The national movement :studies in ideology and history
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi Tulika Books 2011Description: 119pISBN: 9788189487799 Subject(s): Nationalism | Politics and government-India | Autonomy and independence movements | Mahatma gandhi | Jawaharlal nehruDDC classification: 954.035 Summary: This volume consists of five essays on the National Movement that arose to overthrow British rule in India. Three of these essays are devoted to the two men, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, whose divergent ideas dominated the National Movement and to different degrees influenced its course. A fourth essay studies in detail how ideas and practice enmeshed to produce the civil disobedience movement in its initial phase, 1930-31, being undoubtedly the most powerful mass agitation organized by the Congress. The final essay studies the contributions made by the Left, especially the Communists, to the National Movement, seeking to fill a gap quite often found in conventional histories.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 954.035 IRF/N (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 54228 |
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954.035 HEE/I India's Freedom Struggle 1857-1947 | 954.035 IKR/M modern muslim India and the birth of Pakistan | 954.035 IND India's partition:process,strategy and mobilization | 954.035 IRF/N The national movement :studies in ideology and history | 954.035 IRF/N The national movement : Part 2,. The struggle for freedom, 1919-1947 | 954.035 JAH/I India revisited : | 954.035 JAT/F A farewell to Ambedkar |
This volume consists of five essays on the National Movement that arose to overthrow British rule in India. Three of these essays are devoted to the two men, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, whose divergent ideas dominated the National Movement and to different degrees influenced its course. A fourth essay studies in detail how ideas and practice enmeshed to produce the civil disobedience movement in its initial phase, 1930-31, being undoubtedly the most powerful mass agitation organized by the Congress. The final essay studies the contributions made by the Left, especially the Communists, to the National Movement, seeking to fill a gap quite often found in conventional histories.
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