ABSTRACT

This vivid memoir recounts the experience of Shudha Mazumdar, a woman born at the turn of the century to Indian parents whose ideas on child rearing differed greatly. Her father, a wealthy Europeanized Zamindar, tried to instill Western values, while Shudha's mother emphasized the traditional, even going as far as arranging a marriage for her daughter when she was thirteen. Although true to Indian traditions, Shudha eventually manifested her father's influence by becoming a published writer, by becoming a member of a number of social service organizations, and by serving as the Indian Delegate to the International Labour Organization.

chapter 1|12 pages

1

chapter 2|17 pages

2

chapter 3|13 pages

3

chapter 4|13 pages

4

chapter 5|15 pages

5

chapter 6|10 pages

6

chapter 7|10 pages

7

chapter 8|13 pages

8

chapter 9|13 pages

9

chapter 10|12 pages

10

chapter 11|12 pages

11

chapter 12|14 pages

12

chapter 13|12 pages

13

chapter 14|13 pages

14

chapter 15|16 pages

15

chapter 16|10 pages

16

chapter 17|10 pages

17

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue