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  1. Epico-Lyrical Legends of the Punjab and Sikh Reformism in the 1920s.Denis Matringe & John Fletcher - 1998 - Diogenes 46 (181):57-75.
    Like the other great cultural areas of the Indian subcontinent, the Punjab is endowed with a living heritage of oral tradition: all kinds of songs and tales are hawked by itinerant bards, and after the day's work is done, people particularly like listening to them reciting legends of love, the most moving passages of which they sing to their own accompaniment on various traditional instruments. The stories most popular with village audiences are local epico-lyrical legends; these function like myths for (...)
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  • Causes of Misinterpretation of Gurbani and Misrepresentation of Sikhism and the Solution.Devinder Singh Chahal - 2001 - Philosophy 3 (1):13.
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  • South Asian Women in East London: The Impact of Education.Kalwant Bhopal - 2000 - European Journal of Women's Studies 7 (1):35-52.
    This article examines the impact of education on South Asian women's participation in traditional practices of `arranged marriages' and dowries. It is based upon research carried out by the author in East London. Sixty in-depth interviews were conducted with South Asian women, as well as participant observation of living with a South Asian community for a period of six months. The article explores which women participate in `arranged marriages' and receive dowries and which do not. The data indicate that women (...)
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  • The Sword and the turban: Armed force in sikh thought.A. Walter Dorn & Stephen Gucciardi - 2011 - Journal of Military Ethics 10 (1):52-70.
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