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2015
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2 pages
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AI-generated Abstract
The paper explores the historical relationship between Downing College, Cambridge, and Indian students during the British colonial period. It highlights how Downing College's admissions policies and the experiences of Indian students contributed to their understanding of imperialism and played a role in shaping their future endeavors, particularly in the context of India's independence movement. Noteworthy figures among the Indian alumni are discussed, shedding light on their significant contributions post-education.
2020
I extend my gratitude to the chair of the jury, Mrs. Amri Chenini Bouthaina, and the examiner, Mr.
HISTORY OF EDUCATION, 2024
The paper explores the historical significance of Hindu College Calcutta, a key institution in colonial India’s intellectual discourse. Established in the early 19th century, the college faced numerous challenges, including opposition from conservative factions and financial constraints, as it evolved into a hub for education and independent thought. The study highlights the socio-political context and the necessity of an institution providing contemporary education while preserving traditional Indian values. It focuses on the contributions of intellectuals associated with the college, particularly Henry Louis Vivian Derozio, examining his dynamic influence and his pivotal role in founding the Academic Association. Derozio’s teachings and leadership inspired a cohort of students, fostering a culture of free thought and intellectual exploration.
Creative Space
British rule is said to have been responsible for the modernization witnessed in the Indian civilization. The impact of this process was quiet evident from the changes adopted by the Indians in their life style, thinking processes, attires, food and education. Besides the advancements made in the spheres of roads, transports, postal services etc, their rule acted as a significant period of transition from the indigenous style of education to western education. The foundations were laid by the East India Company and the Christian Missionaries to employ Indians for administrative tasks as well as to serve their political, economical and colonial interests. Originally the access to education was limited to the royal families, as the British were of the opinion that Indians could become aware of their rights and positions and protest against their Raj posing a threat to the British establishment in India. Lord Curzon’s efforts in the 20th century gave way to spread of higher education w...
2018
This paper considers the role of racialization in the experiences of West Indians in British universities after the Second World War. In particular, Stuart Hall's reflections highlighted the complexities of national, island-based, and imperial identities across the British empire. This chapter complicates notions of belonging and various identities available to Hall in his earlier years -Jamaican, West Indian, and British. The notion of racialized existentialism was central to students who considered the problematics of their existence through the racial lens. Hall's argument for incomplete 'West Indian-ness' reflects the dynamic nature of identity. The thousands of West Indians arriving in Britain in the 1950s found themselves in a foreign land and negotiating in-between identities. Racialization shaped the intellectual and social consciousness of migrant students. This work investigates and analyses the fluidity of student identifications and argues that racialization in both the Caribbean colonies and the metropole was the determinant factor in West Indian/non-white selfconceptualizations.
Economic and Political Weekly, 2013
Bibtex Endnote RIS Google Scholar Print Email This article draws on archival material from the records of the University of Delhi to recount the last major change in its undergraduate programme in 1943 when the present three year BA course was introduced replacing the two year intermediate followed by a two year BA. That change took almost two decades of consultations and debate before they were accepted and implemented and provide an insightful comparison to the current proposals for changing the University's undergraduate programme. Neeti Nair ([email protected]) teaches History at the University of Virginia, United States. Seventy years ago, the Vice-Chancellor of Delhi University and former Chief of the Federal Court, Maurice Gwyer, pushed through a set of reforms that were later emulated by higher educational institutions across much of India. Following almost two decades of discussion, Delhi University's two-year intermediate degree followed by a two-year Bachelors degree (Pass or Honours, in Arts or Sciences) was duly replaced by a three-year Bachelors degree (Pass or Honours, in Arts or Sciences) in 1943. In the wake of recent changes and ongoing debates on University of Delhi's latest curricular reforms, it is worthwhile revisiting the contours of this debate from the past.
Calyx , 2023
The advent of colonial administration in the city of Poona (Pune) led to the establishment of modern educational institutions in the city to provide education to the natives. The New Poona College, one of the earliest institutions in the city, is emblematic of the rise of modern education. The early foundations of the college, starting as a high school in the colonial period has evolved into an acknowledged institution in contemporary times. The institution faced a number of challenges over time, from financial issues to epidemics. However, it continued to grow, developing a spectacular educational infrastructure. The article recounts the narrative of the institution's journey through time and its continuity.
Indian Journal of Surgery, 2012
Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1972
Andrews all wrote to him for patronage and Scott tried his best to satisfy their demands. As the patronage at the disposal of a Director was limited, Scott found it necessary to borrow £rom his 7 friends in the Direction and to maintain a "Book of Patronage" according to which he sought to bestow a writership or a cadetship on the soliciting candidates according to the seniority in the list.^ In a letter to Collins Salisbury, Scott himself confesses his use of Indian patronage in maintaining his seat in Parliament: "I ... have a just sense of your kind Offices in my election, and if I had a Cadetship in my gift, you should have it immediately-When I left the Direction /out by rotation/ last year, 1 .
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