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Poetry and History: Bengali Maṅgal-Kābya and Social Change in Precolonial Bengal David L
Western Washington University Western CEDAR A Collection of Open Access Books and Books and Monographs Monographs 2008 Poetry and History: Bengali Maṅgal-kābya and Social Change in Precolonial Bengal David L. Curley Western Washington University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://cedar.wwu.edu/cedarbooks Part of the Near Eastern Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Curley, David L., "Poetry and History: Bengali Maṅgal-kābya and Social Change in Precolonial Bengal" (2008). A Collection of Open Access Books and Monographs. 5. https://cedar.wwu.edu/cedarbooks/5 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Books and Monographs at Western CEDAR. It has been accepted for inclusion in A Collection of Open Access Books and Monographs by an authorized administrator of Western CEDAR. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Table of Contents Acknowledgements. 1. A Historian’s Introduction to Reading Mangal-Kabya. 2. Kings and Commerce on an Agrarian Frontier: Kalketu’s Story in Mukunda’s Candimangal. 3. Marriage, Honor, Agency, and Trials by Ordeal: Women’s Gender Roles in Candimangal. 4. ‘Tribute Exchange’ and the Liminality of Foreign Merchants in Mukunda’s Candimangal. 5. ‘Voluntary’ Relationships and Royal Gifts of Pan in Mughal Bengal. 6. Maharaja Krsnacandra, Hinduism and Kingship in the Contact Zone of Bengal. 7. Lost Meanings and New Stories: Candimangal after British Dominance. Index. Acknowledgements This collection of essays was made possible by the wonderful, multidisciplinary education in history and literature which I received at the University of Chicago. It is a pleasure to thank my living teachers, Herman Sinaiko, Ronald B. -
Journal LXIII, Vol. 1-2021
JOURNAL OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY VOLUME LXIII No. 1-2, 2021 THE ASIATIC SOCIETY 1 PARK STREET KOLKATA © The Asiatic Society ISSN 0368-3308 Edited and published by Dr. Satyabrata Chakrabarti General Secretary The Asiatic Society 1 Park Street Kolkata 700 016 Published in August 2021 Printed at Desktop Printers 3A, Garstin Place, 4th Floor Kolkata 700 001 Price : 400 (Complete vol. of four nos.) CONTENTS ARTICLES Genes as a Guide to Human History and Culture Partha P. Majumder ... ... ... 1 Rajendralala Mitra — A Time Traveller in the Twentieth Century — A Possible Scenario Malavika Karlekar ... ... ... 11 Why Is Understanding Gender Important Today? Nirmala Banerjee ... ... ... 31 Remnants of Dharmadam Fort — The Unwritten History of the British Trading Posts of Thalassery in Kerala M. S. Mahendrakumar ... ... ... 53 German Military Aid to the Indian Revolutionary Parties for anti-British Armed Uprising in India 1914-15 Premansu Kumar Bandyopadhyay ... ... 73 Instant Triple Talaq : A Curse on Muslim Women in India Nurul Islam ... ... ... 113 COMMUNICATIONS A Vedic Riddle (Prasnottaré) H. S. Ananthanarayana ... ... ... 129 Sukumar Sen : The Man behind the Screen of Indian Parliamentary Democracy Nilay Kumar Saha ... ... ... 137 ( vi ) GLEANINGS FROM THE PAST Annual Address Delivered by Professor Suniti Kumar Chatterji on February 1, 1971 at The Asiatic Society, Kolkata ... 153 Notes on Gleanings Acharya Suniti Kumar Chatterji’s Reflections on the Founder of the Asiatic Society Satyabrata Chakrabarti ... ... ... 161 BOOK REVIEW The Sun that Shines Supreme : Essays on Ideology and Revolutionary Activities of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Edited by Mamata Desai and Manis Kumar Raha, K. P. Bagchi & Company, Kolkata, 2010. Ranjit Sen ... ... ... 165 Genes as a Guide to Human History and Culture* Partha P. -
Uhm Phd 9519439 R.Pdf
INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality or the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely. event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. MI48106·1346 USA 313!761-47oo 800:521-0600 Order Number 9519439 Discourses ofcultural identity in divided Bengal Dhar, Subrata Shankar, Ph.D. University of Hawaii, 1994 U·M·I 300N. ZeebRd. AnnArbor,MI48106 DISCOURSES OF CULTURAL IDENTITY IN DIVIDED BENGAL A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE DECEMBER 1994 By Subrata S. -
Prospectus 2021
Ramakrishna Mission Vidyamandira Belur Math, Howrah-711202 A Residential Autonomous College affiliated to University of Calcutta College with Potential for Excellence DST-FIST sponsored College, Funded by DBT- Star College Scheme, NIRF India Ranking 2020 (College Category) – 7th Contents 1. History and Objective 1 2. Units of Ramakrishna Mission Saradapitha 2 3. Courses of Study 3 4. Programme Outcomes (PO) 42 5. Rules of Admission 44 6. Rules for Payment of Dues 45 7. Examination 46 8. Stipends and Scholarships 57 9. Library 57 10. Computer Laboratory & Internet Kiosk 59 11. Smart Classrooms & Language Laboratory 59 12. ‘Swami Vivekananda Research Centre’ (SVRC) 59 13. Internal Quality Assurance Cell 59 14. Placement & Career Counselling Cell 60 15. College and Hostel Dress Code 61 16. Hostel 61 17. Co-curricular Activities 62 18. Anti-ragging Cell 64 19. Discipline 65 20. Vidyamandira Vidyarthi Samsad 67 21. Visits by Guardians 68 22. Health 68 23. Administrative & Faculty Members 68 24. Administrative & Academic Support Staff (College) 81 25. Administrative & Academic Support Staff (Hostel) 86 26. Academic Medals & Prizes 88 27. Donations 105 28. Fees Structure 113 29. Withdrawals 116 30. Daily Routine 121 31. Contact 122 1 1. History and Objective: What is today the Ramakrishna Mission Vidyamandira, traces its origin to the educational ethos of Swami Vivekananda. True education, according to Swami Vivekananda, must enable a person to manifest all that is best in him by a harmonious development of head, hand, and heart. Such an education would not only combine in it the best elements of Eastern and Western culture but would at the same time hold aloft the Indian ideals of devotion, wisdom and morality so that it might meet the national temperament at every point. -
Download The
FOLKLORE RESEARCH IN EAST PAKISTAN By A s h r a f S id d iq u i and A . S. M. Z a h u r u l H a q u e Indiana University East Pakistan takes up the eastern part of Bengal, formerly a province of British India. It consists of an area of 55,134 square miles with a population of over fifty-five millions. This land of rivers and green fields has always provided an easy, carefree life for its people, and has moulded their character and folklore accordingly. The abundant folklore of East Pakistan contains a variety of elements, which is partly to be explained by historical forces. From the third century A.D. on, the Mouryas, the Guptas, the Palas, the Senas and the Muslims came one after another to rule the land, and grafted their ways of life and culture traits on the indigenous population. Subsequently Portuguese, French and English ships anchored in the harbors of Bengal, and left not only their merchandise but also their customs. Among these foreign traders, the British became most powerful, and were able to consolidate their authority at the expense of the fading empire of the Mughal rulers. The battle of Plassy in 1757 ended with the defeat of the Nawab of Bengal. This British victory ensured the supremacy of the British East India Company over the entire subcontinent of present-day India and Pakistan for nearly two hundred years. As a result, in the words of 2 A. SIDDIQUI & A. S. M. ZAHURUL HAQUE Toynbee, the civilization has become plural instead of singular.1 The folklore of East Pakistan, therefore, is a mixture of various cultural traditions. -
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University
