The Demon's Daughter Sophie JanThis sixteenth century work has a modern sensibility, presenting characters' inner worlds and understanding love as the fullest realization of the individual. The Demon's Daughter (Prabhavati pradyumnamu) is a sixteenth century novel by the south Indian poet Pingali Suranna, originally written in Telugu, the language of present day Andhra Pradesh. Suranna begins with a story from classical Hindu mythology in which a demon plans to overthrow the gods.
particularly gendered and sexualized desire
dataset sources
Using longitudinal tenure data and analysis of global trends in forest ownership developed by the Rights and Resources Initiative
faculty-student relationships
how ideas about masculinity have also served to shape those historical events
Using a detailed empirical investigation of the fraught bilateral relations between the US and Iran
This book presents and illustrates the use of a number of advanced analysis tools needed to characterize turbulence in this complex regime
ranging from India to Yemen
Various breeding strategies to improve dairy cattle production
McDayter uses unpublished fan letters and anonymous contemporary poetry to argue that it was precisely Byron's involvement with popular culture and feminine hysteria that in part made him so politically influential
This volume explores the life histories of a wide range of radical figures whose political activity in relation to the black liberation struggle was catalysed or profoundly shaped by the global impact and legacy of the Russian Revolution of 1917
This book explores British imperial attitudes towards China during their early encounters from 1792 to 1840