Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Hugh D. Hindman, "The World of Child Labor: A Historical and Regional Survey"
English | 2009 | ISBN: 0765617072 | PDF | 999 pages | 9,3 MB

This global examination of the historical and contemporary problem of the abuse of children in the workplace is an outstanding work. The editor is a professor of labor and human resources and previously wrote Child Labor: An American History (Sharpe, 2002).

A well-qualified editorial board and 190 authors of the 222 original essays have contributed to a clearly arranged, accessible book. The work begins with a series of essays presented in four sections: “Understanding Child Labor,” “More Developed Regions of the World,” “Less Developed Regions of the World,” and “Action Against Child Labor.” These sections are followed by treatments arranged by continent and country. Coverage of individual countries ranges from a page containing a map and some statistics to a single thematic essay (for example, “Child Labor in Honduras,” “Child Soldiers in Myanmar”) to a series of essays. There are 11 essays for India and 13 essays for the U.S. Very helpful current references and suggestions for further reading are at the end of each entry. Black-and-white photos, tables, and charts aid in understanding the topic. The large index is accurate. This scholarly resource is unique among books on the subject and will be very useful in large public and academic libraries.
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Vinay Rai, William Simo, "Think India: The Rise of the World's Next Superpower and What It Means for Every American"
English | 2007 | ISBN: 0525950206 | 304 pages | PDF | 5 MB

With 1.1 billion residents, the world’s largest democracy is poised to dominate the world stage. One of India’s wealthiest men gives an insider’s view into his country’s dynamic transformation, revealing the forces and unique characteristics behind India’s meteoric rise.

The buzzword of the twenty-first century is India—and it’s not just a story of software, outsourcing, and faraway call centers. With the economy soaring at 8 percent a year, India is a medical and pharmaceutical frontrunner, an R&D powerhouse, a rising manufacturing hub, and an up-and-coming cultural trendsetter in areas from fashion to film. And the world is taking note: Western companies from Lockheed Martin to McDonald’s are moving in, Ford is setting up factories, Coca Cola is heading to the countryside in rickshaws, and research centers for Fortune 500 companies are popping up everywhere. Meanwhile, the U.S. military is forging close ties, as India has become a key strategic partner.

Steel tycoon turned educator Vinay Rai, who now runs one of India’s two private universities— with fifteen campuses nationwide—couples with geopolitical writer Melissa Rossi to map out the rising new India. This colorful, lively, forward-looking account of India’s stunning world debut is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand India’s new muscle on the global stage.

• One out of every six people in the world lives in India.
• India’s top trading partner is the United States.
• India is:
The fastest-growing free market economy
The world’s top destination for retailers
The world’s youngest workforce (over 500 millionunder age twenty-five)
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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Buddhist Goddesses of India

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Miranda Shaw, "Buddhist Goddesses of India"
2007 | ISBN-10: 0691127581 | 571 pages | PDF | 67 MB 
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Mark Kobayashi-Hillary, Outsourcing to India: The Offshore Advantage
ISBN: 354023943X | edition 2005 | PDF | 325 pages | 17 mb
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Forbes India - 05 April 2013

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Forbes India - 05 April 2013
English | 128 pages | PDF | 15.00 Mb
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India Today - 01 April 2013

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India Today - 01 April 2013
English | 166 pages | PDF | 41.00 Mb

Discover India - March 2013

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Discover India - March 2013
English | 100 pages | True PDF | 42.00 Mb
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BBC GoodFood India - April 2013

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BBC GoodFood India - April 2013
English | 156 pages | True PDF | 38.00 Mb

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

India's Struggle for Independence 1857-1947

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India's Struggle for Independence 1857-1947
Penguin Books India | February 29, 2012 | ISBN-10: 0140107819 | 600 pages | PDF | 4 MB

This Is The First Major Study To Examine Each Of The Strands Of The Epic Struggle Individually And Collectively And To Present Them In A New And Coherent Narrative. It Succeeds In Evolving A New And Lucid History Of The Period.

