Jibanananda Das

Bengali poet (1899–1954) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jibanananda Das[a] (17 February 1899 – 22 October 1954)[1] was a Bengali poet, writer, and educationist[2] widely regarded as one of the major figures of twentieth-century Bengali modernist poetry. Often called Rupashi Banglar Kabi (“Poet of Beautiful Bengal”),[3][4] he received limited recognition during his lifetime but later came to be considered one of the most important and influential figures in Bengali literature after Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam.[5][6][7][8]

Born
Jibanananda Das

(1899-02-17)17 February 1899
Died22 October 1954(1954-10-22) (aged 55)
Calcutta, West Bengal, India
OccupationPoet, writer, and professor
LanguageBengali
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Jibanananda Das
Jibanananda Das
Jibanananda Das
Born
Jibanananda Das

(1899-02-17)17 February 1899
Died22 October 1954(1954-10-22) (aged 55)
Calcutta, West Bengal, India
OccupationPoet, writer, and professor
LanguageBengali
NationalityBritish Indian (1899–1947)
Indian (1947–1954)
Alma materBrajamohan College
University of Calcutta
GenrePoetry, novels, short stories, criticism
Literary movementBengali Modernism
Notable worksBanalata Sen, Rupasi Bangla, Akashlina, Banalata Sen, Campe, Bodh
Notable awardsNikhil Banga Rabindra Sahitya Sammelan Award (1952)
Sahitya Akademi Award (1955)
SpouseLabanyaprabha Das (née Gupta)
Children2
RelativesKusumkumari Das (mother)
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Born in Barisal, Bengal Presidency, Das studied English literature at Presidency College and University of Calcutta. He worked mainly as a teacher of English at several colleges, while also writing poetry, essays and fiction. His first poem appeared in print in 1919, and his first poetry collection, Jhara Palok, was published in 1927.

Das's verse explores a world of surrealism,[9][10] depression, and melancholia.[11] His work often combines nature, time, death, desire and urban alienation through dense metaphor and surreal suggestion.[12][13] His major works include Jhara Palok, Dhusar Pandulipi, Banalata Sen, Mahaprithibi, Shreshtha Kavita and the posthumously published Rupasi Bangla; among them, the poem “Banalata Sen” and the poetry collection Rupasi Bangla remain his most discussed and celebrated works.[4]

In 1954, Das was hit by a tram in Kolkata while crossing on a road, and was taken to a hospital, where he died eight days later. Das received the Rabindra-Memorial Award for Banalata Sen in 1953.[4] His collection Shrestha Kavita was posthumously awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1955.[4] His life and works have since become major subjects of literary criticism, academic research, translation, documentary work, music and film adaptation in both Bangladesh and India.[14][15][16]

Biography

Early life

Das in his childhood
Young Jibanananda Das

Das was born in 1899 in Barisal, a district town in the British Raj, into a Bengali Baidya family. His ancestors originated from the Bikrampur region (now Mushiganj) of the Dhaka Division, from the now-extinct village of Gaupara in the kumarvog area of the Louhajang Upazila on the banks of the river Padma.[17] Das' grandfather Sarbānanda Dāśgupta was the first to settle permanently in Barisal. He was an early exponent of the reformist Brahmo Samaj movement in Barisal and was highly regarded in town for his philanthropy. He erased the -gupta suffix from the family name, regarding it as a symbol of Vedic Brahmin excess, thus rendering the surname to Das.[18]

Jibanananda's father, Satyānanda Dāś, was a schoolmaster and publisher, and his mother, Kusumakumārī Dāś, was a poet who explored social issues.[19] He was the eldest son and had two siblings, Aśōkānanda and Sucharita.

