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Dawn in India; British purpose and Indian aspiration, by Sir Francis Edward Younghusband ...

By: Younghusband, Francis Edward, Sir, 1863-1942.
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New Delhi: Rupa, 2013Description: 236 p. 22 cm.ISBN: 9788129124388.Subject(s): India -- Politics and government -- 1919-1947 | India -- Nationality | India -- ReligionDDC classification: 954 LOC classification: DS480.45 | .Y6 1931
Contents:
-pt. I. Political.-pt. II. Spiritual.
Summary: India during the final decades of British Raj was a country in turmoil. The Gandhian era was in full swing, the Muslim League was becoming a force to reckon with and the revolutionaries were doing their best to disrupt British rule. What, at that time, was the British attitude towards India? Dawn in India is an account of the views, opinions and attitudes held by the British in India. A chronicle of the history of British emergence in the country, it goes on to justify British reluctance to grant Swaraj to India, casting a critical eye on Indian nationalism, Hindu-Muslim strife and British reforms in the country. Assessing the role of political leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Bal Gangadhar Tilak, societal norms and spiritual movements, Younghusband provides a portrait of India in the decades preceding Independence through British eyes. A classic from the early twentieth century, Dawn in India is a remarkable account of the complex relationship between Britain and India.
Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
[BK] [BK] Christ Junior College
->History
Stack Room Shelf 954 YOU (Browse shelf) Available 00018242

Printed in Great Britain.

-pt. I. Political.-pt. II. Spiritual.

India during the final decades of British Raj was a country in turmoil. The Gandhian era was in full swing, the Muslim League was becoming a force to reckon with and the revolutionaries were doing their best to disrupt British rule. What, at that time, was the British attitude towards India?

Dawn in India is an account of the views, opinions and attitudes held by the British in India. A chronicle of the history of British emergence in the country, it goes on to justify British reluctance to grant Swaraj to India, casting a critical eye on Indian nationalism, Hindu-Muslim strife and British reforms in the country. Assessing the role of political leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Bal Gangadhar Tilak, societal norms and spiritual movements, Younghusband provides a portrait of India in the decades preceding Independence through British eyes.

A classic from the early twentieth century, Dawn in India is a remarkable account of the complex relationship between Britain and India.

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