Bani Basu
Bani Basu | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Indian |
Occupation(s) | Writer, professor in English |
Notable work | Maitreya Jātak, Khanamihirer Dhipi, Gandharbi, Ekushe paa |
Bani Basu (born 11 March 1939[1] Bengali: বাণী বসু) is a prolific Bengali Indian author, essayist, critic, poet, translator and professor.
Life
She received her formal education from the well-known Lady Brabourne College, Scottish Church College and at the University of Calcutta where she received M.A. in English.[2]
Career
Basu began her career as a novelist with the publication of Janmabhoomi Mātribhoomi. A prolific writer, she started her professional career as an author from 1980, first in “Anandamala”, a juvenile magazine, then in “Desh” and other periodicals of the time.
She is known as a novelist, short story writer, essayist, and writings for children and teenagers. Some of her fictions have been made into films & TV Serials.[3] The broad range of her fiction deals with gender, history, mythology, society, psychology, adolescence, music, sexual orientation, the supernatural, and more. Her major works include Swet Pātharer Thālā (A Plate of White Marble),[4][5] Ekushe Pā (Turning Twenty One), Maitreya Jātak (published as The Birth of the Maitreya by Stree), Gāndharvi, Pancham Purush (The Fifth Generation) and Ashtam Garbha (The Eighth Pregnancy). She also writes poetry, and translates extensively into Bengali.
She was awarded the Tarashankar Award for Antarghāt (Treason), and the Ananda Purashkar for Maitreya Jātak. She is also the recipient of the Sushila Devi Birla Award and the Sahitya Setu Puraskar. In 2010 she was awarded Sahitya Academy for her contributions to Bengali literature.
Bibliography
- Swet Pātharer Thālā (1990)
- Gāndharbi (1993)
- Mohanā (1993)
- Ekushe Pā (1994)
- Maitreya Jātak (1999)
- Upanyās Panchak (1999)
- Ashtam Garbha (2000)
- Antarghāt
- Pancham Purush
- Khanamihirer Dhipi (2009)
- Kharap Chele
- Meyeli Addar Halchal
Film and television serial based on her books
- Swet Patherer Thala (Film)[6]
- Gandharvi (Film and TV Serial)
- Swet Patherer Thala (TV Serial)
- Ekushe Pa (TV Serial)
- Nandita (Tele Fim)
- Mrs Gupta Ra (Tele Film)
- Jakhan Chand (Tele Film)
- Bhab Murti (Tele Film)
- Balleygunge Court (Tele Film)
- Shakhambherir Dwip (TV Serial)
- Amrita (TV Serial)
Awards
- Tara Sankar Award (1991)
- Sahitya Setu Chandra (1995)
- Siromoni Award (1997)
- Ananda Puraskar (1997)
- Bankim Award (1998)
- Mahadevi Birla Award (1998)
- Katha Award (2003)
- Pratima Mitra Smiti Award (2007)
- Kabi Kritibas Sahitya Award (2008)
- Bhuban Mohini Dasi Swarna Padak, Calcutta University (2008)
- Sachindra Nath Sahitya Award
- Sahitya Akademi Award (2010)
References
- ^ "Bani Basu - Bengali Writer: The South Asian Literary Recordings Project (Library of Congress New Delhi Office)". Loc.gov. 11 March 1939. Retrieved 15 July 2012.
- ^ "Bani Basu". veethi.com. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
- ^ "Basu, Bani".
- ^ Singh, Smita (10 November 2020). "Book Review: Bani Basu's A Plate of White Marble Offers A Strong Commentary On The Plight Of Widows In India". SheThePeople.TV. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
- ^ Basu, Bani (30 September 2020). "With A Plate of White Marble, Bani Basu's Bengali classic Swet Patharer Thala finds first English translation". FirstPost. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
- ^ "Bengali Novel Adapted Into Aparna Sen Film Now In English". News18. PTI. 6 November 2020. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
- ^ "Film and TV serials based on her work".
External links
- 1939 births
- Living people
- 20th-century Bengalis
- 21st-century Bengalis
- Bengali writers
- Lady Brabourne College alumni
- Scottish Church College alumni
- University of Calcutta alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Calcutta
- Indian women novelists
- Indian women essayists
- Recipients of the Sahitya Akademi Award in Bengali
- Writers of historical romances
- Women romantic fiction writers
- Indian historical novelists
- 20th-century Indian novelists
- 20th-century Indian women writers
- Women historical novelists
- Writers from Kolkata
- Women writers from West Bengal
- Novelists from West Bengal