The Prince
₹199.00
Author: K N Venkatasubba Rao
ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿ ನವೋದಯ ರಾಜತಾಂತ್ರಿಕ, ತತ್ವಜ್ಞಾನಿ, ಬರಹಗಾರ. ಇಟಲಿಯ ಫ್ಲಾರೆನ್ಸ್ ನಗರದ ಬಡಕುಟುಂಬದಲ್ಲಿ 1469ರಲ್ಲಿ ಜನಿಸಿದ ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿ ತನ್ನ 21ನೆಯ ವಯಸ್ಸಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಫ್ಲಾರೆಂಟೈನ್ ಪ್ರಾಂತ್ಯದ ರಾಜಕೀಯ ರಂಗ ಪ್ರವೇಶಿಸಿದ. ಫ್ಲಾರೆನ್ಸಿನ ಆಡಳಿತಕ್ಕೆ ಅಗತ್ಯ ಬೇಹುಗಾರಿಕೆ ಮಾಹಿತಿ ಒದಗಿಸುವುದು ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿಯ ಹೊಣೆಯಾಗಿತ್ತು. ಅಧಿಕಾರದ ಗಳಿಕೆ, ಬಳಕೆ ಮತ್ತು ರಕ್ಷಣೆಯ ನಿಟ್ಟಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಮನುಷ್ಯ ಪ್ರಪಂಚಕ್ಕೇ ಅನ್ವಯವಾಗಬಲ್ಲಂತಹ ಮಾರ್ಮಿಕವಾದ ಬೃಹತ್ ವಿನ್ಯಾಸ ಅವನೊಳಗೆ ರೂಪುಗೊಳ್ಳುತ್ತಿತ್ತು. ಈ ಸಂದರ್ಭದಲ್ಲೇ ಫ್ಲಾರೆನ್ಸ್ ಗಣರಾಜ್ಯ ಪತನಗೊಂಡಿತು. ರಾಜಕುಟುಂಬದ ವಿರುದ್ಧ ಪಿತೂರಿಯ ಆರೋಪಕ್ಕೆ ಗುರಿಯಾಗಿ ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿ ಅಧಿಕಾರಭ್ರಷ್ಟನಾಗಬೇಕಾಯಿತು. ತನ್ನ ಜೀವಿತದ ಮುಂದಿನ ದಿನಗಳನ್ನು ಬರವಣಿಗೆಗೆ ಮೀಸಲಿಟ್ಟಿದ್ದ ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿ ಐವತ್ತೆಂಟನೆಯ ವಯಸ್ಸಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಅಂದರೆ 1527ರಲ್ಲಿ ವಿಧಿವಶನಾದ. 1532ರಲ್ಲಿ ಅಚ್ಚು ಕಂಡ ಅವನ `ಪ್ರಿನ್ಸಿಪೆ’, ಇಂಗ್ಲಿಷಿನಲ್ಲಿ `ದ ಪ್ರಿನ್ಸ್ ‘ ಆಗಿ 1640ರಲ್ಲಿ ಅಧಿಕೃತವಾಗಿ ಪ್ರಕಟಗೊಂಡಿತ್ತು. ಯುರೋಪಿನ ವ್ಯಾಪ್ತಿಯೊಳಗೆಯೇ ಸಾಕಷ್ಟು ವದಂತಿಗಳಿಗೆ ಒಳಗಾಗಿದ್ದ `ಪ್ರಿನ್ಸಿಪೆ’, `ದ ಪ್ರಿನ್ಸ್ ‘ ಆಗಿ ಮೆಚ್ಚುಗೆ ಮತ್ತು ಟೀಕೆಗಳನ್ನು ಇಂದಿಗೂ ಎದುರಿಸುತ್ತಲೇ ಇದೆ. ಮೆಖೈವಲ್ಲಿ `ಆಧುನಿಕ ರಾಜತಂತ್ರದ ಜನಕ’ ಎಂಬ ಹೆಗ್ಗಳಿಕೆಗೆ ಪಾತ್ರನಾಗಿದ್ದಾನೆ. ಅವನನ್ನು ಅರ್ಥಶಾಸ್ತ್ರದ ಕರ್ತೃ ಕೌಟಿಲ್ಯನೊಡನೆ ಹೋಲಿಸುವ ವಾಡಿಕೆ ಇದೆ. ಇದು ಎಷ್ಟು ಸಮಂಜಸ ಎಂಬುದರ ಬಗ್ಗೆಯೂ ಪ್ರಾಜ್ಞರ ನಡುವೆ ಜಿಜ್ಞಾಸೆಯಿದೆ.
