengal University, West Bengal, had his Ph. D. from Delhi School of Economics, Delhi University, and pursued post-Doctoral research at the University of Sussex (UK) and University of Wollongong (Australia). Dr Roy has edited a volume on Refugees and Human Rights (2001) and contributed a good number of research papers to the leading journals, volumes and to national and international seminars/workshops. His areas of interest include sociological theories, urban poor, refugee studies, political sociology and gender studies. Dr Roy has completed a number of research projects; the latest being Gender Profile of Tribes of North Bengal, which has been carried out for the Centre for Women’s Studies, North Bengal University.
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