BANGABANDHU SHEIKH MUJIBUR RAHMAN AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY ADMISSION TEST SUMMER 2018 TERM LIST OF ELIGIBLE CANDIDATE SL #BILL ROLL CANDIDATE NAME FATHERS NAME 1 20002 12749 MD. FAZLA MUKIT SOURAV MD. ABUL KALAM AZAD 2 20004 12956 SHAMINUR RAHAMAN SHAMIM MD. SHAMSUL HAQUE 3 20006 13335 SHAHRAZ AHMED SEJAN MD. MUSHIUR RAHMAN 4 20011 11868 SHAMIMA NASRIN MD. MAINUL HAQUE 5 20014 14704 MOHAMMAD MORSHED TANIM M A HAMID MIAH 6 20015 12980 FATEMA MOHSINA MITHILA MD. SHOWKAT AHMED 7 20016 12689 BIJOY SUTRADHAR SHARAT CHANDRA SUTRADHAR 8 20022 12405 EFAT TARA YESMEAN RIYA MD. ARFAN ALI 9 20024 14189 NAWRIN KABIR PRANTI A. K. M. NURUNNABI KABIR 10 20028 12856 ZAWAD IBRAHIM MD. ABDUL HAFIZ 11 20030 12792 ASIKUNNABI MD. AZIZUL ISLAM 12 20035 11862 TAMIM AHMED TUBA SALAH UDDIN AHMED KISLU 13 20036 14804 MD. RAKATUL ISLAM KOMPON MD. SAIDUR RAHMAN 14 20038 12182 FAISAL BIN KIRAMOT MD.KIRAMOT HOSSAIN 15 20043 13905 JANNATUL LOBA RABIUL ISLAM 16 20046 14832 ABDULLAH AL-MAHMUD ABDUS SABUR AL MAMUN 17 20049 10205 MD. TOFAZZAL HOSSAIN TOHIN MD. ABUL HOSSAIN 18 20052 14313 SUMI BHOWMICK SUBAL KUMAR BHOWMICK 19 20061 11984 MD . HUMAYOUN KABIR MD . GOLAM MOSTAFA 20 20062 11518 TANZINA KABIR HIA MD. HOMAYUN KABIR 21 20068 13409 AYSHA AZAD NIPU ABUL KALAM AZAD 22 20069 14565 PARVAGE AHMED MINUN MD. ABDUL BATEN 23 20075 14502 LAIYA BINTE ZAMAN KAMRUZZAMAN MIA 24 20078 11725 MD.RASEL RANA MD.WAZED ALI 25 20079 12290 RABEYA AKBAR ANTU MD. ALI AKBAR 26 20081 12069 RAHUL SIKDER. DR.MAKHAN LAL SIKDER. 27 20084 12299 ZARIN TASNIM SOBUR AHMED 28 20086 13013 MD. -
NAAC NBU SSR 2015 Vol II
ENLIGHTENMENT TO PERFECTION SELF-STUDY REPORT for submission to the National Assessment & Accreditation Council VOLUME II Departmental Profile (Faculty Council for PG Studies in Arts, Commerce & Law) DECEMBER 2015 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH BENGAL [www.nbu.ac.in] Raja Rammohunpur, Dist. Darjeeling TABLE OF CONTENTS Page number Departments 1. Bengali 1 2. Centre for Himalayan Studies 45 3. Commerce 59 4. Lifelong Learning & Extension 82 5. Economics 89 6. English 121 7. Hindi 132 8. History 137 9. Law 164 10. Library & Information Science 182 11. Management 192 12. Mass Communication 210 13. Nepali 218 14. Philosophy 226 15. Political Science 244 16. Sociology 256 Research & Study Centres 17. Himalayan Studies (Research Unit placed under CHS) 18. Women’s Studies 266 19. Studies in Local languages & Culture 275 20. Buddhist Studies (Placed under the Department of Philosophy) 21. Nehru Studies (Placed under the Department of Political Science) 22. Development Studies (Placed under the Department of Political Science) _____________________________________________________________________University of North Bengal 1. Name of the Department : Bengali 2. Year of establishment : 1965 3. Is the Department part of a School/Faculty of the University? Department is the Faculty of the University 4. Name of the programmes offered (UG, PG, M. Phil, Ph.D., Integrated Masters; Integrated Ph.D., D.Sc., D.Litt., etc.) : (i) PG, (ii) M. Phil., (iii) Ph. D., (iv) D. Litt. 5. Interdisciplinary programmes and departments involved : NIL 6. Course in collaboration with other universities, industries, foreign institution, etc. : NIL 7. Details of programmes discontinued, if any, with reasons 2 Years M.Phil.Course (including Methadology in Syllabus) started in 2007 (Session -2007-09), it continued upto 2008 (Session - 2008-10); But it is discontinued from 2009 for UGC Instruction, 2009 regarding Ph. -
Dhaka Adventist Pre-Seminary & School
