cover image: Modern Review  January  1940

Premium

20.500.12592/z6tq6s

Modern Review January 1940

1940

It IVO'.within the power of the British Government to impose the unwanted and uwelcome British-made constitution on the entire population of InsEa including both the majority and the minorities—at least on the majority. [...] The launching of civil disobedience requires the disciplined fulfilment of the essential conditions thereof." The following is the full teitsf_the pledge "We believe that it is an inalienable right of the Indian people as of any other people to have freedom and enjoy the fruits of their toil and have necessities of life so that they may have full opportunities of growth. [...] That endeavours have been going on for some time past for the resuscitation of the dying and dead indigenous industries of India and for the sening and carrying on of large-scale industries with the help of power-driven machinery does not disprove the fact of the ruin. [...] But most of the large-scale industries are owned and carried on by foreigners and pest of the profits go to them..' Hence though. the quantity of goods at present produced is India exceeds what was produced in the prBritish period the volume of production does not go to ameliorate the condition of the masses of the people. [...] The transport of goods within the country the coastal traffic' and the carrying of goods and passengers across the seas has mostly gone out of the hands of: the people of the country.
government politics public policy
Pages
171
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-xxx Ramananda Chatterjee view
Notes
1-20 unknown view
Antardevata
21-24 Rabindranath Tagore view
India’s Problem
25-27 Rabindranath Tagore view
The World Outlook Today
28-32 C.F Andrews view
Emerson and William Henry Furness
32-32 J.T. Sunderland view
The Father of Press Freedom
33-35 Sudhindra Bose view
Are the Bengalee Hindus Decadent ?—No
36-41 Jatindra Datta view
Inside the U.S.S.R
42-48 Shyama Charan view
On Central Banking in the British Dominions and India
48-50 P.C Thomas view
Dust Magnet and Bactericidal Gun
51-54 Andre Lion view
A New Indian Sculptor
55-ii O.C Ganguly view
Teaching Journalism in American Universities
57-59 Kausik Mitra view
European Imperialism
59-61 C Menon view
The Indo-Ceylon Deadlock
61-67 Nihal Singh view
The European Upheaval
68-73 D. Pole view
Professor Millikan in Calcutta
74-82 unknown view
Bhil Seva Mandal Dohad
82-86 Laxmidas Shreekant view
Book Reviews
87-115 unknown view
Indian Periodicals
116-121 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
122-128 unknown view