Interested customers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
Also available on![]() |
Categories: | Kannada, Texts in Translation, Works in Fiction |
---|
Author |
---|
Related products
-
Caught in the World of Binaries: Selected Poems of K S Nisar Ahmed
Author: K S Nisar Ahmed Editors: C N Ramachandran, M S Raghunath
Professor K S Nisar Ahmed (b 1936) is a geologist by profession and a major writer in Kannada. His first collection of poems, Manasu Gandhi Bazar (My Mind is like Gandhi Bazar) was published in 1960, and since then he has published poetry (15 collections), prose (five collections), and translations from Shakespeare and Neruda. He has been honoured with many awards, including ‘Padmashri’, Honorary D Litt (Kuvempu University), and Pampa Prashasti (Karnataka Government). Living between two languages and two cultures, Prof. Nisar has successfully achieved the balance necessary for the tight-rope walking as a poet. He believes that, “Only when you understand another religion (or culture or language), you really understand your own religion (or culture or language).” The present volume of 100 selected poems exhibits the multifaceted poetry of Nisar that reflects his creative pluralism. The 13 translators of the poems in this volume include A K Ramanujan, V K Gokak and Tejaswini Niranjana.
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
-
The Gandhi Cap and Other Short Stories
Author: Raja Radhikaraman Prasad Singh, Translator: Mahendra P Srivastava
The book The Gandhi Cap and Other Short Stories offers a glimpse into the lifetime of work of a forgotten pioneer of Hindi fiction, Raja Radhikaraman Prasad Sinha. It is ironic that one cannot find a single book by this author who was so dedicated to Hindi literature. The stories in this collection are a testament not only to the contributions of Sinha to Hindi fiction but also, reflect the depth of political and social milieu of the times. Many readers will be moved by the elements patriotism, feminism, secularism, and spiritualism in these stories. Strong female characters are common in most of these stories. These characters provide both a moral fulcrum to the stories as well as reflect the struggle of women to balance prevailing customs with modernity. Some of these stories provide sharp political and social commentary that still have currency (The Gandhi Cap). Sinha incorporates a unique style of writing that uses lyrical prose and poetry together. He even employs a dialogue between the storyteller and a social gathering in the form of an epilogue, to offer a discourse on social dilemma about women’s plight to become modern while admonishing them to retain their Indian essence (An Expensive Bargain). We hope the readers will enjoy this wonderful collection.
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
-
If we meet again we shall smile
Author: Anushua Chakrabarti
People leave our lives. Some simply walk away from our world while some leave this world altogether. Through visuals, poetry and short stories, the author has a dialogue with the reader that takes them both through a journey full of characters that are no more, and yet have shaped the story. This fictional dialogue is a short trip down memory lane that visits the relationships one keeps hidden beneath.
Anushua Chakrabarti, originally from Kolkata, is a wandering minstrel. She lives on travel and music. Anushua has completed her MBA from TAPMI, Manipal, India, post which she worked in top technology brands like HP and Microsoft. She is presently back in Kolkata, driving social service through her acquired experience. Anushua has faced several childhood traumas but she believes she is what she is today, not in spite of it; but because of it.
