Paraja (Oip)

Paraja (Oip)
Author: Gopinath Mahanty
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 373
Release: 1993-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780195623918

Written originally in Oriya in 1945 and translated here for the first time, Paraja is a classic of modern Indian fiction. It tells on an epic scale the story of a tribal patriarch and his family in the mountainous jungles of Orissa. The slow decline in the fortunes of this family - from the quiet prosperity of a subsistence livelihood towards bondage to the local moneylender - is both poignantly individualized as well as symbolic of the erosion of a whole way of life within peasant communities. The novel, furthermore, transcends what it documents because its characters are not merely primitive tribesmen ensnared by a predatory moneylender. Mohanty's protagonists are also quintessentially men and women waging heroic but futile war against a hostile universe. As the citation of the Jnanpith Award of 1974 put it - 'in Mohanty's hands the social is lifted to the level of the metaphysical.'

Paraja

Paraja
Author: Gopinath Mahanty
Publisher:
Total Pages: 373
Release: 1987
Genre: Orissa (India)
ISBN: 9785871151280

The Novel Is About Sukru Jani And His Family Who Are Successful Paraja Tribespeople Of Koraput, Orissa. When A Lecherous Local Official Is Denied The Satisfaction Of Jili, Their Daughter, The Family`S Fortunes Turn. The Happy, Pastoral World Of Koraput Becomes A Desolate Wasteland Of Debt, Misery And Oppression. Dust Jacket Slightly Shop-Soiled, Condition Good.

Paraja

Paraja
Author: Gopinath Mahanty
Publisher:
Total Pages: 373
Release: 1987-01
Genre: Orissa (India)
ISBN: 9780571151288

The Paraja are a peasant tribe living in the hills of Koraput in the Indian province of Orissa. Sukru Jani and his family are successful Paraja tribespeople but the family fortunes decline when a lecherous local official is denied the satisfaction of Sukru's daughter.

Paraja

Paraja
Author: Gopinath Mohanty
Publisher:
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9788126019588

Harijan

Harijan
Author: Gopinath Mohanty
Publisher: Rupa
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2021
Genre:
ISBN: 9789390652808

First published in the Odia in 1948, and translated for the first time here into English by Bikram Das, Gopinath Mohanty's Harijan is one of the most original and radical Indian novels of the twentieth century. It brings to vivid life the story of a group of Mehentars living in a slum. Cleaning latrines with their bare hands is the only work that they can hope to find as their caste excludes them from every other occupation. The leader of this group is the middle-aged and foul-mouthed Jema who starts her day by gulping down a potful of liquor and smoking pinkas in order to deal with the stench of the excreta. One day, Jema comes down with a fever and is unable to go to work. Fourteen-year-old Puni offers to take her mother's place. The next morning Puni wakes up early, bathes, puts on a clean sari, and dabs some cheap perfume on her skin. Stepping out of the hut excitedly, she picks up basket and broom. When she arrives at the first latrine, the stink hits her with the force of a hammer blow. She drops her basket and broom, turns around, and is trying to run away, when her friends stop her. 'This is what you will have to do every day for the rest of your life! It is your fate!' Avinash Babu lives in a palatial house next to the slum. He is planning to evict the Mehentars in order to develop the slum into a residential colony. One night, a fire breaks out and the entire slum is burned to the ground. The Mehentars leave the slum carrying their remaining possessions on their backs. They have nowhere to go but they are past all worries-they know that no matter where they go, they will still be cleaning excrement, for they are Harijans. Harijan is an enduring Odia classic which is regarded as one of the most original and radical Indian novels of the twentieth century. Gopinath Mohanty was an esteemed Odia novelist who was awarded the Padma Bhushan, the Sahitya Akademi Award, and the Jnanpith Award. This is the first English translation of the novel by Sahitya Akademi Translation Awardee Bikram Das.

Bheda

Bheda
Author: Akhila Naik
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2017-09-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0199091331

The entire village was in an uproar when the news spread that Laltu had beaten up Yuvaraj. How dare a Dom boy thrash the gauntia’s nephew, a Teli? The Telis set out to seek revenge by breaking Laltu’s limbs. Conscious of the plight of the Dalits and the lower castes, and hoping to improve their lot, Laltu leads an uprising against the upper castes. Does he succeed? Or is he silenced and crushed by caste power? Set in a remote village in the Kalahandi district of Odisha, the story draws from the real, lived experiences of the region’s Dalits. Bheda, the first Odia Dalit novel, is not only a poignant tale of rebellion and betrayal, it is also a record of the caste atrocities and cultural politics that have defined India.

Drowned and Dammed

Drowned and Dammed
Author: Rohan D'Souza
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2016-08-20
Genre:
ISBN: 9780199469130

This book explores the idea and practice of flood control and argues that this is a part of a political agenda, deeply implicated in the social, economic, and political calculations of capitalism in general and colonialism in particular. It argues for a comprehensive reconsideration of the debate on the colonial environmental watershed, its hydraulic legacy, and questions contemporary enthusiasm for flood control in post-independent India. The author argues that the British assembled and deployed the idea and practice of flood control in order to secure their presence in the Orissa Delta. It was principally a political project deeply implicated in the social, economic, and political calculations of capitalism in general and colonialism in particular. Through the function of flood control, colonial rule sought to organize systems of land revenue, institute capitalist private property, and shape the region's hydrology with physical infrastructure such as embankments, canal networks, and inevitably the Hirakud Dam. In seeking to dominate the delta's many rivers, colonial capitalism brought about an unprecedented ecological rupture by transforming the Orissa Delta from a flood-dependent agrarian regime to a flood-vulnerable landscape. This ecological rupture revealed the particularities of colonial capitalism in its relationships with the natural world.

An Atlas of Clinical Nuclear Medicine, Second Edition

An Atlas of Clinical Nuclear Medicine, Second Edition
Author: Ignac Fogelman
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 752
Release: 1994-01-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1853171409

This atlas, the first edition of which won the 1989 Glaxo Prize for Medical Writing, has now been brought up to date to cover new techniques in the field. Every major body system is featured, along with coverage of SPECT for bone imaging; new ventilation images for lung imaging; cerebral perfusion imaging for the brain; the use of Tc MAG3 in the renal system; tomographic imaging of the heart; and the use of monoclonal antibodies in the diagnosis and treatment of tumours.

The Collected Essays of A. K. Ramanujan

The Collected Essays of A. K. Ramanujan
Author: A. K. Ramanujan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 668
Release: 2004-03-25
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN:

Poet, translator, and folklorist, A.K. Ramanujan has been recognized as the world's most profound scholar of South Asian language and culture. This book brings together for the first time, thirty essays on literature and culture written by Ramanujan over a period of four decades. It is the product of the collaborative effort of a number of his colleagues and friends. Each section is prefaced by a brief critical introduction and the volume includes notes on each essay as well as a chronology of Ramanujan's books and essays.