Volume 3 - Issue 11 - November- 2020 Back to Monthly Issue
Sr. No. Title/Author Description Received Date Accepted Date/Publication Date Page No. Paper
1 A Study to Ascertain whether a Crisis like COVID- 19 Pandemic Presents an Opportunity for us to Lead Innovation and Sustain Ourselves as an Industry by Chhavi Sahai As the saying goes every cloud has a silver lining, the purpose of this is to study is to find out students ‘opinions on the situation this pandemic has brought upon us. The objective is also to explore new ideas that students can come up with when the hospitality industry is facing a crisis. While the spread of COVID-19 is having a direct impact on the hospitality industry’s forward-reservations, it is not all bad news. The hospitality industry can use this situation as an opportunity to re-evaluate their business —downturns can be a good time to train task force and review your plans for investing in long-term success. Additionally, when travel bans are lifted tourist arrivals should rebound, and hoteliers will have opportunities to attract guests from new markets. They should build a wider customer pool for long-term success. I am trying to ascertain the entrepreneurial temperament of our students the objective is also to find about the innovative ideas that today’s youth can come up with within the face of adversity which the COVID-19 has put us into. 31-August-2020 08-November-2020/
10-November-2020
01 - 07 Download Paper
2 Shakespeare’s Last Plays: A New Experiment to Bridge the Gap between Humanity and Divinity by Dr. Shakti Kumar In the present article my humble attempt is to bring out the best elements to bridge the gap between humanity and divinity in the last plays of Shakespeare. The world of Shakespeare alone can be said to possess the organic strength and infinite variety, the throbbing fullness, vital complexity and breathing truth of Nature herself. In points of articulate resource and technical ability-such as, copious and expressive diction, freshness and pregnancy of verbal combination, richly modulated verse and structural skill in handling of incident and action-Shakespeare’s supremacy is, indeed, sufficiently assured. It is, of course, in the spirit and substance of his work, his power of piercing to the hidden centers of character, of touching the deepest springs of impulse and passion that is rich, out of which, emerge the issues of life. He sweeps with the hand of a master the whole gamut of human experience, from the lowest note to the very top of its compass. Shakespeare’s last plays are known as Divine Comedies. His divinity is well reflected through his plays which form an important group by themselves. They are different from comedies, tragedies and historical plays and yet comprise the best elements of them all. They are really the songs of experience highlighting the relevance of childlike innocence in resolving the complexities of life. 06-November-2020 28-November-2020/
30-November-2020
08 - 11 Download Paper
3 Use of Myth in T.S. Eliot's The Family Reunion by Dr. Radha Krishna Kumar Tragedy as a form of literary art can be looked upon as a dramatic presentation of 'crime' and 'punishment'. We start defining crime, quiet, sin, punishment, damnation, redemption and expiation as well. Crime is followed by punishment but sin is followed by expiation. In The Family Reunion Harry's father does not murder Amy, he merely talks of killing him. The Family Reunion corresponds to the action of this trilogy but there is neither murder in Harry's case nor at the father's level. In both the cases, however, the sinful wish has failed and in the Christian view the intention of murder has been depicted as evil as the dead itself. Despite such a get together the family reunion remains a far cry. Even those who are present are not emotionally united and integrated. It is a fact indisputable that sin and expiation are other worldly affairs. One expiates for the sins of one's forefathers with the objective world of blood and flesh. Murder in the Cathedral and The Family Reunion are the plays of double pattern, almost all the plays have double pattern-a kind of mysterious under pattern greater and more subtle woven by what the ancients called fate. It is with this awareness that Eliot finds choice to be of utmost importance in The Family Reunion. Eliot has drawn upon the Greek myth which provides the poetic under pattern to his plays and thus strives for an expiration of the "monstrous mistake" of the past. It implies a constant manipulation of parallelism and contrast between the past and the present. The Family Reunion. 08-November-2020 28-November-2020/
30-November-2020
12 - 15 Download Paper
4 Conflict of Civilization and Savagery in William Golding's Lord of the Flies by Nivedita Sinha This paper seeks to examine William Golding's display of the mystery of human existence in the form of fiction. In most of his novels, we notice a tendency to hide the secret in the beginning and create an element of surprise by unfolding it towards the close. He adopts the fabulist, mythical method to unfathomed the hidden dimensions of human predicaments. In Lord of the Flies, the society created by the stranded children on an uninhabited island stands as a microcosm of the Adult world. The symbolic fabric of the fiction leads us to a situation where the society created by the children is threatened by inherent evil. Civilization no longer bears the load of savagery. Rules, order collapse and boys become brute. The facade of culture gets broken, the moment occasion becomes propitious. 07-November-2020 28-November-2020/
30-November-2020
16 - 18 Download Paper
5 William Blake’s Mystic Vision of Contraries in Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience by Bhagwati Prasad William Blake is a great mystic poet. He is a rare genius. Often acclaimed as ‘a joyful mystic' he is endowed with the mystic vision of contraries. He states that there are contraries in the world. These contraries are essential for the progress of the universe. Blake’s Songs of Innocence glorifies innocence. His Songs of Experience throws light on the evils of the world. Innocence symbolizes heaven and experience stands for hell. They exist inevitably and go on operating for their fusion or unity at the end. The unity implies the unity of the human with the Divine. Moreover, Blake holds that every object or being, even a grain of sand is essentially divine. The lamb and the tiger as contraries reflect the two aspects of the Almighty and are complementary to each other. The lamb, being meek might be destroyed but the tiger, fierce by nature proves its protector and as such the two are instrumental to the progress of the universe and serve as the reflections of the Divine. That is, Blake’s vision of contraries essentially reflects his mysticism that glorifies the oneness of the worldly and the Divine. 14-November-2020 12-January-2021 19 - 23 Download Paper
6 Book Review Book Review - The 10 Rules of Successful Nations by Dr. Jonardan Koner This book depicts the factors contributing to the financial achievement of a nation in a detailed manner. The book helps to get a better understanding of what moves the global markets. The book was previously published under title ‘The Rise and Fall of Nations’. 10 Rules rethinks monetary aspects as a helpful craftsmanship, giving general reader similarly as political and business pioneers a fast guide for the significant powers that shape a nation's future. Author shows why fruitful countries grasp robots and immigrants, lean toward popularity based pioneers to dictators, choose magnetic reformers over technocrats, and pay no psyche to the discussion about large versus small government. Author clarifies why rising stock costs matter so a lot or more than food costs, which proportion of obligation is the best indicator of monetary emergencies, and why nobody number can precisely catch the estimation of a cash. 9-November-2020 20-November-2020/
25-November-2020
24 - 26 Download Paper