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词条 Ramesh Nagaraj Rao
释义

  1. Career

  2. Publications

  3. References

{{Infobox person
| name = Ramesh Nagaraj Rao
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name = Closepet N. Ramesh
| birth_date =
| birth_place =
| death_date =
| death_place =
| nationality = American (born in India; citizen of the United States)
| other_names =
| known_for = A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the IDRF
| occupation = Professor of Communication Studies
}}

Ramesh Nagaraj Rao is a professor of Communication at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia who is the author of a number of papers on India and on the way it is portrayed in the media.{{sfn|Ramaswamy|Banerjee|2007|p=xxi}}

Career

Ramesh Nagaraj Rao (birth name: Closepet N. Ramesh) did his undergraduate education at St. Joseph's College, Bangalore and received B.A. in Economics, Political Science, and Sociology from the Bangalore University in 1977.{{sfn|Ramesh Nagaraj Rao - Welcome}}

He worked as an officer in the State Bank of Mysore, and then taught at the Krishnamurti Foundation's Valley School for two years. While teaching there, he earned a Post Graduate Diploma in Journalism from the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bangalore, and was the winner of the Kulapati Munshi Award for writing.{{citation needed|date=April 2012}}

Rao worked as a copy editor for The Hindu for a year before he left India to pursue graduate studies in the U.S.{{citation needed|date=April 2012}}

He moved to the United States in 1985 and studied at the University of Southern Mississippi, where he obtained a MS in Mass Communication in 1987.{{sfn|Ramesh Nagaraj Rao - Welcome}}

He then obtained his PhD in Communication from Michigan State University in 1992. From 1991 to 2005 he taught at Truman State University where he became a full tenured professor.{{sfn|Prosser|1998|p=491}}

In that position he undertook work on the theory of conflict and hostage negotiations.{{sfn|Putnam|Roloff|1992|p=viii}}

He then joined Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia, as professor and chair of the Department of Communication Studies and Theatre from 2006 to 2011.{{sfn|Ramesh Nagaraj Rao - Welcome}}

Rao is a prolific writer, and his essays and op-eds have appeared in a variety of American and Indian newspapers and magazines like the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Columbia Daily Tribune, Richmond Times-Dispatch, India Abroad, Rediff on the Net and The Washington Post. He has also contributed essays to The Guardian (London) on Hinduism and spirituality. He currently writes for Patheos, a religion and spirituality website, and for The Pioneer, the oldest English language newspaper published from New Delhi. Between 2005 and 2008 he wrote more than 60 essays for UPI's religion and spirituality page.{{citation needed|date=April 2012}}

Rao has served on the executive council of the Hindu American Foundation.{{sfn|Ramesh Nagaraj Rao - Welcome}}

He has links to Rajiv Malhotra and received grants from his Infinity Foundation.[1]

He also has sympathetic connections to the politicians of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in India.{{sfn|Nussbaum|2008|p=248}}

Publications

Books{{refbegin}}
  • {{cite book |title=Coalition Conundrum - The BJP's Trials, Tribulations and Triumphs

|author=Ramesh N. Rao |ISBN=8124108099
|publisher=Har-Anand Publications |year=2001 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Secular 'Gods' Blame Hindu 'Demons' - The Sangh Parivar through the mirror of distortion

|publisher=Har-Anand Publications |year=2001
|author=Ramesh N. Rao
|ISBN=8124108080}}
  • {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Rao et al.|2003}} |url=http://www.letindiadevelop.org/thereport/synopsis.shtml

|title=IDRF - Let the Facts Speak
|publisher=Friends of India and the authors
|year=2003
|first1=Ramesh N. |last1=Rao |first2=Narayanan |last2=Komerath
|authorlink2=Narayanan Komerath
|first3=Chitra |last3=Raman |first4=Beloo |last4=Mehra
|first5=Sugrutha |last5=Ramaswamy
|OCLC=53924622
|accessdate=2012-03-20}}
  • {{cite book

|title=Gujarat after Godhra: real violence, selective outrage
|editor1=Ramesh N. Rao |editor2=Koenraad Elst
|publisher=Har Anand Publications |year=2003 |ISBN=8124109176}}

{{refend}}Selected articles{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite news |ref=harv

|author=Ramesh N. Rao
|title=Ganesha, Shivaji and Power Play
|url=http://www.rameshnrao.com/politics-ganesha-shivaji-power-play.html
|newspaper=India Abroad
|date=16 April 2004}}
  • {{cite web |ref={{harvid|Rao - Infinity Foundation}}

|author=Ramesh N. Rao
|title=Assessing An Indian Government: The New York Times' And The Washington Post's Editorials On India, 1998-2000
|publisher=Infinity Foundation |url=http://www.infinityfoundation.com/mandala/s_es/s_es_rao-r_govt_frameset.htm}}{{refend}}Reception

Discussing his forthcoming book Secular `Gods' Blame Hindu `Demons in 2000, Ramesh Rao said his aim was to counter criticism of the Sangh Parivar and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) that had been published after the destruction of the Babri Mosque in 1992.

