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DeLury, Melissa – Journal of Educational Media, Memory and Society, 2022
History textbooks play a critical role in their connection to conflict. While they can play a role in dehumanizing the "other" by propagating the myths and narratives of dominant groups, they can also play a transformational role in challenging discourses and narratives at the root of conflict. This article explores the relationship…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Conflict, Foreign Countries, Asian History
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Manoj Kumar Mishra; Priyankar Upadhyaya; Thomas Paul Davis – Journal of Peace Education, 2024
This paper narrates the concept of Sustainable Peace Leadership and examines how three prominent Peace Activists from South and Southeast Asia measure up to the concept. The article will consider the works and ideas of Mohandas K. Gandhi (Mahatma Gandhi), Lhamo Thondup (The 14th Dalai Lama), and Nguyen Xuan Bao (Thich Nhat Hanh). Mahatma Gandhi…
Descriptors: Peace, Leaders, Leadership Qualities, Leadership Styles
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Nambissan, Geetha B. – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2020
In this article, I draw attention to the early 1850s in the Bombay Presidency when the colonial government first assumed responsibility for mass education. I show that in the subsequent decades, publicly funded schooling was narrow and extremely exclusive as a result of the strong opposition of dominant castes to the education of the Dalits…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, Equal Education, Educational Policy
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Williams, Philip F. – Academic Questions, 2012
Great Books programs and Western civilization courses have understandably emphasized the Greco-Roman and Hebraic origins of Western civilization, while moving on to a European focus, with some material relating to the Western Hemisphere usually brought in for good measure. After all, people have the ancient Greeks to thank for such landmark…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Non Western Civilization, Asian History
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Gupta, Amita – Policy Futures in Education, 2015
This paper will illustrate how philosophical and pedagogical boundaries that are defined by diverse cultures and ideologies might be navigated in the practical implementation of an early childhood curriculum in postcolonial urban India. Findings from a qualitative naturalistic inquiry indicated that a complex, multifaceted curriculum shaped by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Moult, Annette – English in Australia, 2012
Rudyard Kipling wrote "The Road to Mandalay" in 1892 when Burma was a British colony and Queen Victoria was the Empress of India. In the poem, Mandalay is a city some 500 miles along the Irrawaddy River from the capital, Rangoon. British troops stationed in Burma were transported on the river by paddle steamers. The picture painted of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Cultural Awareness, Asian History
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Masson, Jack K. – Amerasia Journal, 1989
Discusses historical conflicts among cultures within Canada, particularly within the East Indian community. Discusses the multicultural policy recently adopted through alterations in Canada's immigration laws. Explores the historical development of politics in India's Punjab, and the consequences of this development on East Indians living in…
Descriptors: Asian History, Cultural Pluralism, Culture Conflict, Foreign Countries
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Nagarajan, S. – College English, 1981
Notes that the decline of English in India began soon after its introduction into Indian universities near the middle of the nineteenth century and was precipitated in part by too lofty aims and too little attention to Indian languages at the university level. (RL)
Descriptors: Asian History, Curriculum Problems, English (Second Language), English Curriculum
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Scherer, M. A. – Journal of World History, 1996
Reexamines a well-known conflict between Unitarian reformer, Annette Akroyd, and Hindu liberal, Keshub Chunder Sen, over the administration of a private girls' school in 19th century India. Argues that previous interpretations stressing colonial ethnocentrism failed to take into account the complexity of the situation. (MJP)
Descriptors: Asian History, Boarding Schools, Colonialism, Cultural Interrelationships
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Richards, John F. – Journal of World History, 1997
Characterizes the early modern period in world history (roughly 1500-1800) as one marked by worldwide processes of change unprecedented in scope and intensity. Argues that the society of the Indian subcontinent shared directly in the massive processes of change that influenced societies throughout the world. (MJP)
Descriptors: Area Studies, Asian History, Asian Studies, Colonialism
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Sethia, Tara – Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, 1996
Provides an overview of the structure and topics included in undergraduate course on Indian and Chinese history. Briefly reviews such topics as Land and People, Emergence and Evolution of Traditions, Expansion of Islam in Asia, European Imperialism, Nationalism and Independence, and Democracy and Development. (MJP)
Descriptors: Asian History, Asian Studies, Chinese Culture, Course Content