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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mihaela Gligor (The Romanian Academy, Cluj-Napoca, Romania) , Elisabetta Marino (University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Italy)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge India Weight: 0.610kg ISBN: 9781032133348ISBN 10: 1032133341 Pages: 138 Publication Date: 30 December 2022 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsEighty years have passed since Rabindranath Tagore's death and the Bengali writer never cease to inspire people, not just in his homeland but beyond its confines. Tagore was the first truly global figure of India and his writings as a poet, prose-writer and cultural thinker are nowadays more and more scrutinised in a postcolonial light. This volume with essays on how Tagore's poetry, religious or educational ideas, short stories, dialogue with leading intellectuals, travel writing reached or had the potential to reach beyond Bengal, is an important addition to an ever better understanding of one of the finest minds of modern India. Imre Bangha, University of Oxford, UK Rabindranath Tagore has always travelled, and in his situated universalism he continues to go beyond 'narrow domestic walls.' This is an excellent collection of papers on his powerful and increasingly pertinent legacy. Tabish Khair, Aarhus University, Denmark An extraordinary compendium that sheds new light on an extraordinary man, his times, and the profound impact he had on Indian arts, literary culture, and moral imagination. Namit Arora, author of Indians: A brief history of a Civilization Eighty years have passed since Rabindranath Tagore's death and the Bengali writer never cease to inspire people, not just in his homeland but beyond its confines. Tagore was the first truly global figure of India and his writings as a poet, prose-writer and cultural thinker are nowadays more and more scrutinised in a postcolonial light. This volume with essays on how Tagore's poetry, religious or educational ideas, short stories, dialogue with leading intellectuals, and travel writing reached or had the potential to reach beyond Bengal, is an important addition to an ever better understanding of one of the finest minds of modern India. Imre Bangha, University of Oxford, UK Rabindranath Tagore has always travelled, and in his situated universalism he continues to go beyond 'narrow domestic walls.' This is an excellent collection of papers on his powerful and increasingly pertinent legacy. Tabish Khair, Aarhus University, Denmark An extraordinary compendium that sheds new light on an extraordinary man, his times, and the profound impact he had on Indian arts, literary culture, and moral imagination. Namit Arora, author of Indians: A brief history of a Civilization Eighty years have passed since Rabindranath Tagore's death and the Bengali writer never cease to inspire people, not just in his homeland but beyond its confines. Tagore was the first truly global figure of India and his writings as a poet, prose-writer and cultural thinker are nowadays more and more scrutinised in a postcolonial light. This volume with essays on how Tagore's poetry, religious or educational ideas, short stories, dialogue with leading intellectuals, travel writing reached or had the potential to reach beyond Bengal, is an important addition to an ever better understanding of one of the finest minds of modern India. Imre Bangha, University of Oxford, UK Rabindranath Tagore has always travelled, and in his situated universalism he continues to go beyond 'narrow domestic walls.' This is an excellent collection of papers on his powerful and increasingly pertinent legacy. Tabish Khair, Aarhus University, Denmark An extraordinary compendium that sheds new light on an extraordinary man, his times, and the profound impact he had on Indian arts, literary culture, and moral imagination. Namit Arora, author of Indians: A brief history of a Civilization Eighty years have passed since Rabindranath Tagore's death and the Bengali writer never cease to inspire people, not just in his homeland but beyond its confines. Tagore was the first truly global figure of India and his writings as a poet, prose-writer and cultural thinker are nowadays more and more scrutinised in a postcolonial light. This volume with essays on how Tagore's poetry, religious or educational ideas, short stories, dialogue with leading intellectuals, travel writing reached or had the potential to reach beyond Bengal, is an important addition to an ever better understanding of one of the finest minds of modern India. Imre Bangha, University of Oxford, UK Rabindranath Tagore has always travelled, and in his situated universalism he continues to go beyond 'narrow domestic walls.' This is an excellent collection of papers on his powerful and increasingly pertinent legacy. Tabish Khair, Aarhus University, Denmark An extraordinary compendium that sheds new light on an extraordinary man, his times, and the profound impact he had on Indian arts, literary culture, and moral imagination. Namit Arora, author of Indians: A brief history of a Civilization 'Eighty years have passed since Rabindranath Tagore's death and the Bengali writer never cease to inspire people, not just in his homeland but beyond its confines. Tagore was the first truly global figure of India and his writings as a poet, prose-writer and cultural thinker are nowadays more and more scrutinised in a postcolonial light. This volume with essays on how Tagore's poetry, religious or educational ideas, short stories, dialogue with leading intellectuals, travel writing reached or had the potential to reach beyond Bengal, is an important addition to an ever better understanding of one of the finest minds of modern India.' -Imre Bangha, University of Oxford, U.K. Rabindranath Tagore has always travelled, and in his situated universalism he continues to go beyond 'narrow domestic walls.' This is an excellent collection of papers on his powerful and increasingly pertinent legacy.' -Tabish Khair, Aarhus University, Denmark 'An extraordinary compendium that sheds new light on an extraordinary man, his times, and the profound impact he had on Indian arts, literary culture, and moral imagination.' -Namit Arora, author of Indians: A brief history of a civilization Author Information"Mihaela Gligor is Researcher in the Philosophy of Culture at the Romanian Academy ""George Bariţiu"" Institute of History Cluj-Napoca; Founder and Director of Cluj Center for Indian Studies, Babeş-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Elisabetta Marino is Associate Professor of English Literature and the Head of ""Asia and the West,"" an International Research Centre based at the University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |