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    <dc:date>2026-03-14T00:38:19Z</dc:date>
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    <title>Contents</title>
    <link>http://localhost:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/5197</link>
    <description>Title: Contents</description>
    <dc:date>2019-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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    <title>Editorial</title>
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    <description>Title: Editorial
Authors: Sen, Amiya Prosad; Pradhan, Ramesh Chandra
Description: Page- 1 to 3</description>
    <dc:date>2019-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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    <title>Brahmanizing Ayurveda: Caste and Class Dimensions of Late Colonial Ayurvedic Movement in Upper India</title>
    <link>http://localhost:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/5195</link>
    <description>Title: Brahmanizing Ayurveda: Caste and Class Dimensions of Late Colonial Ayurvedic Movement in Upper India
Authors: Rai, Saurav Kumar
Abstract: The emergence of cultural and political nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century India along with the racial discrimination and imperialist motifs inherent in Western medicine triggered medical revivalist/reformist movement around the same time. At the forefront of this medical revivalist movement was the organized efforts to make Ayurveda as a ‘true’ representative of ‘time-tested’ ‘authentic’ ‘indigenous’&#xD;
healing culture of India thereby posing it as the ‘rightful’ claimant of the ‘national healing system’.
Description: Page- 4 to 9</description>
    <dc:date>2019-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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    <title>Uttarakandaramayana and Mother Sita: As depicted by Valmiki and Sankardev</title>
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    <description>Title: Uttarakandaramayana and Mother Sita: As depicted by Valmiki and Sankardev
Authors: Hazaarika, Maheswar
Abstract: Sankardev of the fifteenth-sixteenth century Assam felt the lack of the first and seventh books in the then extant Ramayana of Madhava Kandali (fourteenth century), whom the saint regarded as an unerring poet (apramadi kavi) and allotted the task of translating the first book to Madhavadeva. He himself took up the task of translating the seventh, which, possibly, he had the privilege of examining elsewhere in Sanskrit. In so doing, of 111 cantos in the Sanskrit Ramayana, he rejected altogether the first 38 cantos relating to the stories narrating the birth of the monkeys and the raksasas.
Description: Page- 10 to 15</description>
    <dc:date>2019-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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