Trivium : Vol - 3 : No - 1 : Issue - 4

This issue takes up the challenge of multidisciplinarity by presenting essays from the diverse fields of colonial history, Atlantic slave trade, Urdu literature in translation, the educational theory of Vivekananda and evolution of banking. Even if they appear to be diverse all the essays barring one are focused on the multi-faceted history of the subcontinent. The essay on slave trade broadens the range of the issue by analyzing the neo-slave narrative in Manu Herbstein’s novel Ama. The authors discussed in this issue are Macaulay, QurratulainHyder, Vivekananda and Manu Herbstein. The essay on evolution of banking discusses the story of the Indian banking sector from its birth through nationalization and reforms in the light of the Narshimham Committee.
Readers can find front matter and back matters of the issue by clicking respective buttons:
Author: Anjan Saha

Macaulay and his Cognitive Imagination: Defining Knowledge in Contemporary India

Author: Abhranil Kundu

“Curiosity is Unbecoming in the Female Sex”: Resisting the Notion in Manu Herbstein’s Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade

Author: Basundhara Chakraborty

Re-reading History through Feminist Lens: A Critical Study of Qurratulain Hyder’s The River of Fire

Author: Swati Ghosh,Bishan Sanyal,Buddhadeb Chandra

Evolution of banking sector in India

Author: Sujata Raha

Swami Vivekanander Sahityadarsha o Shilpachinta – Ekti Parjalochana