Welcome to Guest !
 
       IUP Publications
              (Since 1994)
Home About IUP Journals Books Archives Publication Ethics
     
  Subscriber Services   |   Feedback   |   Subscription Form
 
 
Login:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -
-
   
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
The IUP Journal of History and Culture

October' 08
Focus

Since the 19th century, the world has witnessed the emergence of imperialism, militarism, and the simultaneous exploitation of large parts of the world.

Articles
   
Price(INR)
Buy
Reclaiming 9/11 through Satyagraha
Gandhi on Nonviolence in the Context of Enlightenment, Rationality and Globalization
Bengal's Response to Mahatma Gandhi's Constructive Movement
Ahimsa and Its Role in Overcoming the `Ego': From Ancient Indic Traditions to the Thought and Practice of Mahatma Gandhi
Educating the Nation: A Discussion of Mahatma Gandhi's Ideas
Mahatma Gandhi and Satinath Bhaduri: Probings into Gandhian Ideology Through the Vision of a Novelist
Rajghat: In Memory of the Mahatma
Select/Remove All    

Reclaiming 9/11 through Satyagraha

--Gita Dharampal-Frick

This short essay foregrounds the great symbolic portent of the fact that 100 years ago the historic date of September 11, 1906 marked the day of the birth of the modern satyagraha, with Gandhi as its prime instigator. In tracing the historical-cultural genealogy of this concept, the impact that Gandhi exercised on the global media from 1906 until 1948 is highlighted. Thereby an attempt is also made to underscore his continued relevance in grappling with contemporary problems, with a view to provide viable solutions for the future.

Article Price : Rs.50

Gandhi on Nonviolence in the Context of Enlightenment, Rationality and Globalization

--R P Singh

An attempt has been made in this paper to trace Gandhi's principle of `nonviolence' in the context of `Enlightenment Rationality' on the one hand and `Globalization' on the other. The ideas of freedom/independence, autonomy, sovereignty, property (in Gandhi's case Trusteeship), maturity/adulthood, public and private, tolerance, scientific rationality, secularism, humanism, democracy, nation/state, universality of moral actions, humanity as an end in itself, critique of religion, etc., are the most operative terms of European Enlightenment of the 19th century. Though these ideas evolved and developed in Europe, yet they proliferated beyond Europe to other continents and subcontinents. Gandhi appreciated these ideas and like a genius, he interpreted them into indigenous concepts and principles such as truth, simplicity, faith, brahmacharya, purushartha, satyagraha, swaraj, karma, compassion, trusteeship, vegetarianism/fruitarianism and above all nonviolence with the aim of attaining swaraj—victory over one's passions, lusts, greed, etc., and independence and sovereignty of the country. I may point out, though I shall not be in a position to develop it here, that the basic concepts of the Enlightenment were questioned and repudiated by Marx, Engels and Lenin on the one hand and the critical theorists like Adorno, Horkheimer, Marcuse and Habermas on the other. In the era of globalization, the Enlightenment concepts have become almost obsolete. But Gandhi's principles are still valid. These are the only viable principles to resolve moral dilemmas that everybody faces, being constantly confronted by equally valid alternatives in globalization. Hence I'll propose a modest critique of the Enlightenment and the globalization from Gandhi's perspective of nonviolence.

Article Price : Rs.50

Bengal's Response to Mahatma Gandhi's Constructive Movement

--Mario Prayer

An educator to national unity, Gandhi aimed at providing contemporary India with a new common platform of work and thought. While certain points in his program sounded familiar to all Indians, some others did create problems of understanding specially in certain provinces and among the westernized educated élite. Although the wide and quick diffusion of Gandhi's campaigns made it imperative for regional leaderships to get in tune with the all-India dimension of the movement, leaders and activists in different regions maintained a varied approach on account of their respective cultural and social background. This paper illustrates the experiences of prominent Gandhians in Bengal, and focuses both on the educated Bengalis' perception of the Mahatma, and on the most important institutions of rural reconstruction in the province.

Article Price : Rs.50

Ahimsa and Its Role in Overcoming the `Ego': From Ancient Indic Traditions to the Thought and Practice of Mahatma Gandhi

--Hope K Fitz

Ahimsa is an ancient concept that began in India about 3600 years ago.1 The roots of ahimsa are found in the Vedas, i.e., the sacred scriptures of the Hindu tradition.2 However, the concept spread to Jainism3 and then to Buddhism. It culminated in the thought and practice of Mahatma Gandhi. For Gandhi, the basic meaning of ahimsa was no harm to any living being by thought, word or deed and the greatest love (compassion) for all creatures.4 Given Gandhi's belief in and practice of ahimsa, one is able to achieve the `softening the boundaries of the self'. This softening is necessary if one is to overcome the ego which is formed by the tight boundaries.

Article Price : Rs.50

Educating the Nation: A Discussion of Mahatma Gandhi's Ideas

--Sanjukta Dasgupta

This paper analyzes the aspects of Gandhi's notions of education for a modern and free India and traces the evolution of such ideas over time. A nation's system of education plays a significant role in the ordering of society and in imparting a particular identity to it. In India, modern Western education had been introduced by the colonial government which, though liberal, nonetheless, could be utilized as an instrument of control and indoctrination over the colonized people. Demonstrating as it did the racial and cultural superiority of the British, the new colonial education also served to instill a sense of inferiority among the Indian `subjects' vis-à-vis their white masters.

