Rita Chowdhury
Rita Chowdhury | |
---|---|
Chowdhury in conversation with Anjum Katyal | |
Born | Tirap, Arunachal Pradesh, India | 17 August 1960
Occupation | Novelist, Poet, Director National Book Trust Of India |
Education | M.A, LLB, Ph.D |
Period | 1981-present |
Literary movement | Assam Movement |
Notable works | Deo Langkhui, Makam, The Divided Soul (Coffee Table Book), Mayabritta, Wars and Tears (documentary) |
Notable awards | 1981: Axom Xahitya Xabha Award, 2006: Kolaguru Bishnuprasad Rabha Award, 2008: Sahitya Akademi Award |
Spouse | Chandra Mohan Patowary |
Website | |
ritachowdhury | |
Literature portal |
Rita Chowdhury (born 17 August 1960) is an Indian poet, novelist and Sahitya Akademi Award recipient in the world of Assamese literature.[1][2] She has been working as an associate professor in Cotton College, Guwahati, Assam in Political Science Department since 2001. Prior to that, Chowdhury had worked as lecturer from 1991 to 1996 and as senior lecturer from 1996 to 2001 in the same college. She started her teaching career as lecturer in Political Science in Diphu Government College, Karbi Anglong from the year 1989 to 1991.[3] She is currently the Director of National Book Trust, India.[4] She is also the wife of minister Chandra Mohan Patowary.
Literary career
This article's citations lack bibliographical information.(June 2015) |
Chowdhury's first novel was Abirata Jatra (English: Incessant Journey) in 1981[3] which won the first prize in a competition held by Asom Sahitya Sabha on the contemporary Assamese situation. She wrote this novel while she had to go underground during the Assam Movement.
In 1981, her debut novel ‘Abirata Jatra’ (Incessant Journey) was published and reflecting the name of the novel her journey into the Assamese literary world also started. She was awarded the Asom Sahitya Sabha award in 1981 for this very first novel. Even after holding a post of lecturer in Political Science in Cotton University in Guwahati, Chowdhury has been able to establish herself as a litterateur.
After Abirata Jatra, Chowdhury wrote a series of novels namely Tirthabhumi (The Shrine) in 1988, Maha Jibanar Adharshila (Foundation Stone of Great Life) in 1993, Nayana Tarali Sujata in 1996, Popiya Torar Xadhu (Tale of a shooting star) in 1998, Rag-malkosh in 1999, Jala-Padma (Water-Lotus) in 1999, Hridoy Nirupai (The Helpless Heart) in 2003, Deo Langkhui (The Divine Sword) in 2005, Makam (The Golden Horse) in 2010 and Mayabritta (The Circle of Worldly Illusion) in 2012. Each of her novels is a depiction of some significant aspects of the society.
She received Sahitya Akademi Award in 2008 for the novel Deo Langkhui which was based on the Tiwas of Assam. Partly history and mostly legends, the plot of this novel is constructed in a manner that can easily be demarcated as a departure from traditional one although traditions and reality merge into a complete whole.
Makam (মাকাম), a landmark creation in her literary career, is translated into English with the title Chinatown Days.[5]
Chowdhury's fiction reflects the reality of life and the society. Sometimes it is contemporary and sometimes it is historical. There is a subterranean flow of feminism in some of her novels. Most of her novels are research-based.
She was the founder editor of Adharxila, a monthly literary magazine, published from Guwahati from 2001 to 2002.