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India, 3 edition (Cultures of the World)

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Radhika Srinivasan, Leslie Jermyn, Roseline Lum "India, 3 edition (Cultures of the World)"
2012 | ISBN: 1608707822 | PDF | 144 pages | 22,1 MB

Provides comprehensive information on the geography, history, wildlife, governmental structure, economy, cultural diversity, peoples, religion, and culture of India.

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India (Travel Guides)

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India (Travel Guides) By Editors
2008 | 692 Pages | ISBN: 0789483955 | PDF | 96 MB


The guides that show you what the others only tell you. Travel Guides have increasingly become the most sought after guides by seasoned and novice travels alike. Featuring up-to-date information and spectacular 3-D aerial views -- all photographed in full-color -- each location is shown at its best. Recognized as the most unique and comprehensive travel guides on the market, Travel Guides create the new standard for travels. Every guide in the series is updated annually. 3-D aerial maps help you make the quickest journey from one place to the next. Red star sights help you get the most out of the shortest visit. Full-color photographs are taken specifically for each travel guide, and cut-away & floor plans present unique drawings of historic buildings and museums to show exactly where you are and what you see. All the sights in each area are described in depth with special keyed icons, and there's no need to buy an A-Z guide with our fully indexed street maps. Eat and shop with confidence with our reliable listings of hotels, restaurants, bars, and shops in all areas and at all prices. When it comes to entertainment, Travel Guides contains complete listings of theaters, music venues, cinemas, clubs, sports facilities, and activities for children. A special survival guide shows you how to use local currency, public transportation and telephones through pictures. Before your next trip, pick up one of our best-selling Travel Guides today!

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India Unbound

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India Unbound By Gurcharan Das
2000 | 420 Pages | ISBN: 0670882658 | PDF | 31 MB



India today is a vibrant free-market democracy and has begun to flex its muscles in the global information economy and on the world stage. In this acclaimed book, Gurcharan Das tells the stories of the major players in a period of rapid and profound change, and makes comprehensible and compelling the economic and political developments responsible for these changes. Das argues that the changes of the past 50 years have, at last, amounted to a revolution in India. By weaving his personal story into the larger context of contemporary history, Das provides a book that is at once vigorously analytical and vividly written.
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Thursday, February 10, 2011


The Magic of Indian Cricket: Cricket and Society in India
Routledge | April 19, 2006 | ISBN-10: 0415356911 | 304 pages | PDF | 1.2 Mb

In the last twenty years, Indian cricket has been transformed. With the arrival of global television networks, mass-media coverage and multinational sponsors, cricket has become big business and India has become the economic driving force in the world game. For the first time a developing country has become a major player in the international sports arena.
This fully updated and revised edition of Mihir Boses classic history is a unique account of the Indian cricket phenomenon. Drawing on a combination of extensive research and personal experience, Bose traces the development of the Indian game from its beginnings as a colonial pastime to its coming of age as a national passion and now a global commercial powerhouse. This illuminating study reveals Indian crickets central place in modern India's identity, culture and society.
Insightful, honest and challenging, Bose tackles the myths and controversies of Indian cricket. He considers the game in terms of race, caste, politics, national consciousness and ambition, money, celebrity and the media, evoking all the unpredictability, frustration and glory that is the magic of Indian cricket.

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A Comprehensive, Annotated Bibliography on Mahatma Gandhi
Praeger | February 28, 2007 | ISBN-10: 0313302170 | 678 pages | PDF | 4.3 Mb

Few figures in the twentieth century have been as inspirational as Mohandas Mahatma Gandhi. Interest in this extraordinary man has produced a massive amount of printed material, making Ananda M. Pandiri's comprehensive bibliography an invaluable reference tool for scholars and students. Pandiri has meticulously searched printed and electronic indexes, publisher's catalogs, and university libraries throughout India, Britain, and the U.S. to compile a complete bibliography of sources in the English language. This volume is organized and cross-referenced for easy use and access to a voluminous amount of information.

