India's Fight for Freedom


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The Swadeshi Movement in Bengal, 1903-1908


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The Swadeshi Movement In Bengal-1903-1908 Is A Study In Depth Of The Five Crowded Years From The Announcement Of The Partition Plan To The Alipore Bomb Case. The Author Has Chosen As His Main Theme The Effects Of The Nationalist Intelligentsia During These Years To Break Out Of Elitist Confines Through The Development Of New Techniques Of Struggle And Mass Communication And The Ultimate Failure Of Such Attempts, Which, Along With Intensified Repression, Led To The Heroic Blind Alley Of Revolutionary Terrorism. The Shifts Within Nationalism In Political Objectives, Methods And Social And Cultural Ideals Are Analysed And Sought To Be Explained In Terms Of A Novel Classification Of Trends Within The Swadeshi Movement.







India's Fight for Freedom; Or


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Gandhi and Indian Freedom Struggle


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The Nonviolent Struggle for Indian Freedom, 1905-19


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Much of the recent surge in writing about the practice of nonviolent forms of resistance has focused on movements that occurred after the end of the Second World War, many of which have been extremely successful. Although the fact that such a method of resistance was developed in its modern form by Indians is acknowledged in this writing, there has not until now been an authoritative history of the role of Indians in the evolution of the phenomenon. Celebrated historian David Hardiman shows that while nonviolence is associated above all with the towering figure of Mahatma Gandhi, 'passive resistance' was already being practiced by nationalists in British-ruled India, though there was no principled commitment to nonviolence as such. It was Gandhi, first in South Africa and then in India, who evolved a technique that he called 'satyagraha'. His endeavors saw 'nonviolence' forged as both a new word in the English language, and a new political concept. This book conveys in vivid detail exactly what nonviolence entailed, and the formidable difficulties that the pioneers of such resistance encountered in the years 1905-19.