1st Edition

Selected Writings of Shyamal Kumar Pramanik Dalit Literature from Bangla

Edited By and Translated by Sayantan Dasgupta Copyright 2024
182 Pages
by Routledge India

182 Pages
by Routledge India

182 Pages
by Routledge India

Shyamal Kumar Pramanik is one of the most powerful writers of the Bangla Dalit literary movement. His evocative fictional world throws into relief the lives of the downtrodden in in contemporary India. This volume brings his fiction to a new readership by presenting English translations of a selection of his most powerful stories. This book is part of the Voices from the Margins series, which... Read more

1. Introduction

2. Bhajahari and his Family

3. In Dakshin Rai’s Land

4. Champaburi, or the Story of a Village

5. Nibaran Mandal’s Tale

6. Untouchable

7. Hariram

8. Surjakanta and his Nimpur Village

9. Charak Mela

10. Homeland

11. Life in the Forest

12. Darkness

13. Unforgiving Time

14. Primitive Even Today

15. Life and Death of Love

16. Lakhi of Lakhimpur

17. The Verdict of Time

18. Fourth Bharatvarsha

19. Survival

20. Tom Uncle’s Dream

21. Time for a Revolution

22. Interview with Shyamal Kumar Pramanik

Index

Biography

Shyamal Kumar Pramanik (b. 1959) is one of the foremost writers of Bangla Dalit literature. A first-generation literate, he has an MA in History and retired from Reserve Bank of India. He writes short stories, novels and poetry. Caste remains one of the abiding concerns of his fiction. He was instrumental in setting up the Bangla Dalit Sahitya Sanstha and its publication wing, Chaturtha Duniya. His collections of short stories include Rupnarayaner Majhi (1982), Khilipaner Meye (1996), Akalmegher Katha (2002), Nibaran Mondaler Upakhyan (2007), Chaturtha Bharatbarsha (2014), and Shambuk O Anyanya Galpo (2021). Pramanik is also author of two novels, Basat Hariye Jay (2005) and Baikunthapurer Katha (2017), and several poetry anthologies such as Roudra Jhorechhe (1992), Kakhono Akash, Kakhono Mati (1994), Shono, Eikhane Rekhe Gelam (1996), Aguner Barnamala (2000), Bipanno Dinguli Hete Ashe (2004), Bhango Pathor Bhange (2007), He Kalbelar Prohor Shakshi (2012), Jakhon Astitwa Bipanna (2016), and Kobe Abar Gaibo Swadhinatar Gaan (2021). He has also authored two research-based books, Poundradesh OJatir Itihas (1998) and Paschimbanger Tapashili Jati O Adivasi (2017).

Sayantan Dasgupta teaches Comparative Literature at Jadavpur University and is Coordinator of the Centre for Translation of Indian Literatures there. He is currently Joint Director, School of Media, Communication, and Culture at Jadavpur University, and was till recently, member, Advisory Board (English), Sahitya Akademi. He is also secretary of the Comparative Literature Association of India, and EC member, International Comparative Literature Association. He currently edits the Jadavpur Journal of Comparative Literature. His latest publications are the edited volumes, Writings from the Sundarbans (co-edited; Orient Blackswan, 2023) Celebrating the City: Kolkata in Indian Literature (Sahitya Akademi, 2021) and Dalit Lekhika: Women’s Writing from Bengal (co-edited; Stree, 2020). He is also editor of A South Asian Nationalism Reader and author of books such as Indian English Literature: A Study in Historiography and Shyam Selvadurai: Texts and Contexts.