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This is an archive of past discussions about Kerala. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 |
Does anyone watching this have {{GFDL}} or {{PD}}-licensed free photos of pookkalam of Onam? If so, please upload them. -- Sundar (talk · contribs) 10:23, Jun 23, 2005 (UTC)
It is good to have a picture of valia palli of the knanaya people. However the exterior of this church does not show anything unique to the outsider. The uniqueness of a Syrian Malabar Nasrani palli (temple) is that the holy of holies or tabernacle is separated by a red curtain, just like in a Jewish synagogue. A picture showing the exterior of the knanaya palli does not bring this out. It is very important to have a picture of a nasrani palli showing a red curtain to bring out the ethos of the nasrani temple.
It would be better to replace the exterior picture of the knanaya palli with its former interior picture until we might be fortunate to find a better picture of the valia palli showing the holy of holies separated with a full drawn red curtain. Robin klein 11:51, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Hi Saravask I agree with what you say, though my conception for putting up that image was entirely different. However I leave it at that. Robin klein 19:55, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I needed to make changes to the blurb and lead, including an image change (I wanted to use an image w/ a high height-to-width ratio to maximize the size of the image on the main page; also I think its more eye-catching). If people have problems, let me know or go copyedit the blurb/lead directly. Thanks. Saravask 02:31, 10 February 2006 (UTC)
Nitpicking.
Kjrajesh has added many nice pics in many sections. Does wikipedia have any guideline for image gallery in articles? I personally feel that image galleries are not needed. I would like to hear other people's view about this. regards --Raghu 16:42, 15 February 2006 (UTC)
Can someone go through and convert my American English writing/spelling to Indian English? Also, does anyone know where to find reliable data on the proportion of Keralites living in slums or in poverty? Thank you. Saravask 06:05, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
It is highly improper to put up a photograph of a Politician in this one. It deserves to be removed at the earliest.Bharatveer 13:19, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
After much thought, I've reordered the article's topics by chronological order (which is what I did at Saffron): thus, since Kerala's geography and biota are the oldest (hundreds of millions to billions of years since their emergence), I've put them first. Next comes (human) "History" (which is only around 3,000 years old). Next, the districts, (modern) politics, culture, etc in the same order they were before. Will be glad to discuss/answer questions. Saravask 07:06, 25 February 2006 (UTC)
1. Why do you think it is necessary to include reference to Anna lindberg's paper ?
2. Did you read that paper before including it here?
3. Do you think there is anything worth in that paper other than some loaded terms like "effemnization" and "sanskritization?82.178.145.122[ 06:08, 28 February 2006 (UTC) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Bharatveer (talk • contribs) 04:37, 28 February 2006.
Every region/ nation will have marginalized community of its own. But my point is that if you think the exclusion of these marginalized communities would make wikipedia articles "tourist brochures" , then this principle should be applied uniformly in all the cases. But unfortunately i do not see any mention of marginalized communities in any other similar articles of wikipedia like beijing (Beijing or Paris). Therefore your "tourist brochure" argument is quite hollow.
Saravask, A "tourist brochure" written by a "historian" will not become a "scholarly" work . And I know how these "scholarly" works are being produced in "Oirope" and "Amreeka". So i dont have to say much about it.Bharatveer
Is it written in BrEng or AmEng? There are a few inconsistencies.
It's rather heavily linked, which is making it a little difficult to read, and looks a little messy on the screen. Although most of the links are useful, a few common words might be delinked. (But I won't do that without your permission.) Tony 11:49, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
OK, we'll do the Oxford thing! Tony 00:55, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
There are inconsistencies with respect to 'iz' and 'is'. I personally prefer the use of the s to be maximised, as BrEng increasingly does. AmEng maximises the use of z. Can someone go through and regularise one or the other? Tony 05:54, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
PS The use of 'third world' might seem a little judgemental to some readers; with the extraordinary rise of the Indian economy, I'm not sure it has the right meaning any more.Tony 05:58, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Same goes for 'developed world'—in some respects, India is far more developed than wealthy Western nations. I'd go for 'Western' or some other word. Tony 06:39, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
'Emerging economy' is a much better term. Tony 11:08, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
Should the Red rain in Kerala somehow be mentioned in this article? --Khoikhoi 01:57, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
The claim about gender relations is hardly NPOV. Some value system is being embraced here. A less value-laden term (“egalitarian”, if that is indeed what applies) should be used. Gamahucheur 02:52, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
I just wanted to congratulate the authors of of this article. There a wide variety of information, with something for everyone. The pictures are beautiful too. Veej 03:50, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
I too would like to congratulate the authors. The article is very nicely written with great pictures! Those of you who are helping control this incessant vandalism that keeps ocurring are doing a great job! Maybe we should try to block them since it seems to be the same person over and over again wtih different user names. Keep up the great work! Cheesehead Fan 03:56, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
Why not someone knowledgeble about the followings which are peculiar to the ‘movements culture’ of Kerala in social fronts.
