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social reformer

Gopal Ganesh Agarkar

How Gopal Ganesh Agarkar is discussed in this archive

Authored 2 works in the archive.

Subject of 3 profile pieces — including GG Agarkar : Modern Indian Liberal and Reformer , GG Agarkar- Modern Indian Liberal and Reformer , and G.G. Agarkar : Revisiting a Misunderstood Legacy .

Referenced in 2 other works — including Sharad Joshi on Liberalism in India , and The Forgotten Legacy of Yashodabai Agarkar .

In Sharad Joshi on Liberalism in India : Agarkar is named among the colonial-era Indian liberal reformers invoked by Joshi as precursors of the tradition, active between 1860 and 1920.

In The Forgotten Legacy of Yashodabai Agarkar : Gopal Ganesh Agarkar is cited as Yashodabai's husband whose reformist ideas she imbibed and acted upon, providing the intellectual foundation for her own activism.

By Gopal Ganesh Agarkar (2)

About Gopal Ganesh Agarkar (3)

Profile pieces (3)

  • GG Agarkar : Modern Indian Liberal and Reformer
    • "The great Indian classic liberal that he was, Agarkar championed the cause of rationality and women emancipation in colonial Maharashtra" — establishes Agarkar's core liberal identity and reform agenda
    • "Tilak focused on the primacy of political freedom with a conservative approach towards social reform while for Agarkar, social reform came ahead of political freedom" — the key ideological divergence that defined Agarkar's distinctive contribution
  • GG Agarkar- Modern Indian Liberal and Reformer
    • "Among the modern liberal luminaries stands out Gopal Ganesh Agarkar, for his radical social reformism and emphasis on rationality" — establishes his distinctive position within the Maharashtra liberal tradition
    • "Tilak focused on the primacy of political freedom with a conservative approach towards social reform while for Agarkar, social reform came ahead of political freedom" — the defining ideological divergence that separated Agarkar from Tilak and shaped his legacy
  • G.G. Agarkar : Revisiting a Misunderstood Legacy
    • "Agarkar is most frequently remembered as a 'friend-turned-opponent' of Tilak" — establishes the reductive popular image the essay seeks to correct
    • "Agarkar categorized the then-existing views on economics under three labels. These can be broadly called Axiomatic or Classical Economics, Practical Economics and Illusory Economics" — reveals the sophistication of his economic analysis, mapping the competing schools of thought in colonial India

Mentioned in (2)

Excerpts (2)

  • Sharad Joshi on Liberalism in India
    • "In their writings, they trace the beginnings of liberalism to J.S. Mill and Adam Smith and of Indian liberalism to Dadabhai Naoroji, Gokhale, Raja Rammohan Roy, Narmad, Phule, Agarkar, et al." — listed among founders of Indian liberal tradition
  • The Forgotten Legacy of Yashodabai Agarkar
    • "Gopal Ganesh Agarkar educated Yashodabai and kindled the spirit of reform in her. His thoughts on women's upliftment and feminism seeped into Yashodabai." — Agarkar identified as the intellectual influence who shaped Yashodabai's reform consciousness