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Friday, 30 September 2022
David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
Pygmalion by Geroge Bernard Shaw
Pygmalion is a play by G. B. SHAW.
What are major themes of the play?
Write in detail about the Plot of the play?
Write notes on the major characters of the play?
All these questions are discussed here in the following read material. So click on the given link and read the study material.
To download reading material CLICK HERE
To download summary CLICK HERE
To download study material of the novel DAVID COPPERFIELD by Charles Dickens, click here
Thursday, 29 September 2022
Adhyayan Nishpatti - Learning Outcomes for Standard 1 to 8 Primary School Gujrat
નમસ્કાર મિત્રો,
અધ્યયન - અધ્યાપન પ્રક્રિયા દરમિયાન અધ્યયન નીષ્પત્તિઓ ખુબ મહત્વની છે. શિક્ષક Learning Outcomes ને ધ્યાનમાં રાખીને ભણાવે અને તે Outcomes, teaching process ને અંતે પ્રાપ્ત થાય તે અપેક્ષિત છે. તે હેતુથી અહિયાં દરેક ધોરણની અધ્યયન નીષ્પત્તિઓ મુકવામાં આવી છે.
એકમ કસોટી ના પેપર નુ સોલ્યુશન જોવા માટે અહીંયા ક્લિક કરો - Answer Key
અધ્યયન નીષ્પત્તિઓ ની PDF, Download કરવા નીચેની લિંક પર ક્લિક કરો.
STANDARD 1 |
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GUJARATI |
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MATHS |
STANDARD 2 |
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GUJARATI |
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MATHS |
STANDARD 3 |
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ENGLISH |
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MATHS |
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GUJARATI |
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STANDARD 4 |
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ENGLISH |
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GUJARATI |
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HINDI |
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MATHS |
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EVS |
STANDARD 5 |
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ENGLISH |
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GUJARATI |
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HINDI |
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MATHS |
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STANDARD 6 |
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ENGLISH |
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GUJARATI |
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HINDI |
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SANSKRIT |
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MATHS |
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SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY |
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SOCIAL
SCIENCE |
STANDARD 7 |
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ENGLISH |
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GUJARATI |
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HINDI |
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SANSKRIT |
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MATHS |
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SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY |
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SOCIAL
SCIENCE |
STANDARD 8 |
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ENGLISH |
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GUJARATI |
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HINDI |
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SANSKRIT |
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MATHS |
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SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY |
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SOCIAL
SCIENCE |
Wednesday, 28 September 2022
Ekam Kasoti paper solution 2022
Wednesday, 17 August 2022
Sandhida Mahadev
Sandhida Mahadev Aarti
Monday, 17 August 2020
Narration of Nation in Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
- Introduction
Man Booker Prize-winning author for her debut novel ‘The God of Small Things’ in 1997, pens almost after twenty years her second fiction entitled ‘The Ministry of Utmost Happiness’ in 2017 which received wide critical acclaim for its subject matter.
How
does one narrate a fragmenting nation? Much of postcolonial fiction grapples
with the failure of the postcolonial nation-state to deliver on the promises of
democracy and the betrayal of the people by the anticolonial nationalists who
quickly turned into postcolonial dictators. From Chinua Achebe and Ngugi Wa Thiongo to Salman Rushdie and M.G. Vassanji, postcolonial writers have
grappled with this question (TICKELL).
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness articulates a nation’s history from the perspective of the marginalized. Anjum, a hijra, and Saddam Hussain, a Dalit, and Tilottama, a maverick young woman. and it is through the tales of these characters Arundhati Roy presents the failure of Nation-state.
Even
though it is a fiction, it depicts the crude reality of contemporary India. Roy
uses lots of allusions to satirize various people and ideologies of our time. There
are few Indian writers who through their work try to depict the injustice and
inequalities in our society. If the writers are writing about the negative
sides of the nation, then we have to learn to accept that this is the greater
process of self-examination and to become a better society such kind of self-criticism is very essential. It is appropriate to quote here the words of Arvind
Adiga that “"At a time when India is going through great changes and, with
China is likely to inherit the world from the west, it is important that
writers like me try to highlight the brutal injustices of society," he
said, adding that the criticism by writers like Flaubert, Balzac and Dickens of
in the 19th century helped England and France become better societies.