He had found a "programmatic and sustained campaign of vilification and demonization" after these events. He defended the RSS and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and said "There is no way that the Christians and Muslims, let alone the Communist Hindu-haters will accept Hindutva. That attempt to convince the followers of the three most deadly ideologies in the world is a wasted effort".{{sfn|Chalasani|2001}}

Writing to The Japan Times in November 2000 he criticized the paper for parroting "ugly stereotypes as well as maliciously false descriptions" of the RSS.{{sfn|Rao|2000}}

Writing in the India Star in March 2008, Rao criticized the "brood of opinion writers" in the weekly newspaper India Abroad for creating a false image of Hinduism in India.{{sfn|Schulze-Engler|Helff|2009|p=126}}

In 2002 Sabrang Communications and South Asia Citizens Web published The Foreign Exchange of Hate: IDRF and the American Funding of Hindutva, which investigated how funds raised by the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) in the USA were being distributed in India.{{sfn|Tow|Chin|2009|p=289}} Ramesh Rao headed a team that issued a counter-report, IDRF - Let the Facts Speak, which denied the implied accusation that tribal activists that had a role in the Gujarat violence were linked to the IDRF funding.{{sfn|Cady|Simon|2007|p=110}} Martha Nussbaum has found it strange that Rao and his co-authors spent a lot of space in defending the history and politics of the RSS, which was supposedly unconnected to the IDRF. Much of the book is also devoted to personal attacks on the authors of the Sabrang report, with labels such as "Lies, More Lies and Noting But Lies," as well as their caricature as leftist intellectuals with Pakistani connections. Much of Rao's writings are found by Nussbaum to contain digressions and tirades that have little to do with the subject instead of calmly presenting information that allow the readers to judge for themselves.{{sfn|Nussbaum|2008|pp=313-314}}

Ramesh Rao co-edited Gujarat after Godhra - Real Violence, Selective Outrage (2003) with Koenraad Elst. This book includes a critique of a Human Rights Watch report that claimed complicity of the state in the 2002 Gujarat communal violence, authored by Arvind Bahl.{{sfn|Appleby|2011|p=356-357}}

References

1. ^Dr. Ramesh Rao's Research Concerning Media Bias in Recent U.S. Reporting of India, Infinity Foundation, retrieved 2015-03-28
Sources
{{refbegin}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=n-jswjOA2UsC&pg=PA357

|last=Appleby|first=R. Scott|title=Religion and Human Rights: An Introduction|chapter=Religion, Violence, and the Right to Peace
|publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2011 |ISBN=0199733449}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LrAsn_uSSxgC&pg=PA83

|language=Spanish
|title=Migraciones: nuevas movilidades en un mundo en movimiento (Migration: new mobilities in a moving world)
|first1=María Cristina |last1=Blanco |first2=Hania |last2=Zlotnik
|publisher=Anthropos Editorial |year=2006 |ISBN=8476587902}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FpwoZl-3PVMC&pg=PA110

|title=Religion and conflict in South and Southeast Asia: disrupting violence
|first1=Linell Elizabeth |last1=Cady |first2=Sheldon W. |last2=Simon
|publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=2007 |ISBN=0415397340}}
  • {{cite web |ref=harv

|url=http://ilovehyderabad.com/interviews/interviews-interview-with-dr-ramesh-n-rao.html
|title=Interview with Dr. Ramesh N. Rao on his book: "Hindu Demons and Secular Gods: Targeting the BJP and the RSS."
|first=Vijaykumar |last=Chalasani
|work=I Love Hyderabad |year=2001
|accessdate=2012-03-21}}
  • {{cite book |authorlink=Martha Nussbaum |last=Nussbaum |first=Martha C.

|title=The Clash Within: Democracy, Religious Violence, and India's Future
|year=2008 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-03059-6
|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hJtiMwUGj-IC&pg=PA491

|title=Civic discourse: multiculturalism, cultural diversity, and global communication
|first=Michael H. |last=Prosser
|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=1998 |ISBN=1567504108}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv

|title=Communication and negotiation
|first1=Linda |last1=Putnam |first2=Michael E. |last2=Roloff
|publisher=Sage |year=1992 |ISBN=0803940114}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=http://invadingthesacred.com/content/view/25/39/ |title=Invading the sacred: an analysis of Hinduism studies in America |first1=Krishnan |last1=Ramaswamy |first2=Aditi |last2=Banerjee |publisher=Rupa & Co. |year=2007 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://archive.is/20120714222654/http://invadingthesacred.com/content/view/25/39/ |archivedate=2012-07-14 |df= }}
  • {{cite web |ref=harv

|url=http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/rc20001115a3.html
|work=Japan Times
|date=Nov 15, 2000
|title=RSS heads off subversive elements
|last=Rao |first=Ramesh N.
|accessdate=2012-03-21}}
  • {{cite web |ref=harv |url=http://www.vigilonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=347&Itemid=56

|title=Indian leaders are like abused wives
|last=Rao |first=Ramesh N.
|work=rediff.com
|date=April 2005
|accessdate=2012-03-21}}
  • {{cite web |ref={{harvid|Ramesh Nagaraj Rao - Welcome}} |url=http://www.rameshnrao.com/

|title=Welcome to the website of Dr. Ramish N. Rao
|last=Rao |first=Ramesh Nagaraj
|accessdate=2012-03-21}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SDSM0BtAY2EC&pg=PA126

|title=Transcultural English Studies: Theories, Fictions, Realities
|first1=Frank |last1=Schulze-Engler |first2=Sissy |last2=Helff
|publisher=Rodopi |year=2009 |ISBN=9042025638}}
  • {{cite book |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iTk6_HXg5E8C&pg=PA289

|title=ASEAN, India, Australia: towards closer engagement in a new Asia
|first1=William T. |last1=Tow |first2=Kin Wah |last2=Chin
|publisher=Institute of Southeast Asian Studies |year=2009 |ISBN=9812309632}}{{refend}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Rao, Ramesh Nagaraj}}

2 : Living people|Year of birth missing (living people)

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