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  • Art and Nationalism in Colonial India-PDF [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bz1mtB2pw6AecE1maTBkRTZOdEE/view?usp= .../download-book.plohih.net/2526566-get-free-art-and-nationalism-in-colonial-india-occidental-orientations-by-partha-mitter-free-ebook.html]
    267 bytes (26 words) - 16:08, 14 March 2016

Page text matches

  • Beginnings of Cinema in India ...courage and daring, the film industry would never have been established in India in 1912."
    28 KB (4,665 words) - 03:19, 6 May 2006
  • Beginnings of Cinema in India ...courage and daring, the film industry would never have been established in India in 1912."
    29 KB (4,743 words) - 09:52, 25 December 2011
  • ...cer making science educational programmes for the village children; it was India’s first experiment in satellite transmission. ...oon after, he had the opportunity to work with the Archeological Survey of India as a draftsman. However, restless with his job and its constraints, and mov
    36 KB (5,567 words) - 11:20, 30 March 2009
  • Suggested reading would be text like, Arts and nationalism in [[colonial India]], Words of light, Technology of seeing, Illumination, Camera Indica, Photo ...of cinema, they are also aware of printed image and political struggle in India.
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 07:53, 8 July 2006
  • ...nt corpus of publications has established a place for Kalighat painting in India’s artscape (see the bibliography). The painters who created the style wer ...hip, and criticism are exploring the place of contemporary art practice in India’s complex artscape as well as its relation to art practice elsewhere, now
    13 KB (2,044 words) - 01:22, 27 April 2006
  • ...enrolled Edison in her newly formed Theosophical Society and departed for India with one of the new inventions.39 But if the phonograph could be seen as pa ...tors on current political events, travelers and guides to distant locales (India, Norway, the Grand Canyon). The Northern Chautauqua also set aside one or t
    695 KB (110,553 words) - 04:32, 27 April 2006
  • African, Indian, Caribbean and other colonial troops and personnel played a crucial role in supporting the Allied cause i India
    3 KB (455 words) - 08:31, 27 April 2006
  • ...enrolled Edison in her newly formed Theosophical Society and departed for India with one of the new inventions.39 But if the phonograph could be seen as pa ...tors on current political events, travelers and guides to distant locales (India, Norway, the Grand Canyon). The Northern Chautauqua also set aside one or t
    803 KB (128,263 words) - 16:43, 24 May 2006
  • The Sir JJ Institute of Applied Art]] --> [[a young man before an imposing colonial art school]] '''Sir JJ Institute of Applied Art''' is an [[India]]n [[applied art]] institution. Based in [[Mumbai]], this state government
    7 KB (1,201 words) - 18:20, 7 February 2009
  • ...successful films Shantaram tried to make perhaps the first colour film in India, Sairandhari, which had been earlier filmed by Painter, and took the prints ...out, Padosi, remains one of the most celebrated social-films ever made in India.
    14 KB (2,483 words) - 16:25, 4 May 2006
  • The Printed Image and Political Struggle in India [[ARTS AND NATIONALISM]] excerpted from Art and Nationalism in Colonial India, 1850- 1922 by Partha Mitter
    4 KB (623 words) - 22:48, 25 April 2015
  • This famous satire contrasts conservative Bengali culture with that of the colonial elite. It is the story of a young Indian who returns to his native land aft India's first international co-production. The love-is-stronger-than-death story
    127 KB (20,817 words) - 08:24, 8 July 2006
  • ...enrolled Edison in her newly formed Theosophical Society and departed for India with one of the new inventions.39 But if the phonograph could be seen as pa ...tors on current political events, travelers and guides to distant locales (India, Norway, the Grand Canyon). The Northern Chautauqua also set aside one or t
    855 KB (137,726 words) - 17:02, 22 May 2006
  • '''British India 1818-1875''' Reconstruction of British India 1859-75
    133 KB (21,627 words) - 19:09, 24 May 2006
  • Why is it that the actual transformation of Western sources by colonial artists have not aroused much interest until now? ...in terms other than plagiarism stems from the fact that colonial (and Post-colonial) art criticism is unable to detach itself from the values of imperialism, a
    41 KB (6,545 words) - 14:40, 8 May 2009
  • ...der the famous black Trinidadian cricketer, Learie Constantine (who toured India in 1934), let alone Christians of Indian origin. This was a clearly a quest All over British India, then, competitive cricket was organized on `communal' lines,(23) with team
    8 KB (1,349 words) - 23:20, 19 June 2006
  • '''THE DRAMA OF INDIA''' history of colonial and modern theatre in india
    8 KB (1,286 words) - 07:35, 1 August 2006
  • Song of india[http://youtu.be/5hDWIg4FG][http://youtu.be/GhVNguVl0qA] '''Colonial India''' from the new international by s. stanley
    16 KB (2,415 words) - 11:22, 21 February 2012
  • ...out half million gramophone records have been manufactured and marketed in India under variety of banners and labels. Large number of artists have recorded ...rity. This paper attempts to present an overview of gramophone records in India with special emphasis on 78 rpm and EP/LP records. Some aspects of collect
    53 KB (8,415 words) - 01:32, 5 July 2006
  • ...e Institution. Professor Orlebar of the college called him "The Promise of India". Dadabhai, being an Athornan (ordained priest), founded the Rahnumae Mazda ...his aspirations, echoing Professor Orlebar's sentiment as "The Promise of India".
    17 KB (2,767 words) - 01:40, 5 July 2006
  • ...an Shakespeare." The Hindi literary revival, thus, enlisted the project of colonial rule--a project that sought to establish its own ...he authority of an author whose introduction in the literary curriculum in India bore the ideological underpinnings of imperial authority.
