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3D Children story books from India
After 3D movies it is now the time for 3D books . The revolutionary children fairy tales are now available in eye-popping 3D. Popular children stories like Snow White, Cinderella, Hansel & Gretel, Sleeping Beauty, Little Red Riding Hood and Jack & the Beanstalk are readily available.

These books can be read using 3D spectacles only. It is a great combination of visual art for not just children but adults too. These books are a great gift to your loved ones. For ordering or for any other enquiries relating to these books please contact D.K. Agencies (P) Ltd.
Resource development and environmental change / editors, Abdul Munir and Hifzur Rahman.
The Department of Geography, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India, organised an international conference on the theme: Resource Development and Environmental Change-Emerging Issues and Challenges, during January 2009. The Conference was spread over 16 technical sessions and about 300 research papers were presented by eminent social scientists and researchers from within and outside India. This 3 vol. set puts together a selection of over 70 presentations of the event dealing with a very wide range of specific themes and research issues broadly related to areas such as environmental changes, management and development of natural resources, sustainable agriculture, economic development, food security, biodiversity, health and waste management, regional disparities, land utilisation and population dynamics. The learned authors have reflected upon their empirical research work in these areas and their research output holds high and policy oriented relevance for the developing countries and hence the publication has a strong reference value for the concerned scholars.  Read More
Writing India : colonial ethnography in the nineteenth century / edited and introduced by Mushirul Hasan.
After the Battle of Plassey in June 1757, the British established their supremacy in India. The East India Company, once a mere body of traders, started making wars and negotiating with Indian rulers. “India’s destinies”, as rightly observed by Jawaharlal Nehru, “were now in the hands of a set of merchants”. He added, “Government was largely trade, trade was largely plunder.” Meanwhile, the composition, organization, and training of Indian Army – comprising British and Indian Army units – was dictated primarily by its role in maintaining imperial rule in the subcontinent and facing external threats.

The essential motivations for the mapping of India were, thus, war and commerce. The ethnographic surveys carried out by the British rulers, during this period, created an intellectual resource for the administrators, military men, traders, and merchants. Notwithstanding the false traits they had set, they explain or contextualize social and cultural life in new and compelling ways. For example, the notes relating to Hinduism by Captain W.J. Newell (included here) create ambiguities of all sorts, but confirm that Hinduism is a construct.

Writing India exemplifies colonial ethnography by drawing together a range of Notes/Memorandums that appeared in the 19th-century. Written by British army officers, these Notes focus on Brahmans, Hindu Religion, Sikhs, Punjabi Muhammadans, Hindustani Muhammadans, Dogras, and Rajputs, among several others. Each of these pieces sheds light on aspects of the colonial mentalities. Although ‘blood’, ‘race’, ‘heredity’, and ‘selection’, have factored in, they have been used, challenged, or refined by others. Despite their prejudiced outlook on India’s past and present as well as several other limitations, they have great historical import.

Mushirul Hasan: an internationally distinguished historian, is former Vice-Chancellor, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. Currently, he is Director General, National Archives of India.  Read More