Article Price : Rs.50

Mahatma Gandhi and Satinath Bhaduri: Probings into Gandhian Ideology Through the Vision of a Novelist

--Anindita Banerjee

This paper explores the aspects of Gandhian movements, particularly the Civil Disobedience and the Quit India Movement and their impact on the society and individuals, as viewed and understood by a Bengali litterateur Satinath Bhaduri. Being a member of the Indian National Congress and having taken part in the Gandhian movements, Satinath had personal experiences which he drew upon while writing novels like Jagari and Dhonrai Charit Manas. Jagari concentrates on the urban response to the Quit India Movement whereas Dhonrai Charit Manas portrays the rise of a subaltern rural leader and how he interprets Gandhian ideology in his own fashion, assimilates them within his self and finally implements them in his outer life—thereby rising from a mere subaltern level of subconscious existence to an important, exalted position of a leader in the society. In Dhonrai Charit Manas, the author equates the rise of the subaltern Gandhian leader Dhorai Ram with Tulsi Ram, the immortal king of Ayodhya. The Gandhian concept of Ram Rajya takes a new form in Dhonrai's mental world where Tulsidas' Ram rajya finds a variable expression. Thus in Satinath's novel, the Gandhian age is the context, Gandhian ideology is the driving force and the rise of a subaltern Gandhian leader is the phenomenon. These novel adaptations thus represent Gandhi at an altogether different level.

Article Price : Rs.50

Rajghat: In Memory of the Mahatma

--Dietmar Rothermund

The Rajghat Samadhi where Mahatma Gandhi was cremated has become the most important national place of memory in India. The Hindu custom of cremating the dead and immersing their ashes in a river actually precludes the transformation of the place of burning the dead into a place of memory. This custom highlights the transient nature of human life and stresses that memory cannot be attached to time and space. There is an exception, however, as far as the samadhi of any saint is concerned. Samadhi means a concentration of the mind. It is believed that holy men at the end of their days can leave their mortal body in full consciousness. Although samadhi refers to this process, the term is also used for designating the locality where it has taken place. Small monuments mark such places and they attract worshippers. Calling Gandhi's place of cremation a `samadhi' makes him a saint which he never claimed to be. But it is only by presuming that he was a saint that this particular place of memory can be justified. It is also treated as a place of worship. Visitors must remove their shoes when approaching the Rajghat Samadhi as they have to do when entering a temple. Most of them also perform a pradakshina, a clockwise circumambulation of the monument. This is an ancient ceremony otherwise only performed when visiting a temple. In doing this pradakshina the worshipper personally reaffirms the sacred territorial claim of the temple. Many visitors of the Rajghat Samadhi who have followed the ritual observed that they may not be aware of its meaning.

Article Price : Rs.50

Gandhi, Gandhism and the Gandhians

--Author: Thomas Weber Reviewed by Suparna Gooptu

Thomas Weber is an established name in the field of Gandhian Scholarship. Well-known for his book, On the Salt March, Weber in this latest collection, Gandhi, Gandhism and the Gandhians, writes about a range of themes to explore Gandhi's links with some of the major contemporary issues of our times and provides us with important insights into the historical times in which Gandhi lived. These essays—written between 1984 and 1999—have been carefully chosen to impart a thematic focus to the book, which is divided into three sections in tune with its title.

Search
 

  www
  IUP

Search
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Click here to upload your Article

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Automated Teller Machines (ATMs): The Changing Face of Banking in India

Bank Management
Information and communication technology has changed the way in which banks provide services to its customers. These days the customers are able to perform their routine banking transactions without even entering the bank premises. ATM is one such development in recent years, which provides remote banking services all over the world, including India. This paper analyzes the development of this self-service banking in India based on the secondary data.

The Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is playing a very important role in the progress and advancement in almost all walks of life. The deregulated environment has provided an opportunity to restructure the means and methods of delivery of services in many areas, including the banking sector. The ICT has been a focused issue in the past two decades in Indian banking. In fact, ICTs are enabling the banks to change the way in which they are functioning. Improved customer service has become very important for the very survival and growth of banking sector in the reforms era. The technological advancements, deregulations, and intense competition due to the entry of private sector and foreign banks have altered the face of banking from one of mere intermediation to one of provider of quick, efficient and customer-friendly services. With the introduction and adoption of ICT in the banking sector, the customers are fast moving away from the traditional branch banking system to the convenient and comfort of virtual banking. The most important virtual banking services are phone banking, mobile banking, Internet banking and ATM banking. These electronic channels have enhanced the delivery of banking services accurately and efficiently to the customers. The ATMs are an important part of a bank’s alternative channel to reach the customers, to showcase products and services and to create brand awareness. This is reflected in the increase in the number of ATMs all over the world. ATM is one of the most widely used remote banking services all over the world, including India. This paper analyzes the growth of ATMs of different bank groups in India.
International Scenario

If ATMs are largely available over geographically dispersed areas, the benefit from using an ATM will increase as customers will be able to access their bank accounts from any geographic location. This would imply that the value of an ATM network increases with the number of available ATM locations, and the value of a bank network to a customer will be determined in part by the final network size of the banking system. The statistical information on the growth of branches and ATM network in select countries.

Indian Scenario

The financial services industry in India has witnessed a phenomenal growth, diversification and specialization since the initiation of financial sector reforms in 1991. Greater customer orientation is the only way to retain customer loyalty and withstand competition in the liberalized world. In a market-driven strategy of development, customer preference is of paramount importance in any economy. Gone are the days when customers used to come to the doorsteps of banks. Now the banks are required to chase the customers; only those banks which are customercentric and extremely focused on the needs of their clients can succeed in their business today.

more...

 
View Previous Issues
History and Culture