000 01644cam a2200181 a 4500
001 16530951
010 _a 2010308927
020 _a9788184001259
082 _a303.4
_bSUB/A
100 1 _a Subrata Dasgupta
245 1 0 _aAwakening: the story of the Bengal renaissance
260 _aNoida
_bRandom House Publishers India
_c2010
300 _axx, 391 p.
520 _aIn the 19th century, Bengal would witness a revolution like it never had. It began with a band of Englishmen, led by the brilliant William Jones. Then there was the enigmatic Rammohun Roy who invented a reformed Hinduism called the Brahmo Samaj; and his friend, David Hare, who conceived the idea of the Hindu College. There was the tempestuous Michael Madhusudan who created new forms of Bengali verse; and Michael's well-wisher, the scholar Vidyasagar, who fought fiercely for the cause of Hindu widows. There was Bankim Chandra, a civil servant who helped create the Indian novel. There were Jagadish Bose and Prafulla Chandra Ray, two lonely workers in laughably primitive laboratories who became the frontiersmen of Indian science; and Vivekananda, the monk who preached a new form of Vedantism, home and abroad. There was, finally, Rabindranath Tagore, the very epitome of the Bengal Renaissance. How did such an astonishing flowering come to take place? And how did it change India? Immaculately researched, told with colour, drama and passion, Awakening is a stunning achievement.
650 0 _aReligion and culture
650 0 _aSocial change
_aIndia--Bengal
_aRammohun Roy, Raja, 1772?-1833
_aInfluence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
_aIntellectual life
942 _cBK
999 _c62095
_d62095