25 Search Results Found For: "The Modern Review"
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Sj. Subhas C. Bose – Under Regulation III OP 1818 The moment Sj. Subhas Chandra Bose touched the Indian soil on the 8th of March, he was arrested under Regulation No. III of 1818. We woul
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The Making of an Indian MP A tap at my study door. By its timidity I recognized the person who had made it. It was the “slavey” employed by the landlady from whom my wife and I rented the apa
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In the 1936 Allahabad Municipal Elections, the Congress had “dared to nominate” a Dalit candidate. Ranjit Sitaram Pandit wrote a succinct and scathing piece that exposed how the scourge of caste &
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On 14 July, 1930, Rabindranath Tagore visited Albert Einstein’s house in Caputh, near Berlin. The conversation between them – on how to understand truth and reality – was recorded and su
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The second in a series of articles from The Modern Review (1907-1965). In September, 1935, Jawaharlal Nehru wrote this essay for The Modern Review from Almora District Jail (now in Uttarakhand, then i
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This is our first in a series of articles from The Modern Review (1907-1965). In November 1937, The Modern Review published an essay which critiqued Jawaharlal Nehru, warning against his continuing as
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Tagore’s reflections on non-cooperation and cooperation (The Calcutta journal Modern Review of May 1921 carried letters inspired by Gandhi’s Non-cooperation movement; addressed to C.F. And
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Sant Nihal Singh, often also called Saint Nihal Singh, was a journalist who travelled across the US, Canada and Britain with his wife Cathleyne, bringing Indians as well as readers in other cou
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Ranjit Sitaram Pandit was an Indian barrister, politician, linguist and scholar. He is one of those near-forgotten individuals who devoted his life to the Indian Freedom Movement (particularly
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Chanakya was a pseudonym adopted by Jawaharlal Nehru for an article titled ‘Rashtrapati’ which he published in The Modern Review in November 1937. Nehru needs no introduction. He was centra
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