Among the bewildering variety of western images and representations of India in the first half of the twentieth century, Inside India is perhaps by far the most eloquent and perceptive statement of its time. First published in 1937, this magisterial account of India in the 1930s contains the impressions and thoughts of Halide Edib, a Turkish writer who is not interested in imagining, inscribing or inventing India, but rather in documenting its multifaceted ...
This work present a study of the history of India at the time, such as the Gandhian movement and the Hindu-Muslim Separatism.