SYLLABUS FOR THE SUBJECT OF HISTORY OF MODERN WORLDTotal Marks: 100History: Various Concepts <strong>of</strong> perceiving History.Modern: Connotation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> terminology.World: How <strong>the</strong> idea <strong>of</strong> world is perceived. Implications <strong>of</strong> world history.1. TOWARDS GLOBALIZATIONOld Regimes and Archaic Globalization: Peasants and Lords, Dynamics <strong>of</strong> NewPolitics, Archaic and Early Modern Globalization.2. TRANSFORMATION FROM OLD REGIMES TO MODERNITYThe Last Great Domestication and Industrious Revolutions, New Patterns <strong>of</strong> Afro-Asian Material Culture, Production and Trade, Trade Finance and Innovation: EuropeanCompetitive advantages, <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> Asian and African <strong>Public</strong>s.3. CONVERGING REVOLUTIONSAnatomy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> World Crisis (1720-1820), Sapping <strong>the</strong> legitimacy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> State:From France to China Ideological origin <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> modern left and <strong>the</strong> modern state,Nationalities VS States and Empires. The Third Revolution: Polite and CommercialPeoples Worldwide.4. MODERN WORLD IN GENESISWorld revolutions (1815-1865), Emigration, New World Order: 1815-1865, Wars<strong>of</strong> Legitimacy in Asia, Economic and Ideological Roots <strong>of</strong> Asian Revolutions, Hungerand Rebellion in Europe (1848-1851), American Civil War as a Global Event.5. INDUSTRIALIZAION AND THE NEW CITY HISTORIANSIndustrialization, and Cities The Progress <strong>of</strong> Industrialization Poverty and <strong>the</strong>Absence <strong>of</strong> Industry, Cites as Centers <strong>of</strong> Production, Consumption, and Politics TheUrban Impact <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Global Crisis, 1780-1820. Race and Class in <strong>the</strong> New Cities,Working-Class Politics, Worldwide Urban Cultures and <strong>the</strong>ir Critics.6. NATION, EMPIRE, AND ETHNICITY, C. 1860-1900Theories <strong>of</strong> Nationalism, When was Nationalism Born? PerpetuatingNationalisms: Memories, National Associations, and Print, From Community to Nation:The Eurasian Empires Where we Stand with Nationalism, Peoples without States:
Persecution or Assimilation? Imperialism and its History: The Late Nineteenth CenturyDimensions <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> “New Imperialism”. A World <strong>of</strong> Nation-States? The Persistence <strong>of</strong>Archaic Globalization From Globalization to Internationalism in Practice.7. MYTHS AND TECHNOLOGIES OF THE MODERN STATE DIMENSIONS OFTHE MODERN STATEThe State and <strong>the</strong> Historians, Problems <strong>of</strong> Defining <strong>the</strong> State, The Modern StateTakes Root: Geographical Dimensions Claims to Justice and Symbols <strong>of</strong> Power, TheState’s Resources, The State’s Obligations to Society Tools <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> State, State,Economy, and Nation.8. THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LIBERALISM, RATIONALISM,SOCIALISM, AND SCIENCEContextualizing Intellectual History, The Corruption <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Righteous Republic: AClassic Theme. Righteous Republics Worldwide, The Advent <strong>of</strong> Liberalism and <strong>the</strong>Market: Western Exceptionalism? Liberalism and Land Re<strong>for</strong>m: Radical Theory andConservative Practice, Free Trade or National Political Economy? Representing <strong>the</strong>Peoples Secularism and Positivism: Transnational Affinites The Reception <strong>of</strong> Socialismand its Local Resonances. Science in Global Context. Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalization at WorldLevel.9. SOCIAL AND INTELLECTUAL MOVEMENTSRevolutionary Ideas, Philosophical and social trends.10. Clash <strong>of</strong> Civilizations11. Neo-ConservationRECOMMENDED TEXTS AND LITERATURE REVIEWS23. Dorinda Outram, The Body and <strong>the</strong> French Revolution24. Frenc Feher, French revolution and <strong>the</strong> Birth <strong>of</strong> Modernity25. H Kissinger, Diplomacy26. J M Thompson, Napoleon Bonaparte: His Rise and Fall27. E J Hobsbawn, The Age <strong>of</strong> revolution, 1789-184828. E J Hobsbawn, Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth,Reality29. P Pilbeam, The 1830 Revolution in France30. Paul Kennedy, The Rise and Fall <strong>of</strong> Great Powers31. Owen Chadwick, The Secularization <strong>of</strong> European Mind in <strong>the</strong> NineteenthCentury (1976)
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ANIMAL HUSBANDRYPAPER-IITotal Marks
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29. Taiz and Zager. 2003. Plant Phy
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SUGGESTED READINGS1. Agrios, G.N. 1
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SYLLABUS FOR THE SUBJECT OF ARABICP
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PAPER-IITotal Marks:100POETRY1. Mau
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RECOMMENDED BOOKS1. Harold C. Bold
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6. Gardner, E.J., Simmons, M. J. an
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Total Marks: 100Part-IMARKETINGMark
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(A)Organic ChemistryPAPER-IITOTAL M
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SYLLABUS FOR THE SUBJECT OF COMPUTE
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REFERENCE MATERIAL:1. Database Syst
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REFERENCE MATERIAL:1. Elements of N
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3. Siberschatz. Galvin & Gagne, Ope
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Imperfectly competitive market stru
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SYLLABUS FOR THE SUBJECT OF EDUCATI
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1. Philosophy of EducationPAPER- II
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5.4.5 Leadership in the Evaluation
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9. Maya Angelou: Women Work10. Robe
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3. Charles Lamb: Chimney Sweeper4.
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8. Advertising: Definition-Merits a
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Recommended Books:1. Anton, H, Calc
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Recommended Books:1. Nicholson. W.K
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D. History of Persian Literature in
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Total Marks: 100Muslim Philosophy1.
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Course Outline:1. The Universe:-SYL
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22.Mcliveen, J.F.R. (1991) “Funda
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BOOKS:-Various types of agriculture
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3. Debliji, H.J.D2005 “Concepts a
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Paper - llTotal Marks -100Electrici
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MechanicsSYLLABUS FOR THE SUBJECT O
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SUGGESTED READINGS1. Perspectives o
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