An Autobiography or The Story of My Experiments with Truth: Critical Edition [Foreword by Ashis Nandy]
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Review
Gandhi's autobiography is probably the most important book
ever published in India; in part because of the stature of the author,
in part because of the nature of the work. In The Story ofMy Experiments with Truth,
the Future Father of the Nation provided an astonishingly frank and
revelatory account of his moral evolution and his personal struggles. In
this superb critical edition, Tridip Suhrud explains how and why the
book was written, provides detailed notes on the characters and
situations mentioned, and subtly analyses the evolution of the English
translation from the Gujarati original. Suhrud's work is a colossal
contribution to Gandhi scholarship; as well as a vital aid to all
readers, present and future, of Gandhi's remarkable autobiography. This
edition will be read and discussed for generations to come. (Ramachandra
Guha, author of Gandhi Before India)
This pioneering critical
edition subtly and invaluably expands our understanding of one of
Gandhi's key texts-and our sense of the man himself. (Sunil Khilnani,
author of The Idea of India)
Gandhi's Autobiography is an
important document for understanding both the Mahatma and the nature of
the Self. This edition is unlikely to be surpassed in value. It will
authoritatively guide the lay reader through the textures of Gandhi's
prose and references. But even the most accomplished Gandhi scholars
will learn new things about this text. Tridip Suhrud is the gold
standard in scholarship. This meticulous and powerful textual engagement
will only enhance his reputation. (Pratap Bhanu Mehta, vice-chancellor
of Ashoka University and former president of the Centre for Policy
Research)
Written in his incomparably limpid English, M.K. Gandhi's Autobiography is comparable, as great literature, to Augustine's and Rousseau's Confessions.
The invaluable new Introduction by Tridip Suhrud, arguably the finest
interpreter and editor of Gandhi's writings and correspondence in our
times, alerts our attention to the tensions between Gandhi's zest for
living in and building an Ashramic community and his willingness to die
for Truth-that is, ahimsa-between fasting to expiate others' impurity
and marching with the masses to make salt to break unjust colonial laws,
between spinning cotton thread in large groups and meditating alone to
listen for the "still, small voice within". If we let Suhrud teach us
how to read Gandhi, then Gandhi's life-writing can teach us how to seek
the Self's Truth instead of self-seeking. (Arindam Chakrabarti,
director, EPOCH Project, University of Hawaii)
An Autobiography by
one of the twentieth century's most remarkable figures, this hugely
influential book continues to be read widely around the world. This
first critical edition allows us to understand the context and concerns
that animated Gandhi's writing as never before. (Faisal Devji, author of
The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptation of Violence)
Gandhi's Autobiography is
a seminal work for understanding Gandhi's vision and work, and is a
classic twentieth-century spiritual and political text. Suhrud provides
in this critical edition abundant notes for the contemporary reader,
alternative translations where the Desai translation is obscure, and a
significant Introduction which situates the Autobiography in Gandhi's life and thinking. A most welcome addition to serious Gandhi scholarship. (Judith M. Brown, University of Oxford)
About the Author
Tridip Suhrud is a scholar, writer and translator who works on the intellectual and cultural history of modern Gujarat and the Gandhian intellectual tradition. As the director and chief editor of the Sabarmati Ashram Preservation and Memorial Trust (2012-17), Ahmedabad, he was responsible for creating a digital archive-the Gandhi Heritage Portal-of all of M.K. Gandhi's works. Apart from a number of books on Gandhi's life, Suhrud has co-edited the critical annotated edition of Hind Swaraj, translated Narayan Desai's four-volume biography of Gandhi, My Life Is My Message, and translated the four-volume epic Gujarati novel, Sarasvatichandra.
Suhrud is presently translating the diaries of Manu Gandhi, covering the period between 1942 and 1948, compiling a series 'Letters to Gandhi'-of unpublished correspondence to Gandhi-and working on an eight-volume compendium of testimonies of the indigo cultivators of Champaran. Tridip Suhrud is professor and director, Archives, at CEPT University, Ahmedabad.
Product details
- Paperback: 810 pages
- Publisher: India Penguin (7 January 2018)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0143427431
- ISBN-13: 978-0143427438
- Package Dimensions: 24.1 x 16 x 5.8 cm
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