Browsing by Subject "transformation"
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Item Open Access Chemical investigation of naturally occuring carbocyclic compounds structure elucidation, transformation and partial synthesis of terpenoids(University of North Bengal, 1979) Mukhopadhyay, Madanmohan; Pradhan, B PItem Open Access Indian Women in the Event of Social Transformation – Legal Perspectives(University of North Bengal, 2020-03) Das, Sudeshna"All collective human life is indirectly shaped by law. Law is like knowledge, an essential and all pervasive fact of the social condition" –NiklasLuhmann. Law is the reflection of man's social consciousness at a given period of time.Society is a changing phenomenon and this process requires to be maintained by some machinery in order to avoid disorientation and disarray. Legal propositions, researches and judicial pronouncements are those instruments which are developed in the form ofnorms and principles and its accuracy being checked and then applied as true principles of law.Item Open Access Olfactory Social Stratification(University of North Bengal, 2016-03) Ghosh, SayantanSmell plays a crucial role in our everyday life. From dawn till night, social actors go through different types of smells, react differently and build an image on an olfactory basis. At a bazaar, we sniff out our preferred lemon or mango, we opt for our best perfume or deodorant during intimacy, we also opt for deodorants or perfumes for official purposes, but the choice of the fragrance and its intensity may vary. It is not only about food habits or self presentation but smell also plays a key role in stratifying individuals, groups and spaces. Each group in the hierarchy has a specific social and olfactory position. The social construct and olfactory construct often go hand in hand. Whether actual or not, the olfactory perception of each stratum is different. Thus, whether upper class and lower class people really smell different or not, they are socially constructed and hence are expected to smell differently. Similarly, men and women are often portrayed as having different olfactory identities. Smell tells the tale of a person – about his/her gender, caste or class position. Just like individuals and groups, spaces are also classified or stratified in terms of olfaction. It is often argued that each group in the social hierarchy has a distinct smell –whether it is real or not is not the search here. Rather this paper focuses on how each group (in terms of caste, class and gender) and space is socially constructed in specific olfactory terms and how groups and spaces are stratified in terms of olfaction. I have opted for literary sources and in-depth interviews as my method of study. This paper is an effort to reveal the relation between olfaction and social stratification.