India: From Midnight to the Millennium

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Arcade Pub., 1997 - 392 páginas
"Few books in recent years, if any, offer such a comprehensive overview of what ails India, its politicians and its people; and few writers, apart from Nirad Chaudhury and V. S. Naipaul, benefit so obviously from the perspective Tharoor offers, that of an Indian with a profound empathy for his native culture, combined with the insight made possible by following India's progress from afar."
-- "New York Times"

"A hard-hitting, powerfully analytical and supremely articulate new book. . . . Tharoor discusses the flawed miracle of Indian democracy from various angles, opting for a take-no-prisoners approach as he criticizes politicians, unpacks layers of misguided governmental policies and exposes the atavistic tendencies of special-interest pols."
-- "Newsday"

"Tharoor looks back at his country's first 50 years of independence, describing its challenges (illiteracy, poverty, sectarian violence and the ever-present caste problem) and its triumphs (a thriving democracy, a burgeoning economy) in lively, informative prose. He is particularly adept at describing all that India and Indians are not--not the same ethnicity, religion or language--to arrive at the nation's essence: that the singular thing about India was that you could only speak of it in the plural."
-- "Seattle Times"

Dentro del libro

Índice

Introduction
1
A Myth and an Idea
7
Scheduled Castes Unscheduled Change
79
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