These are something peculiar to Kerala, atlest the efficiency or metriculous nature of its implementation. That makes the differentiations on the indexes. Someone knowledgble on these please comeup…. Pratheepps 12:06, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
Looks like the main article is too huge (with images) already!!!
Pratheepps 13:11, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
Sorry I don't know how to properly format my comments in a discussion section but this article needs to be locked due to vandalism. "penis" and other variations are littered all over the article.
Some darn uncivilized fool has written "penis" all over the page and ruined this beautiful article, I tried to change it but it is too may. Can anybody change it?
How can the admins go a vandalism like this unpunished?
First off, this is one of the best illustrated featured articles I've seen. The images are vibrant, and both topical and interesting. Kudos to those of you who contributed images. My only concern is that Kerala's literacy rate — 91%[54] — and life expectancy — 73 years[54] is understated as making Kerala among the Third World's longest-lived, healthiest, and most literate regions, their literacy rate is higher than all 50 African countries, and much of Europe. Theiri life expectency puts them higher than about 75% of the world. I think it's a tad perjorative to refer to those two statistics only in terms of the third world Sherurcij (talk) (Terrorist Wikiproject) 22:17, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
Over the years the literacy rate has ‘sided’ a bit downward. Many things are attributed. The primary being difficulty with the older generation who became the new literates. They’ve grown older and many of them find it difficult to read and right as compared to those days (due to old age memory problems, lack of dexterity, absence of booster programs for the old etc). Even Aysha herself finds it difficult with letters at the age of 80.
And therefore over the years from 1991 the rate started sliding slowly but stabilized at around about 92% Pratheepps 04:20, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
I don't know where else to put this, so here it goes;
Someone edited in a long paragraph of spanish swear words in the Geography section. However, when I went to edit it, the paragraph was no where to be found on the editorial page. I'd like to kindly ask the administrators to have this offensive material removed.
Thank you.
Not related to the article but did anyone else notice that the day after Kerala was the featured article on English Wikipedia, the United States was the featured article on Malayalam Wikipedia? Interesting eh...somewhat of a tit for tat.
Don't the tigers have a taste for women? I wonder whether there's a gender-neutral term for 'man-eating'. English is
becoming more sensitive to gender-specific terms. Tony 01:55, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
"Man-eating" (like sexuality, feeding behavior, motherhood, etc.) are instinct-driven qualities that animals are predisposed to exhibiting regardless of what is or is not around them. The same is true of traits like healthfulness, color, etc. Thus, an unopened bag of carrots would not be described as "potentially healthy" — they are healthy, regardless of whether anyone is around to eat them. A virgin lab rat that is attracted to the opposite sex but is kept in isolation is not "potentially heterosexual", it is heterosexual (i.e., that is its sexual orientation, irrespective of whether or how many rats of the opposite sex are available for it to mate with). Saravask 22:42, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
It's really misleading to say only Nairs were matrilineal in Kerala society along with muslims in Malabar(also in Lakshadweep). In fact, majority of the castes were/are matrilineal in Malabar, including Payyannor Namboothiris. In fact, matrilineality is not even unique to Kerala society in South India. Tuluvas were also matrilineal. And terming all Tiyyas as patriarchal is totally wrong as many of them were matrilineal(I suppose even in South Kerala).
Manjunatha (16 Mar 2006)
Probably, sentence should be rephrased or a new section should be added to give the present and past situation. I suppose, matrilineality is mostly dying out. Malabar in the article could be misleading. It should be, many Hindus throughout Kerala practiced matrilineal system. I suppose, historians even talk about matrilineal system in Travancore.
Manjunatha (21 Mar 2006)
Manjunatha (21 Mar 2006)
I'm not sure of how many of you aware of Tulu people and their culture. Were there no studies dealing with Malayalee-Tulu connection? I'm from Mangalore and for me Tulu, Malayalee cultural connection is striking. Be it matrilineal system, spirit worship(Theyyam in Malabar and Nema in Tulu Nadu).
Probably, because of linguistic studies it's felt that Malayalees were infact Tamils before. However, we have to see that Tulu or Proto-Tulu branches out of South Dravidian language along with Proto-Tamil-Kannada(supposed to Proto-Tamil here). Please find the reference here. In my opinion a big chunk of Malabar Malayalees might have Proto-Tulu origins. Probably, Proto-Tamil origins dominates in South(As far as I know, Theyyam is restricted to Malabar region).
Well, it's bit naive to think Malayalees spoke Tamil before and developed their own language. India's linguistic transitions were always complex. Tamilakam need not to have ruled over only Tamil regions. People, might have adopted Tamil because of that. Don't we know how much Astro-Asiatic and Dravidian languages got replaced elsewhere in India?
Of course, if a linguist proves that Dravidian languages in fact originated in the region of Tamil Nadu, none of my words make any sense. At present, it still has Northeren origins. Kerala might not have been inhabited until neolithic times but that was not the case with Karnataka and Tulu Nadu.
PS: A present genetic study(Sengupta et al.) says Dravidian languages might have their origins in South-West of India and that is again coastal Karnataka, including Tulu Nadu.
Manjunatha (21 Mar 2006)
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