    1 KB (217 words) - 15:13, 17 July 2006
  • ...hat he also authored the three previous volumes in the "Criminal Tribes of India Series", and it cannot be doubted that, in the long years of his service, h ...nt and uses of fingerprinting, the colonial systems of classification, the colonial apparatus and machinery of 'law and order', notions of criminality, the adv
    58 KB (9,589 words) - 17:39, 7 July 2006
  • Why is it that the actual transformation of Western sources by colonial artists have not aroused much interest until now? ...in terms other than plagiarism stems from the fact that colonial (and Post-colonial) art criticism is unable to detach itself from the values of imperialism, a
    41 KB (6,550 words) - 22:53, 8 July 2006
  • '''Illusions and Images of Magic India and Indian Magic''' ...nd am directly involved in creating, interpreting and recreating images of India and Indian magic in the world today. For studying the subject of magic, be
    86 KB (14,445 words) - 05:21, 9 July 2006
  • ...re refers to the Indian subcontinent, which is dominated in area by modern India, but also includes the nations of Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and S ...the Portuguese were the first European nation to begin direct trading with India following the first successful voyage around the south of Africa in 1498 by
    19 KB (3,061 words) - 05:30, 9 July 2006
  • ...n extras made up with shoe polish, Rai and Osten intended to show a "real" India. "No film can be truly artistic, or, I believe, really popular" Rai declare ...of Germany's largest film studios. Amongst other films, he showed Life in India, a short documentary about the Munich carnival. The run was not very succes
    7 KB (1,094 words) - 16:14, 9 July 2006
  • [[ART AND NATIONALISM IN COLONIAL INDIA]] Linguistic Survey, colonial practices, white researcher bosses, native informants.. Shahid Amin
    5 KB (770 words) - 14:58, 3 March 2016
  • ...CATING MODERN SCIENCE: A Social History of Science and Culture in Colonial India by Dhruv Raina and S. Irfan Habib. Tulika Books, Delhi, 2004. ...es. But science and technology themselves too have cultures; developing in India over the late 19th and 20th century, cultures which are always susceptible
    44 KB (7,184 words) - 01:31, 12 July 2006
  • ...thod, with an emphasis on chronology and political history. The history of India was taught every year in schools and every othe year or so at the college l ...far cry from the later identification of Hisory as a useful plank against colonial rule and or fenerating nationalist pride. 13.
    8 KB (1,207 words) - 16:32, 16 July 2006
  • ...the earliest of many invaders who had exploited the aboroginal peoples of India. In his 1873 book, Gulamgiri (slavery) he wrote: ...nmistakably points to a common source of origin, the proverbial wealth of [India]…which has more recently tempted the cupidity of the Western nations, no
    6 KB (870 words) - 12:12, 13 January 2012
  • [[Rabindranath Tagore]] publishes [[Geetanjali]]. The [[All-India Hindu Mahasabha]] is lauched at Allahabad, allegedly in response to the [[M ...eb Phalke]] attends a screening of Life of Christ at [[P.B.Mehta's America-India Cinema]].
    10 KB (1,653 words) - 00:45, 5 December 2009
  • "The Grand Old Man of India" ...e Institution. Professor Orlebar of the college called him "The Promise of India". Dadabhai, being an Athornan (ordained priest), founded the Rahnumae Mazda
    17 KB (2,766 words) - 16:36, 17 July 2006
  • [[The Defence of India Act]]. [[Gopal Krishna Gokhale]] dies. [[Aga Hashr Kashmiri]] writes his be discussed in Criminality and Colonial Anthropology
    999 bytes (149 words) - 23:21, 13 July 2013
  • we call India, a long, slow march X. SOUTHERN INDIA 136
    55 KB (9,073 words) - 15:25, 18 July 2006
  • ...nesia improved, I once held before him a page of the Illustrated Weekly of India. There was a photograph on it of two tribals. He loudly read its title, 'Na ...present Bengal is partly in India and partly in Bangladesh) by the British colonial masters claiming about thirty million victims.
    13 KB (2,126 words) - 06:28, 24 February 2012
  • ...years studying and watching films at the Film and Television Institute of India. ...early technologies, developments, Walter Benjamin, arts and nationalism in colonial times, Photos of God, Camera Indica, Imprints of the British Raj, Maharasht
    5 KB (906 words) - 09:52, 9 July 2009
  • ...li of the funeral spaces. ( check- was it litho- photos of gods) Many post colonial years later, here is the ambition of an individual idiom. We should only welcome then the great photographic project called "People of India", even if it feels like we are being made to dive into the sea, before we h
    23 KB (4,070 words) - 07:29, 19 October 2016
  • Unusually, this particular man, a colonial subject, lays the foundations for a cinema that gazes out of the screen wit ...history of proscenium theatre in India, the history of modern business in India.
    2 KB (406 words) - 07:41, 28 July 2013
  • ...ocial processes that shaped cultural identiities for Baroda and for modern India.
    1 KB (150 words) - 16:17, 25 February 2012
  • [[ART AND NATIONALISM IN COLONIAL INDIA]]
    419 bytes (53 words) - 12:25, 17 March 2016
  • Art and Nationalism in Colonial India-PDF [https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bz1mtB2pw6AecE1maTBkRTZOdEE/view?usp= .../download-book.plohih.net/2526566-get-free-art-and-nationalism-in-colonial-india-occidental-orientations-by-partha-mitter-free-ebook.html]
    267 bytes (26 words) - 16:08, 14 March 2016