"That's what I'm trying to do - it's not an attack on the country, it's
about the greater process of self-examination," the writer told Guardian
Roy refers to The Emergency, 21month period from 1975 to 1977 that was imposed by Indira Gandhi. During Emergency the elections were suspended and civil liberties were curbed. At that time press was also censored and opposition political leaders were imprisoned. Public gatherings and meetings were restricted; the police had the right to search homes without a warrant and could arrest people without charges. The situation during the Emergency has been outlined in the novel as,
Civil
Rights had been suspended, newspapers were censored and, in the name of
population control, thousands of men (mostly Muslim) were herded into camps and
forcibly sterilized. A new law – the Maintenance of Internal Security Act –
allowed the government to arrest anybody on a whim. The prisons were full, a
small coterie of Sanjay Gandhi’s acolytes had been unleashed on the general
population to carry out his fiat. (TMUH)
In
the novel, Roy has used this incident as a backdrop. Novel shows people are
still protesting at Jantar Mantar in Delhi for justice. Roy in this novel has
given a voice to those who have been wounded, died and those who are still
suffering due to the aftermath of Bhopal Gas tragedy. Anjum meets the group of
fifty representatives protesting at Jantar Mantar demanding for justice, in the
case. They are on the protest, with banners which say “Warren Anderson has
killed more than Osama bin Laden” (TMUH). Roy here is comparing the accused
Warren Anderson with the mastermind of September 11 attacks of New York, and in
doing so, she is probably mapping the intensity of the tragedy which was much
more tremendous and horrible than 9/11 attacks. By comparing the two accused,
she is also highlighting the ‘little justice’ done to the victims of the Bhopal
tragedy who are still suffering from its aftermath
The
residents of “Khwabgah” in the novel, who are a thousand kilometres far from
New York can be seen sharing the grief and sentiments of the people of the USA.
“The usually garrulous residents of the Khwabgah watched (on TV) in dead
silence as the tall buildings buckled like pillars of sand” (TMUH 40). The tall
buildings here are a reference to World Trade Centre buildings. Everyone in the
Khwabgah was watching the live broadcast of the burning down of the towers
silently, with their mouth shut in great shock. In that prolonged silence the
utterance of Bismillah, “Do they speak Urdu?” shows his disposition to
associate himself with those trapped and losing their lives in the ablaze
buildings. This incident in the USA had not only perturbed the United States
but India also. The fictional characters of the novel are also no different from
it
In the novel Arundhati Roy refers to former Prime Minister Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee as The Poet Prime Minister. Immediately after 9/11 attack Govt. of India passed a law, POTA (Prevention of Terrorism Act) in 2002 which was also included in the novel.
In
2011 The Anti-corruption Movement led by Anna Hazare was the centre of attention of the entire Nation. On 4 April 2011– Anna Hazare started the ‘fast to death’ at
Jantar Mantar in Delhi, demanding the government to draft and pass the Jan
Lokpal Bill to fight against corruption. The country was tired by series of scams
including 2G scam, Coal mine distribution scam, Commonwealth games scam etc. so
in Delhi, there was a huge protest against the corruption, which was joined by
many people including bureaucrats, film stars, some politicians etc. Roy
includes this episode also in the story to show the darker reality of the
nation.
Mob
lynching on the name of cow protection is also one of the most debated issues of
recent time. There are few instances which were the talk of the town and were in
headlines that people got killed by a mob. Recent incidents include Dadri Mob
lynching in 2015, 2016 Latehar Mob lynching case, 2016 Ahmedabad lynching case
etc. where the mob has lynched the accused to death.
Roy projected the contemporary critical
and sensitive socio-political issues of India. Under the covers of secularism
and democracy how intolerance, racism, discrimination and injustice frequently
practised. How people are slaughtered and innocents are buried in the dark
(Raj). So
in a way novel is a commentary on the crude sides of present Indian society,
with the backdrop of real incidents like Bhopal Gas massacre of 1984, Gujarat
riot of 2002, Kashmir insurgency, the plight of Kashmir Pandits, clash between the Muslims and Hindus Maoist and Naxalite movements, problems of Adivasi’s
and Dalits as well as other political, religious aspects, war, Capitalism,
Nationalism and so on.
Thus,
we can say that Arundhati Roy is narrating a fragmented Nation in her novel The
Ministry of Utmost Happiness.
Works Cited
Mandal, Supriya.
