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Gandhi : A Life

  • Gandhi : A Life
  • Attribution

    Yogesh Chadha
  • Publication Details

    Book, John Wiley, 1997
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
      (LOWER LEVEL)  DS481.G73 C43 1997         AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    “It is imperative that Gandhi is reclaimed as a human being out of the many myths surrounding him. Gandhi in over twenty years, Yogesh Chadha creates a complex, compelling, and beautifully rounded portrait of one of the monumental figures of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This definitive new work is the culmination of eight years of writing and research, during which Chadha had complete access to Gandhi’s voluminous writings and government papers only recently made available. As he explores the key events in Gandhi’s intellectual, spiritual, and political development, Chadha writes with total frankness, never shying away from the weaknesses and the more controversial aspects of both Gandhi’s public and personal lives, including struggles with sexuality and celibacy. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
  • Author

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • Simultaneously published in the United Kingdom as Rediscovering Gandhi in 1997
    • Gandhi: A Life reveals the transformation of an ordinary, timid young man into a leader whose stand against a mighty empire brought millions together. From the poor and the illiterate to the intelligentsia and the rich, Gandhi’s followers forged a sustained, non-violent movement for independence. When Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born in 1869, India was divided. British India, ruled by the Viceroy from Delhi, stood in stark contrast to the other India, a checkerboard of hundreds of princely states, royal instruments without political power. Shortly before his nineteenth birthday, Gandhi - by then a husband and father of several years - set sail from Bombay to England to study law; shortly therafter, he traveled to South Africa to practice. An outsider, the young barrister tasted firsthand the bitter fruits of class prejudice, racial intolerance, and colonial oppression. At the same time, his pursuit of spiritual fulfillment and a keen curiosity about the world’s diverse religions nourished Gandhi’s own deeply felt convictions, pointing him toward the path along which he would guide India to independence
  • ISBN

    • 0471243787
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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