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E-book
Author Connerney, Richard D.

Title The upside-down tree : India's changing culture / Richard Connerney
Published New York : Algora Pub., ©2009

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 214 pages)
Contents Introduction; The Upside Down Tree: The Bi-directionality of Cultural Change in India; Tameez aur Tahazeeb: Lucknow, Home of Manners and Civilization; The International Museum of the Latrine: Sewage and Scavengers; In Search of Flesh-Eating Turtles: Death Rituals and Water Pollution; Eating Baby Sharks: The Failing Fisheries of Goa; Kipling's Vermont: Surviving the Monsoons; The Tower of Babu: Hindi, Hinglish, English; Uda Devi Zindabad? The Assault on History as Illustrated by the History of an Assault; The Mourning of Chains: Muharram (and a Sunni-Shiite Riot) in Lucknow
Summary When he called India a"functioning anarchy," economist Kenneth Galbraith may have been thinking about Uttar Pradesh (UP), in northern India. Some Indians laughingly refer to Uttar Pradesh as a"loser state." Known as a home of deep poverty, incurable corruption and sticky social problems, UP is not the India that now appears regularly in The New York Times and Newsweek. This is the "other" India; the one that modernity has largely left behind, and this book is the result of Rick Connerney's repeated residencies over the last 18 years in that state
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 207-209) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Connerney, Richard D. -- Travel -- India
HISTORY.
Manners and customs
Travel
SUBJECT India -- Description and travel. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85064883
India -- Social life and customs. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh86007592
Subject India
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780875866505
0875866506