"An Analysis from the Perspectives of Postcolonial Ecocriticism of
Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost Happiness." The Criterion: An
International Journal in English 9.2 (February 2018).
Prashant Maurya,
Nagendra Kumar. "Political overtones and Allusions in Arundhati
Roy’sPolitical overtones and Allusions in Arundhati Roy’sThe Ministry of
Utmost Happiness." Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
10.3 (2019). PDF. 14 8 2020.
Raina, jaaved Ahmad.
"Transgender Marginalization and Exclusion”: A study of Arundhati Roy’s
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness." The Creative Launcher (n.d.).
Roy, Arundhati. The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.
Gurgaon: Penguin Random House India, 2017. Print.
The Newswire.
"My book highlights brutal injustices of India: Adiga." 16 10 2008.
PDF. 13 8 2020.
<https://www.outlookindia.com/newswire/story/my-book-highlights-brutal-injustices-of-india-adiga/621065>.
RAJ, SUSHREE SMITA.
"A STUDY ON ARUNDHATI ROY’S “THE MINISTRY OF UTMOST HAPPINESS." INTERNATIONAL
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE, LITERATURE AND TRANSLATION STUDIES (IJELR)
Vol. 5. .Issue.2., 2018 (April-June) (n.d.).
TICKELL, ALEX.
"Writing in the Necropolis: Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost
Happiness." Moving worlds: A journal of Transcultural studies
(n.d.).
Wikipedia. Bhopal disaster. n.d. 14 8 2020.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bhopal_disaster&oldid=971888690>.
What is Globalization? What are Cultural and Social Dimensions of Globalization? Explain
- · Preface
Globalization is not a new phenomenon. Trade between two distant territories is happening since centuries via sea. Industrial Revolution played a major role in speeding up this process in the last two centuries. The term ‘Globalization’ is quite complex to define because it involves so many aspects. Definition of globalisation also varies in emphasis from the economic and technological to the socio-cultural and political.
- So, let's have a look upon some of the definitions of Globalizations.
The concept of globalization has been explained by the IMF (International Monetary Fund) as ‘the growing economic interdependence of countries worldwide through increasing volume and variety of cross border transactions in goods and services and of international capital flows and also through the more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology.’ In a broad overview definition, “globalization is the worldwide process of homogenizing prices, products, wages, rates of interest and profits.
Sheila
L. Croucher argues that “globalization can be described as a process by which
the people of the world are unified into a single society and function
together. This process is a combination of economic, technological,
socio-cultural and political forces.
The
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia in 2002 reports
that: Globalization is a widely-used a term that can be defined in a number of different ways. When used in an
economic context, it refers to the reduction and removal of barriers between
national borders in order to facilitate the flow of goods, capital, services
and labour. Globalization is not a new phenomenon. It began in the late
nineteenth-century, but its spread slowed during the period from the start of
the First World War until the third quarter of the twentieth century. This
slowdown can be attributed to the inward-looking policies pursued by a number
of countries in order to protect their respective industries, however, the pace
of globalization picked up rapidly during the fourth quarter of the twentieth
century.
Tomlinson defines globalization simply as “complex
connectivity,” the expansion of social ties across the planet. As we travel
more easily through space, interact with others across vast distances, receive
information from near and far, our sense of who “we” necessary change as
well. Globalization “alters the context of meaning construction.
According to Anthony Giddens “Globalization can be
defined as the intensification of worldwide social relations which link distant
localities in such a way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring
many miles away and vice versa.”
Martin khore's definition of
globalisation is what we see in the Third World have for several centuries
called colonization.
Globalization has made a huge impact on thinking across the Humanities, redefining the understanding of fields such as communication, culture, politics and literature., the impact of globalization on its culture and literature is quite significant. the discipline of literary studies is undergoing a dramatic transformation.
Modern technologies such as satellite communications
and World Wide Web have made a drastic change in dissemination of various forms
of literature and quite irrelevantly information explosion has played a central
role in the distribution of social and cultural packages all around the globe. People
can even read novels, poetry, short stories, song and play online now. a person
in India can read Dostoevsky or Anton Chekhov in his own language and vice
versa. Russian student can look of
Indian author on the internet. With globalization, it is nearly impossible to
stop the spread of ideas, because its very nature brings to light the
interconnectivity of all individual.
