While reading this book, I was frequently interrupted by old memories and associations. I remember having written in Bangla for my school magazine how nature was integral to Tagore's poetry, how during my district training at Srikakulam I had spent a month in a tribal area named 'Elwinpeta', and how I had grown up reading columns of M Krishnan in The Statesman. I knew about Radhakamal Mukherjee as an important academic from Lucknow, of Patrick Geddes as the biographer of his scientist-friend Jagadish Chandra Bose, about K.M. Munshi as a noted author who founded the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, and of J.C. Kumarappa and Madeleine/Mirabehn as Gandhiji's devoted associates. I hardly knew anything about the remarkable couple Albert and Gabrielle Howard, except by name.
Ramachandra Guha's genius lies in discovering the common thread that tied these characters, with different levels of renown, in a manner that is both exhaustive and absorbing. Mixing description with analysis, and covering around a century—from Rabindranath to Krishnan—Guha unites them in that "they all addressed human-nature relationships, and they did so in writing." Admittedly, Guha's books that select individuals and their contribution to public causes—whether in shaping modern India or through writing and acting on ecological issues—have sometimes been criticised by casual readers for having left out personalities of their choice. Many such critiques emanate from an inadequate understanding of the historical context in which Guha posits such men and women.
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Denne historien er fra January 05, 2025-utgaven av Financial Express Bengaluru.
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Top IITs See a Drop in Campus Placements
● More students likely getting jobs independently
Top IITs see a drop in campus placements
• More students likely getting jobs independently
US set to lift curbs on Indian nuclear entities
EYEING DEEPER ENERGY TIES
ICC explores two-tier Test cricket system
ICC chief Jay Shah will meet Cricket Australia chair Mike Baird and his England counterpart Richard Thompson to discuss the finer points
Centre eyes private capital for $107-bn grid expansion
INDIA IS ASKING states to attract more private capital to accelerate the expansion of its power transmission network, part of a plan to revamp the country's grid and accommodate more clean power.
Dam over Brahmaputra not to impact water flows to India
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D-Street catches flu
Headwinds for markets at the start of the year include higher US 10-year yields and a stronger dollar, the potential imposition of additional US tariffs on Asia-Pacific economies, and elevated economic policy uncertainty and geopolitical risk, Goldman Sachs strategists said in a note while trimming the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index's target to 620 from 630, as per a Bloomberg report.
D-Street catches flu
HEADWINDS FOR MARKETS at the start of the year include higher US 10-year yields and a stronger dollar, the potential imposition of additional US tariffs on Asia-Pacific economies, and elevated economic policy uncertainty and geopolitical risk, Goldman Sachs strategists said in a note while trimming the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index's target to 620 from 630, as per a Bloomberg report.
Q-comm boost to gig worker hiring in 2025
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Banks, NBFCs See Hit to...
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