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Ancient India (Myths of the World)

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Ancient India (Myths of the World)
Publisher: Benchmark Books | ISBN: 0761442138 | edition 2009 | PDF | 97 pages | 14.6 mb

FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Looks at the culture and people of ancient India. Topics explored include religious practices and the roles of Brahman priests in society. This title also covers several important eras, including the Indus Valley civilization and Vedic periods

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Step-by-step Guide to Indian Cooking

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Step-by-step Guide to Indian Cooking
84 pages | Publisher: Bounty Books | 7 Jan 1993 | ISBN-10: 1851522662 | PDF | 50 mb


This recipe book contains dishes from all over India. Main course fish, meat, poultry and vegetable dishes as well as side orders, bread and snacks, rice and dal, desserts and drinks are included. A guide to spices and advice on all aspects of Indian cookery is included.

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The New Cambridge History of India

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The New Cambridge History of India
Cambridge University Press | January 12, 2004 | ISBN-10: 0521267277 | 328 pages | PDF | 9.1 MB

Barbara Ramusack describes the pre-colonial origins of the Indian princes, frequently portrayed as synonymous with oriental luxury, and how they adapted their public activities and personal lifestyles to survive as political leaders and cultural icons. Their collaboration enabled the British to govern India with relatively limited manpower from the late 1790s to 1947. The book is intended for students of colonial history and visitors to the princely states.

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Hypnotism and Mysticism of India

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Hypnotism and Mysticism of India
Westwood Publishing Company | June 1979 | ISBN-10: 0930298012 | 208 pages | PDF | 14.86 MB

Hypnotism and Mysticism of India
BY: O. McGill (Author)

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Buddhism Lectures

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TTC Buddhism Lectures (Prof. Malcolm David Eckel) Taught by Malcolm David Eckel
Boston University Ph.D., Harvard University Course No. 687 (24 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture)
The Teaching Company: Buddhism 2010 | ISBN:n/a | Language English | Audio CD inMP3/128Kbps | 316 MB

A religion without God? How could that be?
------------------------------------------

And how could it have captured and captivated so many millions of people in so many countries for so many centuries?

No doubt you can picture the Buddha seated serenely, feet crossed in front of him, hands folded in his lap. But who was the real person behind this image? What did he say about the nature and purpose of life? What were the origins of the concepts of reincarnation, nirvana, karma, and Zen, and what is the Buddhist understanding of them? Buddhism is your opportunity to trace the history, principles, and evolution of a theology that is both familiar and foreign.

In its 2,500-year history, Buddhism has expanded from a tiny religious community in northern India into a movement that now spans the globe. This course is a historical survey of Buddhism from its origin in India in the 6th century B.C.E. to its present status as a major world religion. It is meant to introduce students to the astonishing vitality and adaptability of a tradition that has transformed the civilizations of India, Southeast Asia, Tibet, China, Korea, and Japan and has now become a lively component in the cultures of Europe, Australia, and the Americas.

The study of Buddhism offers great challenges to people who have grown up in the Western world. It does not share many of the central beliefs of Western religions, such as the concept of a single, omnipotent God, or that each human being has a permanent self that began at conception and will continue in an afterlife.

Buddhism also has been transformed in many ways as it has swept across the cultures of Asia; it often is difficult to decide what Buddhism actually is and how it should be studied.



Buddhism as an Unfolding Story
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Professor Malcolm David Eckel begins the course by saying, "Buddhists love to tell stories", and he approaches Buddhism as a series of stories. Throughout his lectures he acts as a storyteller as well as a teacher, recounting tales that have been told throughout centuries to elaborate on and explain the Buddhist view of life.

The stories begin with the rich religious culture of India, the culture into which the Buddha was born, the culture that made it possible for him to craft his own distinct solutions to the problems of life and death.

