Nineteenth Century Indian English Prose: A SelectionThis Selection Is An Attempt To Represent The Facility With Which Indians Used The English Language In The Nineteenth Century. It Also Represents The Various Ways In Which Indians Wrote Or Spoke Of Their Country And As Such It Is A Selection Of Statements About India And The Idea Of The Indian Nation. It Includes Political, Cultural, Religious And Literary Pieces And Everywhere The Preference Has Been For Pieces Which Show Indian Eloquence In English. The Figures Included Are Raja Rammohun Roy, Dadabhai Naoroji, Keshab Chandra Sen, Mahadev Govind Ranade, Woomesh Chandra Bannerjee, Badruddin Tyabji, Sir Ferozeshah Mehta, Romesh Chunder Dutt, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Swami Vivekananda, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, V.S. Srinivasa Sastri, Mahatma Gandhi And Sri Aurobindo. The Collection Is Reader Friendly But The Reader Will Have To Engage Actively With The Authors And Make The Necessary Connections Of Themes And Ideas To Benefit Fully From The Anthology. |
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Contenido
Introduction by Mohan Ramanan | 1 |
Raja Ram MOHUN Roy 17721833 | 31 |
DADABHAI NAOROJI 18251917 65 | 65 |
KESHAB CHANDRA SEN 18381884 77 | 77 |
MAHADEV GOVIND RANADE 18421901 84 | 84 |
WOOMESH CHANDRA BANNERJEE 18441906 91 | 91 |
BADRUDDIN TYABJI 18441906 94 | 94 |
Sir PHEROZESHAH M MEHTA 18451915 99 | 99 |
ROMESH CHANDER DUTT 18481909 104 | 104 |
BAL GANGADHAR TILAK 18561909 132 | |
Términos y frases comunes
allowed Answer authority become believe Bengal better bill body Brahmo British rule brought called cause century character Cheers Christian civilization classes College common concremation conduct Congress consideration considered continued course desire discourse duty East effects enable England English equally established European existence feel gentlemen give given hands Hindu hold House ideas important improvement India Indian National influence interest introduced justice knowledge land language learning literature living Lord manner matters means mind Mohammedans Naoroji nationalist native nature never nineteenth century object opinion particular passages persons political practice present progress promote questions Ranade reason reform relation religion religious representative respect response Ripon Samaj Sanskrit selection social society speech stand thought thousand tradition wanted whole widows women writings Yajnavalkya