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Book Description Condition: New. pp. 365. Seller Inventory # 2697296053
Book Description Condition: New. pp. 365. Seller Inventory # 96149866
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. ISBN:9788173049972. Seller Inventory # 2024741
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. This book includes field insights on child labour in the pottery industry form late 1990s with a variety of dimensions. They are: perception of the school, working conditions, attitude of teachers and employers, piece rate system in the pottery industry an impact of government schemes on the families, etc. have been succinctly covered in the present book. This book will be of immense help to policy makers, researchers, experts and professionals in the area of child labour. This is the first volume which brings out the field reality in a book form on Child Labour in Pottery Industry exclusively to the reach of the persons working on the various issues of children, Child Labour, Child Rights, Human Rights, Child Education, Child Abuse and Child Neglect. Seller Inventory # 111990
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. Russian Orientalism concerning India, through interpretation of Russian travelogues, is severely under-researched. The few exhaustive Indological studies exploring Indo-Russian cultural links either shun close readings of select texts, or do not make the Indian connection regarding Russian Orientalism in the Saidian sense, which burgeoned after the break-up of the Soviet Union. Rather, contemporary applications of Orientalism as a gaze to Russias activities in the East have remained, with only few exceptions, limited to the Caucasus and Central Asia, seldom extending to India. Consequently, with the exception of Nikitins Voyage Beyond Three Seas most of the Russian travelogues, predating institutionalisation of Russian Orientlology, are not reinterpreted from modern perspectives. Researches on Lebedev, the most loved of Russian travellers in India, n Russia, Germany and India do not talk with each other, while Orientalist research of European-American provenance for India simply ignores him. Minor travelogues of Efremov and Daniebegov suffer worse fate. Prince Saltykovs travelogues, letters and pictures are the most neglected. Vereshchagins Orientalist, anti-war art and his travelogues in Caucasus and Central Asia receive attention. But even after the current resurgence of interest in him, his travelogue of India written by him and his wife, where he is the main subject, lies forgotten. The diaries of Minaev are given short shrift, though they problematise Russian Orientalism in India most significantly. Amartya Mukhopadhyays original study, as a social scientist, seeks to fill this gap from an Indian point of vantage, showing how these travellers were imprisoned by, or broke free of, the stereotypes of observation called after Said as Orientalism. Seller Inventory # 111989