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Family History of Elizabeth R.K. Draper
The Family History of
Elizabeth R.K. Draper
30 APRIL 2023
Elizabeth Rose Kaye Draper authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550 Your Family in History offered online in Fall 2022 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected]
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
Purification of soul in R.K. Narayan's, The Guide
R.K. Narayan is one of the most well known novelist in India who writes in English. He is well known for his depiction and humourous writing on Indian society and culture. R.K. Narayan is essentially a storyteller, whose sensitive, well-drawn portrayals of twentieth-century Indian life were set mostly in the fictional South Indian town of Malgudi. Most of his novels capture many Indian traits while having a unique identity of their own. The Guide, which is also set in the town of Malgudi is written in a simple style, unpretentious, and witty with a unique flavour as if he was writing in the native mother tongue. The story seems to depict the everyday life of the simple characters in a rather amusing and comical way. But at the same time one can‘t help to wonder if R.K Narayan, who is hailed as a master story teller of India, has only the motive of entertaining and being comical in this book. I belief R.K Narayan has a wider and rather philosophical message beneath his work. From pages to pages of this novel, I noticed how the author holds dear to the age old philosophy that underlines the core of Hinduism –the law of Karma. Therefore, to understand The Guide,one needs to understand the theological aspects of Hinduism. This novel actually takes the readers on a journey of Hinduism and shows how the transition and purification of a Hindu soul takes place through the main character, Raju. Narayan shows how Raju, a character full of flaws goes through different phases in his life to redeem his sins and become a changed person towards the end
Informetrics on M. N. Srinivas
M. N. Srinivas, the well known sociologist is widely recognised as architect of modern Indian sociology and social anthropology. His publications have been analysed by year, domain, authorship pattern, channels of communication used. Keywords, etc. The results indicate that the papers published by him are of a nature that qualify him to be a 'role model' for the younger generations to emulate.
By the end of 1995, Srinivas had to his credit 144 papers which, included 33 broad papers in sociology and anthropology; 18 papers in social change; 28 papers in village studies; 12 papers on religion; 17 papers on caste and 36 papers of general popular interest. The periods 1958-61 and 1974-77, when Srinivas was 38-41 and 58-61 years old. were his most productive periods with highest publication activity
Gedenkboek ter gelegenheid van het tiende lustrum van de R.K. studenten vereniging "Sanctus Virgilius"
Dit Gedenkboek\u95Annuarium werd ter gelegenheid van het tiende lustrum van de R.K. Studenten Vereniging Sanctus Virgilius op 18 April uitgegeven door de Delftse Uitgevers Maatschappij in opdracht van de Commissie tot redactie van Gedenkboek en Annuarium. Het werk werd gezet uit de "Bodoni" en gedrukt op dool persen van drukkerij Van der Drift in een oplage van duizend exemplaren, bestemd voor de leden en oud-leden van "Sanctus Virgilius". / Behalve de gewone oplage werden gedrukt vijftien exemplaren op Imperiaal van Van Gelder en Zonen, genummerd van I-XV. / Het eerste exemplaar, in perkament gebonden, werd aangebod en aan Z.H. Paus Pius XII. De overige luxe-exemplaren zijn bestemd voor geestelijke en wereldlijke autoriteite
Macro-scale matter wave generation in charged particle dynamics in a magnetic field, a consequence of quantum entanglement
Matter wave interference effects on the macro-scale predicted by the author in charged particle dynamics in a magnetic field [R.K. Varma, Phys. Rev. E 64, 036608 (2001)], and observed subsequently [R.K. Varma, A.M. Punithavelu, S.B. Banerjee, Phys. Rev. E 65, 026503 (2002); R.K. Varma, S.B. Banerjee, Phys. Scr. 75, 19 (2007)] have been shown here to be an interesting consequence of quantum entanglement between the parallel and perpendicular degrees of freedom of the particle. Treating the problem in the framework of the inelastic scattering theory, it is shown that these macro-scale matter waves are generated in the ‘parallel’ degree of freedom as a modulation of the plane wave state of the particle along the field concomitantly with the excitation of Landau levels in the perpendicular degree of freedom in an inelastic scattering episode. We highlight here the role of quantum entanglement leading to the generation of this macro-scale quantum entity which has been shown to exhibit observable consequences. This case also exemplifies a situation exhibiting quantum entanglement on the macro-scale
Other-languagedness in Stories by R.K. Narayan, Saadat Hassan Manto, and Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
In her article Other-languagedness in Stories by R.K. Narayan, Saadat Hassan Manto, and Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Biljana Djorić Francuski examines, within a comparative framework, the concepts of otherness and other-languagedness as expressed in three short stories by authors from separate but interconnected cultures: an Indian English writer, Rasipuram Krishnaswamy Narayan; a Pakistani writer, Saadat Hassan Manto; and a writer of European origins who lived in and wrote about India, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. The author analyzes, within the context of the (post)colonial discourse, the instances of misunderstanding resulting from binary oppositions between the interlocutors, due to their mutual otherness
A Critical Study of the Autobiographical Elements in the Fictional Works of R. K. Narayan
Not availabl
The Effects of Isolation on Agricultural Development
Title: The Effects of Isolation on Agricultural Development, Author: R.K. Smith, Location: ThodeAgriculture, as with any human activity, is subject
to an extremely wide range of influences. This gives rise
to complexities of a rather broad scope which must be dealt
with when investigating the agriculture found on any-scale ,
be it farm, county, province , or country. In any study on
agriculture. These complexities must be reduced somehow so
t hat the scale of inve s tigation a l lo ws enough in- dep t h study
to permit reliable conclusions . The purpose of this study
is to investigate the effects of one factor, isolation 1 on
agricultural development. Let it be hypothesized that :
isolation of an agricultural area will affect : i) the rate
and nature of growth , and ii) the present agriculture ".ThesisBachelor of Arts (BA
What's It Worth - The Patient-Litigant Exception Whittles Away at the Physician-Patient and Mental Health Information Privileges: R.K., M.D. v. Ramirez
The author examines the implications of the R.K., M.D. v. Ramirez case on the confidentiality of physician-patient and mental health information. The article discusses the patient-litigant exception, which allows for the disclosure of privileged information when a patient initiates legal action, potentially undermining the foundational principles of medical confidentiality. The article critiques the court's reasoning and the broader impact of this exception on patient trust and the therapeutic relationship. Through an analysis of legal precedents and ethical considerations, the article highlights the tension between legal rights and patient privacy. Ultimately, the author calls for a reevaluation of the exception to better protect sensitive health information in the context of litigation
Examining Gandhian ideals and the feminized national allegory in R.K Narayan\u27s Waiting for the Mahatma
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the character of Bharati in R.K Narayan’s novel, Waiting for the Mahatma, as a prominent female figure of political agency and representation of the role Indian women took during the revolutionary movement. Yet, also argues that problems arise when the author uses a feminine character as a national allegory and represents her as “Mother India,” because it makes the category of woman homogenous, neglecting to recognize the intersectional identities that make the lives of women diverse and incomparable. Additionally, another aspect of this argument is that Narayan’s depiction of Bharati fits into the Gandhian ideals of women as moral agents, rather than economic ones, which leads to a limited portrayal of women’s capabilities. Through his fealty to Gandhi, he fails to escape the concerns that postcolonial feminists have brought up about reductive and generalized depictions of women as representations of nations
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