R. Balakrishnan

R. Balakrishnan’s Followers (19)

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R. Balakrishnan


Born
Natham, TN, India
Genre


R. Balakrishnan (ஆர். பாலகிருஷ்ணன்), a postgraduate in Tamil literature, is the first student of Tamil literature to clear the Civil Service exam. He joined the Indian Administration Service in 1984. His initial postings in the Tribal areas of Odisha triggered his interest in Indology, Anthropology and Place-name Studies. It was Iravatham Mahadevan who led Balakrishnan into the area of Indus Studies.

Balakrishnan has published several research papers on Place-name Studies, Odisha's history, and it's plural culture. Using Geographical Information System tools, he formulated the 'Korkai-Vanji-Tondi Complex', a place-name complex in the Indus geography. His paper on High-West:Low-East Dichotomy of Indus cities gained wide attention. His Tamil b
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Average rating: 4.33 · 75 ratings · 16 reviews · 13 distinct worksSimilar authors
Journey of A Civilization: ...

4.48 avg rating — 40 ratings — published 2019 — 2 editions
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சிந்துவெளிப் பண்பாட்டின் தி...

4.21 avg rating — 24 ratings3 editions
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சிறகுக்குள் வானம் [Siraguku...

4.20 avg rating — 5 ratings
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தமிழ் நெடுஞ்சாலை

4.25 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2022
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Panmayak Kalvan

4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2018 — 2 editions
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Discrete Mathematics

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3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings4 editions
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Handbook On Audit Committee

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Textbook of Modern Algebra

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Demographic Transition: An ...

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Foundations of Discrete Mat...

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Quotes by R. Balakrishnan  (?)
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“... neither the metaphor of ‘melting pot’ nor of ‘salad bowl’ can accurately explain Indian culture. My preferred metaphor is that of the Rain Forest. The ‘tropical rain forest’ characteristically has a number of layers, each with a variety of flora and fauna adapted for life in that particular layer. The layers include the uppermost ‘emergent’ layer that rises above to form the canopy of the forest, the ‘under-story’ and finally the ‘forest floor’, the foundational core. This emergent layer has its roots in the forest floor that is full of shrubs, vines and fungi... A ‘bird’s-eye view’ cannot reveal this rootedness, the underlying substratum, the under-stories and the forest floor.
If the metaphor of ‘tropical rain forest’ is applied to the Indus Valley Civilization, the citadels, the rulers, and the rich merchants with their maritime wealth, the urban structure and its finesse are comparable with the ‘emergent canopy’. Yet the bulk of the demography was at the root – the substratum, from which the mature urban cities emerged... The nature of its religion, the cultural practices, cockfights and bull-vaulting visually represent the ‘under-story’ of the IVC.”
R. Balakrishnan, Journey of A Civilization: Indus to Vaigai

“Above all, the very world view, “Every town our home town, every[one our kin - யாதும் ஊரே யாவரும் கேளிர்]” can only emanate from a civilizational wisdom which has seen places, found merit in give and take and is enriched by travels, journeys and migrations.”
R. Balakrishnan, Journey of A Civilization: Indus to Vaigai

“BRW [Black & Red Ware] is the Pan-Indian Pot and Sangam literature is the Pan-Indian Literature. The Pot Route that links Indus and Vaigai was made of clay, overlaid with burnt bricks and embellished with copper. It is the red-topped road to Tamil antiquity, and the colour was a deep Dravidian Red.”
R. Balakrishnan, Journey of A Civilization: Indus to Vaigai



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