Dhaka Adventist Pre-Seminary & School Materials for 1st Term (2021) English Version Class: Seven Subject: BGS Chapter One Liberation Movement of Bangladesh Example of Multiple Choice Questions 1. In which year the students decided to present the demand for Bangla as a state language in the Constituent Assembly? (a) 1948 (b) 1951 (c) 1952 (d) 1953 2. Which movement of the Bengalese got international recognition? (a) The Language Movement (b) Confidentiality Movement (c) The Student Movement (d) Six points Demand 3. After the declaration of which policy in 1962 the students became more agitated? (a) Women development policy (b) Child policy (c) Education Policy (d) Population Policy 4. In the All party state Language Committee the most active among the students were— i. Gaziul Haque ii. Kazi Morshed Khan iii. Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Which one of the following is correct? (a) i and ii (b) ii and ii (c) i and iii (d) i, ii, and iii 5. When was Pakistan formed? (a) 1946 (b) 1947 (c) 1948 (d) 1949 6. On which place of Dhaka University Mohammand Ali Zinnah declared about national language? (a) Curzon hall (b) Sohrawardi park (c) TSC auditaorium (d) VC square Creative Questions Answer Ans: a. President Iskander Mirza declared martial law in Pakistan in 1958. Ans: b. In 1954, Muslim League was defeated because of political misery and mal administration. The party leaders, being alienated from the people could not stand a chance. Mistule, price hike, oppression, factionalism, corruption, disparity between the two parts of Pakistan can be termed as some of the reasons for the crushing defeat of Muslim League. -
Sanskritisation of Bengali, Plight of the Margin and the Forgotten Role of Tagore
Journal of the Department of English Vidyasagar University Vol. 11, 2013-2014 Sanskritisation of Bengali, Plight of the Margin and the Forgotten Role of Tagore Sandipan Sen It is well known that, after the victory of Lord Clive against Sirajuddaula at the battle of Plassey in 1757, there was an unprecedented reign of loot in Bengal, as the British presided over a drainage of wealth from Bengal. According to one estimate, apart from the “official compensation” to the British army and navy, the members of the Council of the British East India Company received an amount of L 50,000 to L 80,000 each, and Clive alone took away L 234,000 over and above a jaigir worth L 30,000 a year (Smith 473). This apart, most British men carried out a grand loot at individual levels, the extent of which is difficult to imagine. The magnitude of the loot can be estimated from the fact that Govind Chand, the descendant of Mahatab Chand - the Jagat Seth during the battle of Plassey who had a staggering annual income of Rs 26,800,000 in 1765 - was reduced to penury as a result of the loot, and the British rulers granted him a monthly dole of Rs 1200 (Sikdar 986). Needless to say, this grand loot completely destroyed the economic structure of Bengal, which was a prosperous and wealthy kingdom. However, it often eludes our attention that the arrival of the British not only destroyed the economy of Bengal, but also the language of Bengal, i.e. the Bengali language. -
Southeast Bank ALLOTNO BANKCODE LOTTERYNO BONO NAME SHARES 059728 06-01-000006 0186741 1204570044777449 JANNATUL NAHIDA CHOWDHUR
SouthEast Bank ALLOTNO BANKCODE LOTTERYNO BONO NAME SHARES 059728 06-01-000006 0186741 1204570044777449 JANNATUL NAHIDA CHOWDHURY 200 059729 06-01-000011 0186746 1202420042849231 MD KHALILUR RAHMAN 200 059730 06-01-000018 0186753 1202420042319446 MD ABDUL JALIL & MST FOREDA PERVIN 200 059731 06-01-000019 0186754 1202420042849213 MD AKKAS ALI 200 059732 06-01-000021 0186756 1203020039271765 MOHAMMAD ALI ZINNAH 200 059733 06-01-000022 0186757 1203020039532499 MOHAMMAD ALI ZINNAH & MST.MOIFUL KHATUN 200 059734 06-01-000027 0186762 1202420042319411 MD.ABDUL JABBAR 200 059735 06-01-000029 0186764 1203020039271227 MST JOHURA BEGUM 200 059736 06-01-000031 0186766 1202420042849122 MD HARUNUR RASHID & HASINA AKTER 200 059737 06-01-000035 0186770 1202420042849280 MOST RABEYA BEGUM 200 059738 06-01-000038 0186773 1201960029726916 MD MONIR HOSSAIN 200 059739 06-01-000047 0186782 1203180010603381 MD MOIN KHAN 200 059740 06-01-000049 0186784 1202020001067901 MD ABU SAYEED GAZI 