The stories then proceed to the life of the Buddha himself, Siddhartha Gautama. Born into a royal family in 566 B.C.E., he eventually renounced his life of privilege and became an Indian ascetic. After years of struggle, the pivotal moment in his life came when he sat under a tree and ôwoke upö to the meaning of life ('Buddha' means 'Awakened One'). This awakening was the realization that 'all of life is suffering,' combined with an understanding of the path that led to the cessation of suffering, and to nirvana.

The stories then examine the practice of Buddhism after the Buddha's death. You'll trace the interpretation of his teaching, or Dharma; the development of the early Buddhist community, and the remarkable evolution of Buddhist philosophy as it emigrated from India to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), China, Japan, Tibet, Southeast Asia and, ultimately, the Western world.



A Remarkable Capacity for Change
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One of the most fascinating aspects of Buddhism is its extraordinary flexibility. As it adapted to new challenges in India and the rest of Asia, Buddhist beliefs went through significant, even radical, changes.

Early Buddhism was a tradition of self-reliance: Awakening came -if it came at all - solely on the basis of one's own efforts. You'll learn that in the Mahayana movement, or 'Great Vehicle,' Buddhists emphasized the importance of compassion and concern for others. The Mahayana ideal of the bodhisattva ('Buddha-to-be' or 'future Buddha') was not to attempt to achieve nirvana but to return to this world to help others along the path.

As Mahayana Buddhism spread across India and Central Asia, it added the concept of 'celestial bodhisattvas,' advanced practitioners of the bodhisattva path who reside in the heavens and are able to serve earthly beings who call on them for help. With these new ideas, the Mahayana movement transformed the traditional emphasis on self-reliance into an ideal of salvation by faith and reliance on an otherworldly savior. This tradition of Buddhist devotion has become extremely popular in Japan today, and is also widely represented in North America, where it bears surprising similarities to Christianity.

As you study its past, you'll discover that Buddhism also changed as it encountered other cultures in Asia. In China, Buddhism became more respectful of duties to the family and ancestors, more pragmatic and this-worldly, and more consistent with Chinese respect for harmony with nature. In Japan, Buddhas were reconciled with the local deities, known as Kami, so that both could be worshipped together.

The Buddhist ability to embrace change may seem puzzling to Western minds. But change lies at the very core of Buddhism. You'll examine how the Buddha himself espoused the doctrine of 'no-self,' a belief that there is no such thing as a permanent identity. Instead, the human personality and all of reality are constantly changing. Mahayana Buddhism elaborated this idea when it developed the concept of 'Emptiness,' the view that nothing exists in its own right, and that everything is 'empty' of identity.

Buddhists believe the concepts of no-self and Emptiness are far from negative: They invest their religion, and life itself, with limitless possibilities. If everything is constantly changing, then it is possible for everything to become new. If everything is an illusion, then there is no barrier to accomplishing anything.




A Tradition of Political Activism
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Professor Eckel will introduce you to Buddhist values that are not always limited to aspects of life that we would call religious. For example, Buddhism also has a lively tradition of political action. This tradition began with King Asoka, emperor of the Maurya Dynasty in India from 269-238 B.C.E. Asoka waged a campaign to conquer the Kingdom of Kalinga that was so brutal that it prompted him to convert to Buddhism. He then proclaimed himself a 'righteous King' who would protect and promulgate Buddhist teachings.

Asoka's ideal has been imitated in traditional Buddhist cultures throughout Southeast Asia, as well as in Tibet, China, and Japan. A striking contemporary example of the intersection between religious and political values in Southeast Asia is Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar, the daughter of General Aung San, the country's national hero. Aung San Suu Kyi became the leader of the movement against repressive military rule and was eventually placed under house arrest, where she continued to speak out in favor of the democratic opposition. She received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1991 for her efforts on behalf of democracy, human rights, and ethnic reconciliation.

Even more familiar to us today is the work of the Dalai Lama, who has helped lead Tibetan Buddhists through a period of deep political and cultural difficulty, winning the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1989 for his nonviolent campaign of resistance to Chinese domination in Tibet. His public involvement in many significant issuesùincluding human rights, the exploitation of the environment, and the oppression of minority peoplesùhas made him one of the foremost spokesmen and most visible symbols of Buddhism in the contemporary world.




The Buddhist Story Becomes Our Story
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Buddhism's capacity to transform itself and influence new cultures continued as it came in contact with Western nations. Since the end of the 19th century, Buddhism has become a respected part of life in countries far beyond its traditional home in Asia.

Early Western converts to Buddhism interpreted the religion for their countrymen. In the 1880s, Henry Steele Olcott traveled to Ceylon, converted to Buddhism, and created the Theosophical Society and a Buddhist Catechism that embodied what has been called a Protestant form of Buddhism, designed to make it more acceptable to Western sensibilities.

Today, almost every variety of Buddhism has been adapted for an American audience. Fascinating new Buddhist communities, such as the Buddhist Churches of America, have taken hold on the West Coast and in Hawaii. Centers for Zen practice and for Tibetan Buddhism have been established in North America, often making it possible for American converts to receive training and assume positions of leadership.

Buddhist influence has also permeated many aspects of Western culture. Often a person's first contact with Buddhism has come through reading Siddhartha by German author Herman Hesse, the novels of Jack Kerouac, or works of Beat Poets such as Gary Snyder. African American author Charles Johnson uses Buddhism to explore the change of consciousness that takes place when ex-slaves experienced freedom.

Professor Eckel will show you how the widespread and continuing appeal of Buddhism always comes back to its storiesùof the Buddha himself, and of the ways others have lived their lives in the attempt to follow his example.




======================================================================

Course Lecture Titles
***********************

01. What is Buddhism?
02. India at the Time of the Buddha
03. The Doctrine of Reincarnation
04. The Story of the Buddha
05. All Is Suffering
06. The Path to Nirvana
07. The Buddhist Monastic Community
08. Buddhist Art and Architecture
09. Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia
10. Mahayana Buddhism and the Bodhisattva Ideal
11. Celestial Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
12. Emptiness
13. Buddhist Philosophy
14. Buddhist Tantra
15. The Theory and Practice of the Mandala
16. The 'First Diffusion of the Dharma' in Tibet
17. The Schools of Tibetan Buddhism
18. The Dalai Lama
19. The Origins of Chinese Buddhism
20. The Classical Period of Chinese Buddhism
21. The Origins of Japanese Buddhism
22. Honen, Shinran and Nichiren
23. Zen
24. Buddhism in America

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An introduction to spoken Kashmiri

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An introduction to spoken Kashmiri:
A basic course and reference manual for learning and teaching Kashmiri as a second language - Parts 1,2

Publisher: Dept. of Linguistics, Univ. of Illinois | 1973 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0000D5K57 | English/Kashmiri | PDF | 875 pages | 7.46 Mb

This basic textbook of Kashmiri, the language of Srinagar, India, was designed for use in the classroom or in a self-instructional course and consists of two volumes. Volume 1 is divided into the following sections: (1) a brief sociolinguistic profile of Kashmiri, (2) phonology, (3) conversations (lessons 1-31), (4) advanced grammar, (5) review exercises, (6) narrative texts (lessons 32-45), and (7) examples of Kashmiri poetry (lessons 46-50). In each of the first 31 lessons, the lexical meaning of all new words is given before they occur in a Kashmiri sentence, for which the English translation is given. At the end of every lesson, there is a section of detailed notes on culture, grammar, and vocabulary, together with practice materials. In lessons 32-50, no explanatory notes are provided, but the English equivalents of important lexical items are given. Volume 2 includes a Kashmiri-English/English-Kashmiri glossary, a partial list of English borrowings in Kashmiri, a glossary of selected terms used in the text, and suggestions for further reading.
Target language: Kashmiri
Source language: English

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