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
-
Kaitan Gandhi’s Freedom Struggle
Author: Na D’Souza Translator: B Gangadharamurthy
Kaitan Gandhiya Swatantrya Horata is one of the very few novels written in Kannada on the Gandhian phase of the Indian freedom struggle. It is not globally unknown that Gandhi not only changed the idiom of the struggle and successfully experimented his lifetime-belief in non-violence on the vast canvas but also made it decisively inclusive. Kaitan Gandhi’s Freedom Struggle thematically illuminates these two crucial aspects of the great struggle and grapples with the naked truth as Charles, the priest in the novel revealingly says,The rulers, whosoever it is, are rulers. Caste, colour, or country does not matter to them. All are wicked. Like in all true works of realist literature, the author, here too, creatively blends the individual, the social, and the historical in such a way that the novel poignantly unfolds the true spirit of quest for freedom and humanity.
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
-
Defiance
Defiance is a captivating tale of the march of globalization and its impact on the lives and times of the Santher Guthu family in Ombathkere, a village located between Mangaluru and Kasaragodu. Set in the picturesque Malabar coast of Karnataka in the late 20th Century, the novel takes the reader through four generations of the family. Ambakke, the protagonist, along with her brother Sankappa Hegde, the third-generation descendants of the family form the lifeblood of this story of human relationships in the midst of time and change. The novel is born out of deep contemplation of a community in the face of transition. There is anxiety that grips this part of Karnataka in the wake of modernity. The vast canvas of the novel and the depiction of folk culture provides a unique touch to the saga of the community. Defiance is a novel about traditions and the fear of losing out to modernity. It is about change and the desire to remain rooted.
-
Mahammaayi
Author: Chandrasekhara Kambara, Translator: Kathyayini Kunjibettu
Mahāmmāyi is the story of the legend of Shatavithaayi – the Goddess of death, and her adopted son Sambhashiva. Out of affection for her son, Goddess Shatavithaayi blesses him with the “power of life”. The blessing was that death will evade the people who are treated by Sambashiva. But a certain condition set by Shatavithaayi forbade him from healing every ill man. The condition was that, if Shatavithaayi stood on the right side of the patient, Sambhashiva could treat that person and he would live; but, if she stood on the left side of the patient, he should not treat that person as his death was inevitable. Through a distinct method of story-telling, the story follows the life of Sambhashiva as he begins to question the ideas of fate and destiny. Thus, the conflict between fate and human efforts to change that fate is vividly described in this play. -
Anurakte
Author: Vyasaraya Ballal Translator: Poornima Hebbar
There are many rags-to-riches stories around the city of Mumbai. However, here is a story of transformation of a woman and her true self in the city of dreams. Set in Mangalore and Mumbai of the late 1940s, Anurakte- The Enamoured is an elegantly written story of a woman and her changing worldview over a period of time. Sumithra, a young woman with ordinary dreams and aspirations, comes to the then Bombay in search of livelihood. Little did she know that her experiences in the city and her zest for an independent life would transform her into a different person. She breaks the shell and resolves not to look back. The book is a poignant tale of love, loss, betrayal, family, relationships and traditions. The culturescape of Mumbai beautifully intertwines with her dreams. It is as much a story of the vibrancy of Mumbai as it is about Sumithra’s journey towards freedom.
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.
-
Bamonn
Author: Na D’Souza Translator: S M Pejathaya
Konkani Roman Catholic Christians were converted from other groups by Goan Missionaries long back, keeping the caste system tradition to a large extent in layers such as the Bamonn, the Charodi, the Gawdi, the Nendar, the Shudra, etc. At the time of marriages and other social gatherings they continue to consider caste system norms and customs in the community. Caste system in Indian Christians is vividly described in the novel Bamonn. Christopher Pai of Kalyanpura hails from a Bamonn family and takes great pride in his ancestry. He believes in the stories about his Konkani Roman Catholic ancestors from his elders and about their being true Christians, holding on to their faith despite tremendous pressure to convert to Islam during Tipu Sultan’s regime. He also believes Bamonns are superior to other Christians in the community. After retiring from his job of a Headmaster, he refuels his obsession to retrace his roots and find out the truth about his ancestors. In his journey of self-assurance and faith, will he succeed in his mission to convince his family, his children and the community at large of his glorious ancestry and in still pride in the next generation? . . .
Interested readers may write to us at mup@manipal.edu about purchasing the book.