My Account Log in

2 options

Mary C. Carras papers, 1959-2007.

Online

Available online

View online
Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1468
Loading location information...

Available in person This item can be accessed at the library reading room.

Request an item

Access options

Format:
Other
Author/Creator:
Carras, Mary C.
Language:
English
Marathi
Subjects (All):
Gandhi, Indira, 1917-1984.
Gandhi, Indira.
Authors, American.
Economics.
International relations.
International trade.
Political science.
Women--Political activity.
Women.
India--Politics and government--1947-.
India.
Genre:
Audiovisual material.
Audiocassettes.
Interviews.
Research notes.
Writings (documents)
Penn Provenance:
Gift of Lee and Phil Cokorinos (nephews of Mary C. Carras), 2021.
Physical Description:
15 box (11 linear feet)
Arrangement:
Organized into 2 series: I. Biographical, student, and professional files and II. Research.
Place of Publication:
1959-2007.
Language Note:
In English and Marathi.
Biography/History:
Mary C. Carras was born on July 28, 1928 in New York, the daughter of Greek immigrants, Louis and Urania Georgiou Carras, and sister to Yeta and Sassa. She earned her BA from Hunter College in New York, New York in 1962 and her PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in 1969. Early in her education, she appears to have focused on studying the political and economic spheres in India. She traveled to India via a Fulbright-Hays/National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship (1964 to 1966), an American Institute of Indian Studies Travel Grant (1966) and a dissertation fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania (1967). During those early trips to India, Carras developed her research methodology, and recorded first hand descriptions of life in India.From 1968 to 1970, Carras served as Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Cedar Crest College in Allentown, Pennsylvania. She then moved to Rockford College in Rockford, Illinois, where her role was initially the same, but in 1972, she was made Acting Chairman of the Department of Political Science. In 1972, she moved to Rutgers University-Camden, where she served as Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science. She became the head of the department in 1985. Carras was perhaps best known for her biography of Indira Gandhi, Indira Gandhi in the crucible of leadership: a political biography, which was published by Beacon Press in 1979. Her research for this work (and other works about Gandhi and the politics and economy of India) includes multiple interviews with Gandhi (from 1975 to 1981) and others who knew her. Carras describes her interviews with Gandhi as candid and forthcoming. In addition to studying Indira Gandhi and tangentially, Gandhi's father Jawaharla Nehru and her son Rajiv Gandhi (both also serving as prime ministers), Carras studied Narasimha Rao; international trade; Indo-American relationships; economy in India and the United States; biotechnology; and social and occupational problems of women in South Asian cultures, among other topics. Carras died on January 17, 2021.
Summary:
This collection documents Mary C. Carras's professional career and contains almost no personal material. Topics of her collection are largely focused on the politics and economy of India from the 1960s through the 1980s. Within that broad focus, researchers will find considerable research on Indira Gandhi, international relations, Indo-American relations, agriculture and biotechnology, and social and occupational problems of women in South Asian culture. Series I. Biographical, student and professional files documents the full range of Carras's career. Biographical information relating to Carras is limited to a few CV's and grant and fellowship applications and therefore, these files largely only document her professional life. This group of material provides glimpses into Carras's earliest work in the studies of India's economic and international relations via her student papers as an undergraduate at Hunter College and a PhD student at the University of Pennsylvania. Researchers will also find career-centric work, including presentations to and involvement with conferences, a very small amount of teaching-related material, and review work based upon her reputation as an expert in her field. Most significant in this group are the files relating to Carras's writings and these include communications with publishers, drafts or reprints of published articles, as well as responses and reviews of works, notably her biography of Indira Gandhi, Indira Gandhi in the crucible of leadership: a political biography. Series II. Research files makes up the bulk of the collection and consists of a wide range of research that Carras conducted, almost certainly for her writings, but probably also for her other career responsibilities: for presentations to organizations and associations, teaching, and reviewing grants and writings for others. These research files are organized alphabetically by topic; however it is important to note that much of Carras's research is intertwined with multiple topics and may have been used in different ways for a variety of projects. For example, nearly all research regarding India during the 1970s seems to at least reflect upon Indira Gandhi's sphere of influence, even if that is not the stated topic of her research. When the titles on Carras's folders represented the contents of the folders, they were retained. Carras's research methodology appears to have been fairly consistent: she collected writings by others, articles and data from journals, government publications, and online sources; and perhaps most importantly, she interviewed people for their first-hand perspectives of her research topics. When interviewing, Carras recorded conversations on audiocassettes (many of which are included in the collection), transcribed the recordings, and created an alphabetical index. These perspectives on India, Indira Gandhi, Indo-American relations, international relations, and Zilla Parishads are completely unique to this collection. Carras's earliest interviews related to the Zilla Parishads and contain only notes and transcripts [Box 4, Folders 7-12 and Box 5, Folders 1-3]. Over the course of three decades, Carras interviewed: Prime Minister Indira Gandhi; politicians and government employees about Indira Gandhi; Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi; Foreign Minister/Prime Minister Narasimha Rao;and numerous Indian and American politicians and government employees for her Indo-American Project. Included in the collection are a number of audiocassettes containing information beyond the interviews. Because the processor was unable to listen to original media, titles have been taken directly from the cassette. Some content seems fairly straightforward, such as content recorded from television or radio programs; however, there are titles that are more uncertain, such as "Nehru, Jawaharlal, press clippings, 1951 Congress Crisis." It is possible that these are recordings of Carras taking verbal notes on topics; but the actual content is unknown.
OCLC:
1359275169

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Library Catalog Using Articles+ Library Account