200 059741 06-01-000053 0186788 1203250024267641 FATEMA BEGUM 200 059742 06-01-000059 0186794 1201580018829375 MD ABU SAYEED GAZI & PARVEEN AKTER 200 059743 06-01-000062 0186797 1203250041716924 MERUNA KHAN 200 059744 06-01-000065 0186800 1204490044314257 MD RAZAUL KABER 200 059745 06-01-000072 0186807 1204490035049567 AKLIMA KHATOON 200 059746 06-01-000073 0186808 1204490027374444 KAZI SOHEB AFZAL 200 059747 06-01-000074 0186809 1204490039453651 KAZI SOHEB AFZAL & MOUSHUMI RAHMAN 200 059748 06-01-000084 0186819 1204390034305301 MD JUWEL RANA & MOSS MARIUM AKTER 200 059749 06-01-000087 -
India Progressive Writers Association; *7:Arxicm
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 124 936 CS 202 742 ccpp-.1a, CsIrlo. Ed. Marxist Influences and South Asaan li-oerazure.South ;:sia Series OcasioLal raper No. 23,Vol. I. Michijar East Lansing. As:,an Studies Center. PUB rAIE -74 NCIE 414. 7ESF ME-$C.8' HC-$11.37 Pius ?cstage. 22SCrIP:0:", *Asian Stud,es; 3engali; *Conference reports; ,,Fiction; Hindi; *Literary Analysis;Literary Genres; = L_tera-y Tnfluences;*Literature; Poetry; Feal,_sm; *Socialism; Urlu All India Progressive Writers Association; *7:arxicm 'ALZT:AL: Ti.'__ locument prasen-ls papers sealing *viithvarious aspects of !',arxi=it 2--= racyinfluence, and more specifically socialisr al sr, ir inlia, Pakistan, "nd Bangladesh.'Included are articles that deal with _Aich subjects a:.the All-India Progressive Associa-lion, creative writers in Urdu,Bengali poets today Inclian poetry iT and socialist realism, socialist real.Lsm anu the Inlion nov-,-1 in English, the novelistMulk raj Anand, the poet Jhaverchan'l Meyhani, aspects of the socialistrealist verse of Sandaram and mash:: }tar Yoshi, *socialistrealism and Hindi novels, socialist realism i: modern pos=y, Mohan Bakesh andsocialist realism, lashpol from tealist to hcmanisc. (72) y..1,**,,A4-1.--*****=*,,,,k**-.4-**--4.*x..******************.=%.****** acg.u.re:1 by 7..-IC include many informalunpublished :Dt ,Ivillable from othr source r.LrIC make::3-4(.--._y effort 'c obtain 1,( ,t c-;;,y ava:lable.fev,?r-rfeless, items of marginal * are oft =.ncolntered and this affects the quality * * -n- a%I rt-irodu::tior:; i:";IC makes availahl 1: not quali-y o: th< original document.reproductiour, ba, made from the original. -
The Wastes of Time by Syed Sajjad Hussain
THE WASTES OF TIME REFLECTIONS ON THE DECLINE AND FALL OF EAST PAKISTAN Syed Sajjad Husain 1995 Reproduced By: Sani H. Panhwar 2013 Syed Sajjad Syed Sajjad Husain was born on 14th January 1920, and educated at Dhaka and Nottingham Universities. He began his teaching career in 1944 at the Islamia College, Calcutta and joined the University of Dhaka in 1948 rising to Professor in 1962. He was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Rajshahi University July in 1969 and moved to Dhaka University in July 1971 at the height of the political crisis. He spent two years in jail from 1971 to 1973 after the fall of East Pakistan. From 1975 to 1985 Dr Husain taught at Mecca Ummul-Qura University as a Professor of English, having spent three months in 1975 as a Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge University. Since his retirement in 1985, he had been living quietly at home and had in the course of the last ten years published five books including the present Memoirs. He breathed his last on 12th January, 1995. A more detailed account of the author’s life and career will be found inside the book. The publication of Dr Syed Sajjad Husain’s memoirs, entitled, THE WASTES OF TIME began in the first week of December 1994 under his guidance and supervision. As his life was cut short by Almighty Allah, he could read and correct the proof of only the first five Chapters with subheadings and the remaining fifteen Chapters without title together with the Appendices have been published exactly as he had sent them to the publisher.