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According to Unny, Shankar's Weekly was the "homing ground for the second generation of Indian political cartoons". [6] Shankar allowed a variety of styles to function together despite himself being a very powerful leader with certainty for the craft. There was no common house style; a variety of personal styles were created by the cartoonists. [6]
New Delhi, Children's Book Trust. Written and illustrated by Shankar: An orphan Indian boy being raised by his grandparents tells stories about his life. Shankar (1983), Don't spare me Shankar: Jawaharlal Nehru. New Delhi: Children's Book Trust. Reproduction of 400 selected cartoons from the Shankar's weekly, 20 June 1948 – 17 May 1964.
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Spanish language parody of Wikipedia. 11,159 [23] GFDL Fringepedia: Fiction – Fringe, related 'fringe science' topics Powered by MediaWiki. 6,759 [24] CC BY-NC-SA Gardenology.org: Gardening Meant as a "complete plant and garden wiki encyclopedia" 22,005 [25] CC BY-SA GCpedia: Government — Canada: Internal Government of Canada Wiki GeoNames ...
All pages with titles containing Shankar; Shankar's International Dolls Museum, New Delhi; Shankar's Weekly, a magazine founded by K. Shankar Pillai; Shankar Party unofficial name given to the Adhyatmik Ishwariya Vishwa Vidyalaya; Shankar Guru (disambiguation) Sankar (disambiguation) Shankara (disambiguation) Shanker, a surname; Sankara ...
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In 1946, Kutty relocated to New Delhi at behest of Shankar, who wanted him to work as a cartoonist for his planned evening newspaper. From 1946 to 1997, Kutty lived in New Delhi and worked for various publications. In 1947-48, he worked for National Call and Amar Bharat. Kutty also contributed to Shankar's Weekly, a
Pages in category "Weekly magazines published in India" The following 70 pages are in this category, out of 70 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .