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R. Rajan [12]R. Sundara Rajan [9]Rajeswari Sunder Rajan [6]Roby Rajan [1]
Reeja Rajan [1]Rajeswari Rajan [1]
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  1.  16
    The Crisis of secularism in India.Anuradha Dingwaney Needham, Rajeswari Sunder Rajan & Neelam Srivastava - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (3):653-666.
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  2. After Midnight's Children: Some Notes on the New Indian Novel in English.Rajeswari Sunder Rajan - 2011 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 78 (1):203-230.
    The preoccupation with the nation that marks much postcolonial writing, especially the Anglophone novel in India following the appearance of Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children, has been widely remarked. In this essay I am interested in tracing how this interest in the nation-thematic has persisted into—or changed in the course of-the first decade of the new century in the fiction that has appeared since the 1980s, in response to both socio-political developments as well as changing literary trends.
     
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  3. A Critical survey of completed research work in philosophy in Indian universities, upto 1980.Surendra Sheodas Barlingay, S. V. Bokil & R. Sundara Rajan (eds.) - 1986 - Pune: Indian Philosophical Quarterly Publications, Dept. of Philosophy, University of Poona.
     
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  4.  7
    India and the Unthinkable.Vinay Lal & Roby Rajan (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    A remarkable but little commented on feature of the various discourses on India circulating today is the near total absence of its metaphysical heritage as a source of illumination into our contemporary condition. On the few occasions that this heritage is explicitly invoked, it is either as a subsidiary aspect of some purportedly larger concept such as religion, civilization, history, tradition etc., or as a set of quaint speculations fit for study as a tertiary branch of history of philosophy or (...)
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  5.  41
    Cassirer and Wittgenstein.R. Sundara Rajan - 1967 - International Philosophical Quarterly 7 (4):591-610.
  6. Innovative competence and social change.R. Sundara Rajan - 1986 - Pune, India: I.P.Q. Publication, University of Poona.
  7. Nature and Life World: Towards a Hermeneutics of Nature.R. Sundara Rajan - 1992 - In D. P. Chattopadhyaya, Lester Embree & Jitendranath Mohanty (eds.), Phenomenology and Indian philosophy. New Delhi: Indian Council of Philosophical Research in association with Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. pp. 216.
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  8.  12
    Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis: the Hermeneutical Mediation.R. Sundara Rajan - 1991 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 22 (2):1-14.
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  9.  5
    Towards a critique of cultural reason.R. Sundara Rajan - 1987 - Delhi: Oxford University Press. Edited by R. Sundara Rajan.
    This Volume Seeks To Develop A Kantian Perspective On The Theory Of Culture, Based On The Notion Of The Regulative Judgement And The Idea Of An Examplar In Kants Critique Of Judgement.
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  10.  6
    Transformations of transcendental philosophy.R. Sundara Rajan - 1994 - Delhi: Pragati Prakashan.
    Basicalls Addresses 2 Questions- What Kind Of Changes Or Transformations The Idea Of Philosophy Has Undergone In The Present Century - In What Ways Their Critical Transformation Have Affected The Transcendal Project. 6 Chapters-Notes-Index.
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  11. The Purusharthas in the Light of Critical Theory.R. Sundara Rajan - 1979 - Indian Philosophical Quarterly 7 (3):339-50.
  12.  21
    The Third World Academic in Other Places; Or, the Postcolonial Intellectual Revisited.Rajeswari Sunder Rajan - 1997 - Critical Inquiry 23 (3):596-616.
  13. Women's human rights in the Third World'.Rajeswari Sunder Rajan - 2005 - In Nicholas Bamforth (ed.), Sex Rights: The Oxford Amnesty Lectures 2002. Oxford University Press.
  14.  7
    Zeitgeist and the Literary Text: India, 1947, in Qurratulain Hyder’s My Temples, Too and Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children.Rajeswari Sunder Rajan - 2014 - Critical Inquiry 40 (4):439-465.
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