ID | 364039 |
Title Proper | Reflections on the Indian Renaissance |
Other Title Information | Occasional Papers on History and Society. Second Series, No.: XXXIII, December 1990 (For Private Circulation Only) |
Language | ENG |
Author | Pande, G. C. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The 'Indian Renaissance' has been diversely understood. In its narrowest sense it has been to attitudes and ideas of the English-educated or Anglicised people in Bengal in the age of Rammohan Roy or Debendranath Tagore; so it has been called the Bengal Renaissance by distinguished historians. More generally, the Indian Renaissance has been understood as the beginning of India's modernization. |
`In' analytical Note | In Sangari, Kumkum: Mirabai and the spiritual economy of Bhakti. [Occasional Papers on History and Society. Second Series, No.: XXVIII, June 1990 (For Private Circulation Only)] New Delhi. Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, 1990. |
Key Words | Indian renaissance |