Results 101 to 110 of about 182 (154)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE CHOLAS TO FINE ARTS
PARIPEX INDIAN JOURNAL OF RESEARCHThe Chola dynasty, which ruled South India from the 9th to 13th centuries, made remarkable contributions to the fine arts, leaving a lasting impact on Indian cultural heritage. Under their patronage, architecture, sculpture, and painting flourished, reaching new heights of sophistication.
C.R. Rathika +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
The International Journal of Critical Cultural Studies
<p class="ql-align-justify">Cognitive Film Theory (CFT) illuminates how cinematic techniques redistribute cognitive labor from literary interiority to viewer inference, emotional calibration, and cultural memory reconstruction in Tamil historical film adaptations. This article demonstrates how Mani Ratnam’s <em>Ponniyin Selvan</em>: I
Caleb Theodar +2 more
openaire +1 more source
<p class="ql-align-justify">Cognitive Film Theory (CFT) illuminates how cinematic techniques redistribute cognitive labor from literary interiority to viewer inference, emotional calibration, and cultural memory reconstruction in Tamil historical film adaptations. This article demonstrates how Mani Ratnam’s <em>Ponniyin Selvan</em>: I
Caleb Theodar +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, 1937
Under this heading Mr. A. C. Banerji discusses in pages 655–666 of the JRAS. for 1935 the northern invasion of Rājēndra, the Gangaikoṇḍa-Chola, on which subject I made a contribution long ago to the late Sir Asutosh Mukerjee Commemoration Volumes, which article appeared in a slightly revised form in the Journal of Indian History, volume ii, pp. 317–369,
openaire +1 more source
Under this heading Mr. A. C. Banerji discusses in pages 655–666 of the JRAS. for 1935 the northern invasion of Rājēndra, the Gangaikoṇḍa-Chola, on which subject I made a contribution long ago to the late Sir Asutosh Mukerjee Commemoration Volumes, which article appeared in a slightly revised form in the Journal of Indian History, volume ii, pp. 317–369,
openaire +1 more source

