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How i got my BELLY BUTTON
₹495.00“How I Got My Belly Button” by Anju Kish is a book that explains puberty, growing up, and sex education in a way that’s easy for kids to understand. It’s a fun and engaging story that answers questions kids might have about their bodies and helps parents and kids have open and honest conversations about sensitive topics.
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The Origanals WAR AND PEACE
₹495.00“War and Peace” is a historical novel set during the Napoleonic Wars, exploring the lives of several aristocratic Russian families. The story spans over a decade, from 1805 to 1812, and follows characters like Pierre, Prince Andrei, and Natasha Rostova as they navigate love, family, war, and personal growth. Against the backdrop of Napoleon’s invasion of Russia, Tolstoy examines themes of power, morality, family, and the human experience. Through intricate character development and historical detail, Tolstoy creates a sweeping epic that explores the complexities of life, love, and war.
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Religion, Law and Power
₹495.00This book constructs an anthropological history of a subaltern religious formation, Mahima Dharma of Orissa, a large province in eastern India. Tracking the contingent making of a critical community over a hundred and forty year period, Religion, Law and Power explores the interplay of distinct expressions of time and history, innovative reformulations of caste and Hinduism and distinct engagements with state and nation. This serves to unravel the wider entanglements of religion, history, law, modernity and power. Ishita Banerjee-Dube provides a situated and critical analysis of the different trajectories of Mahima Dharma, bringing to the fore a clutch of empirical and theoretical issues. Understandings of the articulation and institutionalization of a subaltern religious order are not marked off from, but reveal the techniques and textures of, the modern state and dominant Hinduism. Such moves foreground subaltern and ascetic expressions and negotiations of modernity in institutional and everyday arenas, and further question widespread propositions of a singular Hinduism, especially in India today. ‘Religion, Law and Power’ should be of interest to historians, anthropologists and religious studies scholars as well as general readers interested in religion, politics, community and state. It will be of particular interest to students of South Asia concerned with Hinduism and religious sects, history and law, and power and resistance.
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