Indian Ideas Of Freedom Dennis Dalton
Material type: TextPublication details: Haryana Harper Collins 2023Description: 517pISBN:- 9789356290020
- 320.954 DAL
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Books | IIITDM Kurnool General Stacks | Non-fiction | 320.954 DAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0005393 |
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306.44 TOL Medium of instruction policies : which agenda? whose agenda? | 306.449 SPO The Cambridge Handbook of Language Policy | 320.954 ALE IMPORTANT JUDGMENTS THAT TRANSFORMED INDIA | 320.954 DAL Indian Ideas Of Freedom | 320.954 LAX Indian Polity : | 327 SIN International Relations | 330 VAR Talking to my daughter : a brief history of capitalism |
Continuity and Innovation in the Modern Indian Idea of Freedom
Vivekananda and the emergence of a philosophy of freedom in Modern India
The development and nature of Vivekananda Idea of Freedom
Aurobindo on the nature of Freedom
Gandhi Individual freedom and social action
Swaraj through Satyagraha
Tagore: Freedom and Nationalism
B.R.Ambedkar Idea of Freedom
M.N.Roy on Freedom
Indian Ideas of Freedom is an illuminating study of the lens through which freedom was perceived by thinkers such as Swami Vivekananda, Aurobindo Ghose, Mahatma Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore, B.R. Ambedkar, M.N. Roy and Jayaprakash Narayan. It examines how, for this 'group of seven', the pursuit of freedom was both individual and political; how their ideas and arguments, drawing heavily on indigenous cultural resources, were far from imitative and thus distinct. In that, it explores their contribution to an intellectual tradition that braced an extraordinary nationalist movement. And while the differences among these seven are apparent, their similarities are less recognized; they are presented here as parallel. Dennis Dalton's reading of the extensive writings and speeches of these thinkers is critical but compassionate. Moreover, as James Tully observes in his Afterword to the book, Dalton 'participates in the dialogue' in which he places the theorists-a method of studying political thought Tully deems 'as original and important as the tradition of freedom it brings to light'.
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