Books
- Abirata Jatra (Incessant Journey) in 1981 published by Bani Mandir, Dibrugarh
- Thirthabhumi (The Shrine) in 1988 published by Deepti Prakashan, Dibrugarh
- Maha Jibanar Adharshila (Foundation Stone of Great Life) in 1993 published by Jyoti Prakashan, Dibrugarh
- Nayana Tarali Sujata in (1996), published by Lawyer's Book Stall, Guwahati
- Popiya Torar Sadhu (Tale of a Meteor) in 1998 published by Cambridge India, Guwahati[6]
The dirty and deceitful picture of some workers of the press and journalist world is vividly presented in the novel Popiya Torar Sadhu. How a budding writer, jeuti follows her dreams and reaches the city from a small village, how she is emotionally trapped and cheated by some evil, greedy person who misguide and misuse the young, innocent girl is depicted in the book. the fake emotional drama of those culprits cum head of some newspapers makes her so blind that she repeatedly ignores all the incessant warnings of her friends to stay away from them. Too much emotions makes her so weak that she lose the power to see the truth of the masked culprits. And the result was a great failure, the death of an upcoming writer and journalist who was destroyed in the bud-stage and not allowed to become a flower. A strong tragedy and a warning to stay away from such dangerous actors visualising the truth with the brain not by mind.
- Ragmalkosh in (1999), published by Assam Book Depot, Guwahati
- Jala Padma (Water-Lotus) in 1999 published by Assam Book Depot, Guwahati
- Hridoy Nirupai (The Helpless Heart) in 2003 published by Jyoti Prakashan, Guwahati
- Deo Langkhui (The Divine Sword) in 2005 published by Jyoti Prakashan, Guwahati
The novel Deo Langkhui unveils some important aspects of the Tiwa society and a series of their customs and traditions. Also depicts the life of the king jakanka.
- Ai xomoy Xei Xomoy
- Makam (The Golden Horse) in 2010 published by Jyoti Prakashan, Guwahati
The Heart touching and sorrowful conditions of the Chinese people in Assam during the Indo China War of 1962 is clearly depicted in Makam.
- Mayabritta (The circle of Worldly Illusion) in 2012 published by Jyoti Prakashan, Guwahati
- Makam (English) in 2015 published by The Pangea House, New Delhi.
- Bibranta Bastab in 2015 published by The Jyoti Prakashan, Guwahati.
A girl Gayatri who was cheated by an ill minded man and abandoned and isolated by the society who never saw the truth. Later she became an IPS officer. A documentary was made by her on her own life to show how all the people wronged and misunderstood her.
- Chinatown days' 'in 2018 published by Pan Macmillan, New delhi.
It is the early nineteenth century. The British East India Company has been bringing in Chinese slaves to work in the tea gardens of Assam. Amidst days of misery and toil, they slowly begin to find contentment in their day-to-day lives.In post-independence Assam, Mei Lin, descended from the slave Ho Han, lives a life of satisfaction with her husband Pulok Barua. But in 1962, as war breaks out in the high Himalayas between India and China, a close family member conspires to have Mei Lin deported to Maoist China. She and thousands of other Chinese Indians will now have to fend for themselves in a land that, despite their origins, is strangely foreign.From the horror-ridden hardships of the slave pens of Assam to the Sino-Indian war, this searing novel tells the story of the Chinese Indians, a community condemned by intolerance to obscurity and untold sorrow.
Poems
- Xudoor Nakshatra (The Far-off Star) in 1989, published by Sofia Publishers, Guwahati
- Banariya Batahar Xuhuri (Whistle of the Wild Wind) in 1996
- Alop Pooharar Alop Andharar (Streaks of Light and Darkness) in 1997 published by Lawyer's Book Stall, Guwahati
- Boga Matir Tulaxi (Black Basil on White Soil) in 1999 published by Lawyer's Book Stall, Guwahati
Recent releases
- Rajeeb Eeshwar
- Jahnavi
English works
- The Divided Soul (Coffee Table Book) in 2015 published by The Pangea House [1]
Production works
- Wars and Tears (Documentary, Director, Script Writer) produced by The Pangea House [2]
Awards
Chowdhury has been awarded with a number of literary awards and recognitions. Among those, the major awards are as follows:
- Assam Sahitya Sabha Award (First Prize awarded in the Manuscript Competition of Novel) in 1981 for the Novel, Abirata Yatra.[7]
- Kalaguru Bishnu Prasad Rabha Award by Assam Sahitya Sabha, new Delhi in 2006 for the novel Deo Langkhui.[3]
- Sahitya Akademi Award, 2008, for the novel Deo Langkhui.[1][2][8][9]
- Lekhika Samoroh Xahitya Bata in 2011 by Sadou Axom lekhika Samoroh Samittee.[3]
- G.A. Kulkarni Award for Translation of the novel, Makam in Marathi Language in 2013 by Goa Hindu association, Mumbai.[3]
- Certificate of merit Award in 2011 by IDPA, Mumbai for the Documentary, ‘The Divided Soul’.[3]
- Award for Excellence in Best Editing for ‘The Divided Soul’ (Docu) produced by Chowdhury in Mumbai International Film festival in 2011.[3]
Special felicitation
- Felicitated by the Indian Overseas Chinese Organization on 23 May 2010.
