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COUNTRY OF FIRST BOYS

By: Contributor(s): Language: English Publication details: New Delhi Oxford University Press 2015Edition: 1Description: 276ISBN:
  • 9780199453252
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 303.3720954 AMA/CO
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Lending Lending Ernakulam Public Library General Stacks Non-fiction 303.3720954 AMA/CO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available E186247

How do deprivations related to class, caste and gender interrelate?
Why are our political leaders so good in saying what should be done without doing anything much about them?
How should we think about Sanskrit and ancient India without adding religious colour?
Why is it important to revive Nalanda, the world's oldest university?

The Country of First Boys is Amartya Sen's intellectual journey through the past and present to seek an understanding of India's history and the demands of its future. The themes of these essays include the hardened and extreme nature of inequality in India and what can be done about it. One of the many rewards of good schooling - denied to most Indians - includes the understanding that India is an integral part of a world civilization. Always sensitive to global communication and interaction, India's own contributions vary from the development of a multiplicity of astronomically reasoned calendars and the invention of games like chess to the establishment of the foundations of several branches of modern mathematics.

In this collection, Sen examines justice, identity, deprivation, inequalities, gender politics, education, the media and the importance of getting your priorities right. These are accessible yet pioneering essays that hold the kernel of many of his seminal works.

Table of Contents:
Foreword by Gopalkrishna Gandhi
Editors Preface
Introduction by Amartya Sen

India Through Its Calendars
The Play's the Thing
The Smallness Thrust Upon Us
Hunger: Old Torments and New Blunders
Speaking of Freedom: Why Media Is Important for Economic Development
Sunlight and Other Fears: The Importance of School Education as a Source of Nourishment for Indian Children
Sharing the World: Interdependence and Global Justice
The Country of First Boys
Poverty, War and Peace
What Should Keep Us Awake at Night
What Difference Can Tagore Make?
A Wish a Day for a Week
On Nalanda University

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