The economy of India had undergone significant
policy shifts at the beginning of the 1990s. This new model of economic reforms
is commonly known as the LPG or Liberalization, Privatization and Globalization
model. P V Narasimha Rao, then Prime Minister initiated ground-breaking
economic reforms & Dr. Manmohan Singh, then Finance Minister played a
key role in implementing these reform policies. since then India is going through a rapid transformation.
- Cultural and Social Dimensions of Globalization
Every coin has two sides. Similarly, Globalization is
also one of the hotly debated issues because of its advantages and
disadvantages. Proponents of globalization believe it allows developing
countries to catch up to industrialized nations through increased
manufacturing, diversification, economic expansion, and improvements in
standards of living. Outsourcing by companies brings jobs and technology to
developing countries. Trade initiatives increase cross-border trading by
removing supply-side and trade-related constraints. Globalization has advanced
social justice on an international scale, and advocates report that it has
focused attention on human rights worldwide
On one hand, globalization has created new jobs and
economic growth through the cross-border flow of goods, capital, and labour. On
the other hand, this growth and job creation is not distributed evenly across
industries or countries
Globalization motives are idealistic, as well as
opportunistic, but the development of a global free market has benefited large
corporations based in the Western world. Its impact remains mixed for workers,
cultures, and small businesses around the globe, in both, developed and emerging
nations
Nowadays all local cultures are merging into each other and global culture is emerging out of that. Technology has played a key role in making this cultural change at a great pace. cultural boundaries are swept away by fax machines, internet, satellites, and cable TV. The mixture of GLOBAL and LOCAl culture has created new GLOCAL culture.
As John Tomlinson conceives, “the impact of
globalization in the cultural sphere has, most generally, been viewed in a
pessimistic light. Typically, it has been associated with the destruction of
cultural identities, victims of the accelerating encroachment of a homogenized,
westernized, consumer culture. This view tends to interpret globalization as a
seamless extension of – indeed, as a euphemism for – western cultural
imperialism.” An alternative perspective on cultural globalization emphasizes
the transfiguration of worldwide diversity into a pandemic of Westernized
consumer culture. Some critics argue that the dominance of American culture
influencing the entire world will ultimately result in the end of cultural
diversity. Such cultural globalization may lead to a human monoculture. This
process, understood as cultural imperialism, is associated with the destruction
of cultural identities, dominated by a homogenized and westernized, consumer
culture. The global influence of American products, businesses and culture in
other countries around the world has been referred to as Americanization. This
influence is represented through that of American-based television programs
which are rebroadcast throughout the world. Major American companies such as
McDonald's and Coca-Cola have played a major role in the spread of American
culture around the globe. Terms such as Coca-colonization have been coined to
refer to the dominance of American products in foreign countries, which some
critics of globalization view as a threat to the cultural identity of these
nations (Wikipedia). It is generally believed that western culture is overpowering the local culture. The traditional way of living life is diminishing and
more Americanized or Westernized way of living is becoming prominent
everywhere. Culture and customs, Food habit, festivals, dressing, games, work
culture, education and much more are changing very fast. More number of people
are craving for the life Europeans or Americans live. So, in that sense, one can
say that we are living in the era of Neocolonialism.
The World Commission on
the Social Dimension of Globalization (WCSDG) is one of those organizations
which aims at making globalization a fairer and more suitable process for all.
As
stated in the working paper No.24 for the 2004 sessions of WCSDG, certain
objectives were delineated to be achieved: [Commission’s] broad goals were: to
identify policies for globalization that reduce poverty, foster growth and
development in open economies, and widen opportunities for decent work; to
explore ways to make globalization inclusive, so that the process can be seen
to be fair for all, both between and within countries; to promote a more
focused international dialogue on the social dimension of globalization; to
build consensus among key actors and stakeholders on appropriate policy
responses; and to assist the international community forge greater policy coherence
in order to advance both economic and social goals in the global economy.
- conclusion
Anthony Giddens, The Consequences of Modernity, Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990. p.64.
Bernhard G. Gunter and Rolph van der Hoeven, Foreword, “The Social Dimension of Globalization: A Review of the Literature,” Working Paper No. 24. Policy Integration Department, World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization, International Labor Office: Geneva, June 2004.p.iii.
Kopp, Carol M.
"Globalization." 30 04 2020. Investopediahttps://www.investopedia.com/terms/g/globalization.asp. 09 08 2020.
Wikipedia
contributors. "Cultural globalization." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 20 Jul. 2020. Web. 12 Aug. 2020.