Posts held
- Visitor's (President of India) nominee to the Court, Rajiv Gandhi University, Arunachal.
- Visitor's (President of India) nominee to the Court, Axom University, Silchar, Assam.
- Member, State Commission for Women, Assam.
- Member, Asomiya Advisory Panel, National Book Trust.
- Chief trustee, 'Adharxila'(Honorary)
Research
- The Chinese Diaspora and 1962 Sino-Indian War.
- Tea History of Assam.
- Tea Community of Assam.
- Tiwa Tribe of Assam.
- The Assamese Chinese Community.
- Forced Migration in Post Partition India.
Early days
Daughter of renowned writer late Biraja Nanda Chowdhury and Social-Worker Shri Molina Chowdhury, Rita Chowdhury was born at Nampong in Tirap District of Arunachal Pradesh. She did her schooling in Upper Haflong L.P. School and Higher Secondary in Margherita Public Higher Secondary School. She passed her B.A. in Political Science from Cotton College under Gauhati University in 1982. She is double MA in Political Science and Assamese from Gauhati University with LLB(1990) and Ph.D.. She did Ph.D. from Gauhati University on Comparative Literature in 2005. Her thesis was on Society and Women psychology depicted in Nirupama Borgohain and Ashapurna Devi's Novels: a Comparative Study.
She had joined Jatiyatabadi Juba Chatra Parishad, a leading student organisation of Assam at the age of only eighteen and became one of the prominent members of it during the Assam Agitation and was imprisoned continuously in Guwahati, Dibrugarh and again in Guwahati Jail for almost three months.
Family life
She is the wife of Chandra Mohan Patowary; minister of Transport and Industry of Assam. She has a son and a daughter for whom she is a friend rather than a mother.
References
- ^ a b Bhattacharjee, Subhamoy (26 January 2009). "Royal allowance to community kings of Assam". Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ a b "Literary feats lauded". The Assam Tribune. 29 December 2008. Retrieved 22 October 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Chowdhury, Narzary given Akademi award". The Assam Tribune. 18 February 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2009.
- ^ "Chowdhury new NBT Director". 16 July 2015. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
- ^ Chowdhury, Rita (11 January 2018). Chinatown Days. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 9781509896561.
- ^ "The Assam Tribune Online". www.assamtribune.com. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
- ^ "Meet Dr Rita Chowdhury – Assamese Author and Director of National Book Trust of India". G Plus. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
- ^ Editor, Assam Times (23 December 2008). "Sahitya Academy award to 2 Assamese litterateurs". Retrieved 2 August 2009.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "Sahitya Adademi Awards for Choudhury, Narzary". 23 December 2008. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
External links
- 1960 births
- Living people
- Recipients of the Sahitya Akademi Award in Assamese
- People from Kamrup Metropolitan district
- Assam academics
- Poets from Assam
- Assamese-language poets
- Writers from Arunachal Pradesh
- Indian women novelists
- 20th-century Indian novelists
- Cotton College, Guwahati alumni
- People from Tirap district
- Indian women poets
- 20th-century Indian women writers
- 20th-century Indian poets
- Women writers from Assam
- Novelists from Assam
- Women writers from Arunachal Pradesh
- Writers from Assam
- Writers from Northeast India
- Recipients of the Assam Valley Literary Award