List of Tripuri writers
Appearance
This is an alphabetical, referenced list of notable Tripuri authors
Authors
- Aloy Deb Barma, anthropologist, critic, author, academic[1]
- Ashit Debbarma, Kokborok novelist and short stories writer
- Bijay Kumar Debbarma, novelist, poet, and activist[2]
- Bikashrai Debbarma, Kokborok poet, critic, singer and songwriter[3]
- Binoy Debbarma, linguist and lexicographer
- Chandra Kanta Murasingh, poet and short stories writer
- Karuna Nidhan Debbarma, former civil servant, critic, and writer
- Mousami Debbarma, humanist, author, academic[4]
- Nagendra Debbarma, historian, novelist
- Nanda Kumar Deb Barma, playwright, poet, singer, and songwriter
- Narendra Debbarma, poet, novelist, editor[5]
- Ramesh Debbarma, Kokborok poet and lyricist
- Sefali Debbarma, poet, novelist, and short stories writer
- Shyamlal Debbarma, poet, novelist, and short stories writer
- Sudhanwa Debbarma, politician and novelist[6]
- Sukhendu Debbarma, writer, historian and academic[7]
References
- ^ Barma, Aloy Deb (2024). "Talking Back through Peripheral Visions and Negotiating Identity: Kokborok and Bengali Films and Music Videos in Tripura". Journal of Film and Video. 76 (2): 33–48. ISSN 1934-6018.
- ^ Barma, Bijay Kumar Deb; Burman, Bhaskar Roy (2005). "Ekalavya of the Longtarai". Indian Literature. 49 (5 (229)): 33–34. ISSN 0019-5804.
- ^ "Vol. 49, No. 5 (229), September-October 2005 of Indian Literature on JSTOR". www.jstor.org. Retrieved 2024-02-19.
- ^ Bhattacharyya, Rituparna (2023). Northeast India through the ages: a transdisciplinary perspective on prehistory, history, and oral history. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-0-367-74431-1.
- ^ Barma, Narendra Deb; Mukharjee, Bamapada (2005). "I am a Pedlar". Indian Literature. 49 (5 (229)): 63–63. ISSN 0019-5804.
- ^ "Kokborok language gains popularity". www.telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 2024-02-19.
During the early eighties, the first Kokborok novel, authored by the former Speaker of the state Assembly, Sudhanwa Debbarma, appeared under the title of Hachuk Khuriyo (in the lap of hills).
- ^ Debbarma, Sukhendu; Devy, G. N., eds. (2016). People's linguistic survey of India. Volume 28, part 2: The languages of Tripura / volume editor: Sukhendu Debbarma. Himayatnagar: Orient Blackswan. ISBN 978-81-250-6396-4.