Labour in India: A Study of the Conditions of Indian Women in Modern IndustryG. Allen & Unwin ; New York, 1923 - 281 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 75
Page 14
... child , a touch of humour , are of the things that unite , and then that secret breath of comradeship , than which in its fullness there is no more gracious gift in life , mingles for a moment the alien races . In spite of the ignorance ...
... child , a touch of humour , are of the things that unite , and then that secret breath of comradeship , than which in its fullness there is no more gracious gift in life , mingles for a moment the alien races . In spite of the ignorance ...
Page 18
... children slip into postures familiar to the stranger only in the images of the gods ; the fearless wandering of the cattle through the streets unmolested by young or old - these and many other signs tell of the long corporate history of ...
... children slip into postures familiar to the stranger only in the images of the gods ; the fearless wandering of the cattle through the streets unmolested by young or old - these and many other signs tell of the long corporate history of ...
Page 37
... children . As soon as anything other than milk or rice - water is given to them , they share the ordinary meals , the vegetable curries , the rice or millet , and the lentils . During certain morning and evening hours the village well ...
... children . As soon as anything other than milk or rice - water is given to them , they share the ordinary meals , the vegetable curries , the rice or millet , and the lentils . During certain morning and evening hours the village well ...
Page 40
... children gather on the ground to mend them in order that a good supply may be ready for the Friday bazar . At the market , the Wagris squat behind iron implements of varying kinds and beside piles of saris , quilts , and blankets ( but ...
... children gather on the ground to mend them in order that a good supply may be ready for the Friday bazar . At the market , the Wagris squat behind iron implements of varying kinds and beside piles of saris , quilts , and blankets ( but ...
Page 44
... children are taken away after the first class or the second ; in other cases , the child may spend three or four years in the infant class and leave without being able to read for lack of trained teachers . 2 There is a very strong wave ...
... children are taken away after the first class or the second ; in other cases , the child may spend three or four years in the infant class and leave without being able to read for lack of trained teachers . 2 There is a very strong wave ...
Other editions - View all
Labour in India: A Study of the Conditions of Indian Women in Modern Industry Janet Harvey Kelman No preview available - 2015 |
Labour in India: A Study of the Conditions of Indian Women in Modern ... Janet Harvey Kelman No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
Ahmedabad allowed already amongst annas bazar Bengal bobbins Bombay Bombay Presidency Brahmans building Calcutta carried caste Cawnpore centres child childbirth co-operation Co-operative compound Conference coolie cotton mills crèches cultivators custom demand dhais difficulties districts economic efforts employed employers employés fact fibres ginning factories Government ground Hindu houses hundred huts increase India Indian Factories Act Indian Industries interest JANET HARVEY jats jute mills labour land large number latter legislation less live machinery machines manager ment methods mill areas modern industry moneylender mothers Muslim Nagpur occupied overseers payment possible present Punjab question realization roof rupees a month sanitary secure Selly Oak Colleges sheds Sholapur sirdar social society spinning standards suggested supply surroundings tion Trade Unions United Provinces vary verandah village wages Wagris weaving Welfare woman women workers yarn
Popular passages
Page 180 - Shall, while she is absent from her work in pursuance of paragraphs (a) and (b) be paid benefits sufficient for the full and healthy maintenance of herself and her child, provided either out of public funds or by means of a system of insurance, the exact amount of which shall be determined by the competent authority in each country, and as an additional benefit shall be entitled to free attendance by a doctor or certified midwife.
Page 180 - In any public or private industrial or commercial undertaking, or in any branch thereof, other than an undertaking in which only members of the same family are employed, a woman — (a) Shall not be permitted to work during the six weeks following her confinement.
Page 139 - Europeans who resent these conditions not only from the health point of view, but also from the moral and social point of view.
Page 180 - Shall have the right to leave her work if she produces a medical certificate stating that her confinement will probably take place within six weeks.
Page 212 - Then the earth was rent and parted, and a golden throne arose, Held aloft by jewelled Nagas as the leaves enfold the rose, And the Mother in embraces held her spotless sinless Child, Saintly Janak's saintly daughter, pure and true and undefiled, Gods and men proclaim her virtue! But fair Sita is no more, Lone is Rama's loveless bosom and his days of bliss are o'er!
Page 53 - Durga, scourge of all thy foes, As Lakshmi, bowered in the flower That in the water grows, As Bani, wisdom, power ; The source of all our might, Our every temple doth thy form unfold — Unequalled, tender, happy, pure, Of splendid streams, of glorious...
Page 235 - Mines is of opinion that there is urgent and immediate in women danger to the life or safety of women or children employed in or at any " '."'' mine, he may, by order in writing, prohibit the employment of such dangerous.
Page 226 - In British India the principle of a sixty-hour week shall be adopted for all workers in the industries at present covered by the factory acts administered by the Government of India, in mines, and in such branches of railway work as shall be specified for this purpose by the competent authority. Any modification of this limitation made by the competent authority shall...
Page 212 - If unstained in thought and action I have lived from day of birth, Spare a daughter's shame and anguish and receive her, Mother Earth! If in duty and devotion I have laboured undefiled, Mother Earth!
Page 208 - Take a man out of his villagecommunity, and you remove him from all the restraints of society. He is out of his element, and, under temptation, is more likely to go wrong than to remain true to the traditions of his home-life. Even between village and village the usual restraints of public morality are not always recognized.