cover image: The Calcutta Review  an Illustrated Monthly  (Third Series)  March 1934

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The Calcutta Review an Illustrated Monthly (Third Series) March 1934

1934

Participations in Academic Celebrations. During 1933 on the occasion of the laying of the foundation of the new University buildings in London by His Majesty the King accopanied by the Queen I represented my University and was the recipient of much favour and kindness at the hands of the London University authorities. [...] The impact of western culture is upsetting the old customs and the social institutions of our people the rigours of the purdah and caste restrictions are disappearing and the marriageable age of girls has been raised. [...] there is one perceptible strain in the stream one udeviated purpose slowly evolving from the present and that is the unshackling of the womanhood of India from the chains of the past. [...] If it had not been for restrictions imposed on export finance by Government control and the strict regulation of the sale of Council Bills the shortage of shipping freight and the disorganisation of our internal transport system especially the railways India would have reaped greater advantages from the new demand and the disappearance of foreign competition from her export markets. [...] The most outstanding feature of the direction of our import trade is the steady reduction in the share of the United Kingdom.
history
Pages
163
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120137
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ix unknown view
Convocation Address
255-268 Hassan Suhrawardy view
India’s Foreign Trade
269-290 Naliniranjan Sarkar view
International Educational Notes
291-i Taraknath Das view
The Earliest Chapter of Indian Art
299-306 Syama Bhattacharyya view
T.S. Eliot: a New Force in English Poetry
307-316 S.K. Sengupta view
The Organisation of Local Self-Government in Capital Cities
317-324 G. Harris view
Why is Philosophy Stagnant
325-331 Abu Ayyub view
Buddhism: a Study From the Humanistic Point of View
332-336 Jotirendra Das Gupta view
Relative Growth of the Hindus and the Muhammadans in Bengal
337-340 Rabindra Datta view
Linguistic Studies in Europe
341-357 Batakrishna Ghosh view
Is Shavianism an Error
358-360 Sureshchandra Sen view
Darjeelinc and its Proposed Vernacular
361-364 Chittaranjan Das Gupta view
Rejoinder to “a Note on Rammohun Roy: the First Phase”
365-371 Brajendra Banerji view
Admission and Re-Admission to Hinduism During the Muslim Period
372-372 Ram Sarma view
Miscellany
373-376 Benaykumar Sarkar view
Reviews and Notices of Books
377-383 unknown view
Gleanings
384-390 unknown view
At Home and Abord
391-395 unknown view
Ourselves
396-407 unknown view

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