Dull gret biography of mahatma gandhi
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The Great Indian Novel
5* for the gods two chapters.
Dr. Tharoor has struck goldmine here: this novel fryst vatten fail-safe because of the intricate richness of its source material--the grand epic 'Mahabharata' with its original dysfunctional family, bedroom politics, palace intrigues & counter intrigues; grand notions of duty, honor, courage, sacrifice, boons & curses; envy, bitterness, greed & hatred -- all of these leading to a full-fledged fratricidal war.
Tharoor superimposes major events from Indian political history, such as the British colonial India's war for independence, the partition, a fledgeling Indian democracy, the dark years of the Emergency & its chaotic aftermath by loosely using major characters & situations from the 'Mahabharata'.
The narrator VV (Sage Vyasa in the original), fryst vatten a retired, veteran politician, dictating his memoirs to his amanuensis, Ganapathi (Lord Ganesha in the original).
The book excels as a political satire;
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Conscience
Moral philosophy or values of an individual
For other uses, see Conscience (disambiguation)."Scruples" redirects here. For other uses, see Scruples (disambiguation).Not to be confused with Consciousness or Conscientiousness.
A conscience is a cognitive process that elicits emotion and rational associations based on an individual's moral philosophy or value system. Conscience stands in contrast to elicited emotion or thought due to associations based on immediate sensory perceptions and reflexive responses, as in sympathetic central nervous system responses. In common terms, conscience is often described as leading to feelings of remorse when a person commits an act that conflicts with their moral values. The extent to which conscience informs moral judgment before an action and whether such moral judgments are or should be based on reason has occasioned debate through much of modern history between theories of basics in ethic of human life in juxtaposition to the
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Top Girls by Caryl Churchill The purpose of this resear
The purpose of this research is to examine the play Top Girls by Caryl Churchill from a feminist perspective. The plan of the research will be to set forth the general line of action of the play, including the pattern of ideas that emerge in the work, and then to discuss the means by which the ideas are presented, with reference to feminist social critique.
The thematic structure of Top Girls is best understood as a presentation of ideas about the position of women in a man's social, intellectual, political, and economic world and the coping strategies that women employ in order to survive in that world. The playwright's dramatic strategy for presenting these ideas is create two different worlds, one entirely imaginary and the other grounded in mundane domestic realities. The play begins with a scene of pure fantasy, in which commentary about women's experience of the modern world is abstracted from first-person reportage