Normal view MARC view ISBD view

India's Perception, Society, and Development [electronic resource] : Essays Unpleasant / by Arup Maharatna.

By: Maharatna, Arup [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: India : Springer India : Imprint: Springer, 2013Description: XVII, 183 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9788132210177.Subject(s): Religion -- Philosophy | Social policy | Population | Cultural studies | Demography | Economics | Population Economics | Social Policy | Demography | Cultural Studies | Philosophy of ReligionAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 330 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
PART I: Quarrelling with Indian Perceptions -- Chapter 1: Quarrelling with Indian Perceptions -- Chapter 2: Dear, departed ones -- Chapter 3: 'Dreaming Bengal' -- Chapter 4: Reforming Babu's Worldview -- Chapter 5: The National Library, Calcutta: A Reader's Rendition -- Chapter 6: An Anatomy of Work Culture -- Chapter 7: Sketching Tagore as a Social Activist -- Chapter 8: India's family planning programme: a muddle extraordinary -- Chapter 9: In Resurrection of Gunnar Myrdal's Asian Drama -- PART II: Market, Media, and Development -- Chapter 10: On the Invasion of Neo-liberalism into Development Thinking -- Chapter 11: What education? -- Chapter 12: What is meant by 'changing times' after all? -- Chapter 13: Commodities, Comforts, and Chaos -- Chapter 14: Market, Media, and Mediocrity -- Chapter 15: Migration, Mediocrity and Misery -- Chapter 16: In the name of 'accident': India's road traffic deaths and injuries? -- Chapter 17: The Demography of North-East India: Perilous Pluralism? -- PART III: Society, Culture, and Dilemmas -- Chapter 18: 'Who is civilised'?  On the tribal traditions, society, and culture -- Chapter 19: India's Social Stratification: Demography and Dilemmas -- Chapter 20: Aping the 'awful'? Recent Trends in India's North-South Cultural Divide -- Chapter 21: Understanding Modern Hindu Mind: Resurrecting Ashok Rudra's Reading.        .
In: Springer eBooksSummary: There has been, of late, a growing realisation that the pace and pattern of economic development of a country can hardly be understood and explained comprehensively in terms of the straitjacket of economics discipline alone. India is a prime example of the importance of the part played by a country's history, culture, sociology, and socio-cultural-religious norms, values, and institutions in its development process. This book, with its assorted essays of varying depths of scholarship and insightful reflections, attempts to drive home this point more forcefully than ever before. In its search for the non-economic roots of India's overall sloth and murky progress in its broad-based economic and human development, the book illuminates major oddities deep inside a unique mental make-up full of perceptual and ideational dilemmas, many of which are arguably shaped by the long-lasting and dominant influence of what could be called the Brahminical lines of thinking and discourse. With India's hazy and dodgy world of perceptions as a backdrop, the book also addresses - through its intelligent essays - the deep and sometimes dire ramifications of the historic advent and the dramatic advance of neoliberal market ideology today.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

PART I: Quarrelling with Indian Perceptions -- Chapter 1: Quarrelling with Indian Perceptions -- Chapter 2: Dear, departed ones -- Chapter 3: 'Dreaming Bengal' -- Chapter 4: Reforming Babu's Worldview -- Chapter 5: The National Library, Calcutta: A Reader's Rendition -- Chapter 6: An Anatomy of Work Culture -- Chapter 7: Sketching Tagore as a Social Activist -- Chapter 8: India's family planning programme: a muddle extraordinary -- Chapter 9: In Resurrection of Gunnar Myrdal's Asian Drama -- PART II: Market, Media, and Development -- Chapter 10: On the Invasion of Neo-liberalism into Development Thinking -- Chapter 11: What education? -- Chapter 12: What is meant by 'changing times' after all? -- Chapter 13: Commodities, Comforts, and Chaos -- Chapter 14: Market, Media, and Mediocrity -- Chapter 15: Migration, Mediocrity and Misery -- Chapter 16: In the name of 'accident': India's road traffic deaths and injuries? -- Chapter 17: The Demography of North-East India: Perilous Pluralism? -- PART III: Society, Culture, and Dilemmas -- Chapter 18: 'Who is civilised'?  On the tribal traditions, society, and culture -- Chapter 19: India's Social Stratification: Demography and Dilemmas -- Chapter 20: Aping the 'awful'? Recent Trends in India's North-South Cultural Divide -- Chapter 21: Understanding Modern Hindu Mind: Resurrecting Ashok Rudra's Reading.        .

There has been, of late, a growing realisation that the pace and pattern of economic development of a country can hardly be understood and explained comprehensively in terms of the straitjacket of economics discipline alone. India is a prime example of the importance of the part played by a country's history, culture, sociology, and socio-cultural-religious norms, values, and institutions in its development process. This book, with its assorted essays of varying depths of scholarship and insightful reflections, attempts to drive home this point more forcefully than ever before. In its search for the non-economic roots of India's overall sloth and murky progress in its broad-based economic and human development, the book illuminates major oddities deep inside a unique mental make-up full of perceptual and ideational dilemmas, many of which are arguably shaped by the long-lasting and dominant influence of what could be called the Brahminical lines of thinking and discourse. With India's hazy and dodgy world of perceptions as a backdrop, the book also addresses - through its intelligent essays - the deep and sometimes dire ramifications of the historic advent and the dramatic advance of neoliberal market ideology today.

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.