Education and career

Jibanananda attended Brajamohon College in Barisal, where he passed both his Matriculation and Intermediate exams with a first division.[20] In 1919, he received a BA Degree in English literature from Presidency College, Kolkata[21] and earned a master's degree from Calcutta University in 1921.[22][4]

Following his graduation, Das taught and tutored students in English, but he experienced persistent difficulty in securing stable employment and faced financial hardship throughout his life.[23]

Literary career

Alongside teaching, Das occasionally wrote poems, sometimes under pseudonyms, for various Bengali magazines including Bangabani, Kallol, Kalikalam, and Progoti.[20] His first poem called "Borsho-abahon" (Arrival of the New Year) appeared anonymously in the Boishakh issue of Brahmobadi journal in 1919.[20] He published his first collection of poems called Jhara Palok (Fallen Feathers) in 1927.[20] In 1935, Das wrote Mrittu'r Aagey (“Before Death”). This was followed by his most celebrated poem Banalata Sen, both of which were published in the first two issues of the newly launched poetry magazine Kobita.[20] In 1942, the poem Banalata Sen was included in Das’s third poetry collection of the same name.[20] After the partition of Bengal in 1947, Das left Barisal for Kolkata, where he became the editor of a newly published literary magazine named Dwandwo (Conflict).[20] By the last year of his life, Jibanananda was acclaimed as one of the best poets of the post-Tagore era.[20][clarification needed] In May 1954, he published a volume titled Sreshttho Kobita (Best Poems), which won the Indian Sahitya Akademi Award in 1955.[20] His sonnet cycle Rupasi Bangla was published posthumously in 1957.[24][25]

Personal life

In May 1930, Jibanananda married Labanyaprabha Das (née Gupta) and they had a daughter and son named Manjusree and Samarananda.[26] Labanyaprabha was the daughter of Rohini Kumar Gupta and Sarojubala Gupta. Her paternal uncle was Acharya of the Brahmo Samaj in Dhaka.

Death

During Jibanananda's evening walk on 14 October 1954, he was struck by a tram while crossing a road near Calcutta's Deshapriya Park.[27] He was taken to Shambhunath Pundit Hospital, where he died eight days later.[28][29] Witnesses had later reported that the tram had sounded its whistle, but Das did not stop and was hit. Some accounts have speculated that the incident may have been a suicide.[30][31]

His body was cremated the following day at Keoratola crematorium.[32]

Writing style

Das's early poetry reflects the influence of his contemporary poets,[4] but by the later half of the 20th century, his own work had become a major influence on the development of modern Bengali verse.[33] Das's poetry includes elements of surrealism,[9][10] depression, and melancholia,[11] while also reflecting nature through vivid, mystical images and metaphors.[13]

First Edition of Banalata Sen published from Kavita Bhavan of Buddhadev Bose

Legacy

During his lifetime, Das published only 269 poems in different journals and magazines, of which 162 were collected in seven anthologies, from Jhara Palak to Bela Obela Kalbela.[34] After his death, it was discovered that, in addition to poetry, Das had written 21 novels and 108 short stories.[4][30]

Many of his poems have been published posthumously at the initiative of his brother Asokananda Das, sister Sucharita Das and nephew Amitananda Das, and the efforts of Dr. Bhumendra Guha, who over the decades copied them from scattered manuscripts. By 2008, the total count of Jibananda's known poems stood at almost 800. In addition, numerous novels and short stories were discovered and published about the same time.[35]

Jibananda's first book 'Jhara Palak'

Jibanananda scholar Clinton B. Seely has termed Jibanananda Das as "Bengal's most cherished poet since Rabindranath Tagore".[36] He was known as a surrealist poet for his spontaneous, frenzied overflow of subconscious mind in poetry and especially in diction.[10]

A film inspired by his short story Jamrultola, titled 'Sunder Jibon', directed by Sandeep Chattopadhyay and produced by Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute;[37][38] won the National Film Award for Best Short Fiction Film at the 50th National Film Awards, with Shantanu Bose in the lead role.

Major works

Poetry

  • First page of the manuscript of Rupashi Bangla by Jibanananda Das
    Shaat-ti Tarar Timir, (Darkness of Seven Stars), 1948.
  • Shreshtho Kobita, (Best Poems), 1954: Navana, Calcutta.
  • Ruposhi Bangla (Bengal, the Beautiful), written in 1934, published posthumously in 1957.
  • Bela Obela Kalbela (Times, Bad Times, End Times), 1961, published posthumously but the manuscript was prepared during lifetime.
  • Sudorshona(The beautiful), published posthumously in 1973: Sahitya Sadan, Calcutta.
  • Alo Prithibi (The World of Light), published posthumously in 1981: Granthalaya Private Ltd., Calcutta.
  • Manobihangam (The Bird that is my Heart), published posthumously in 1979: Bengal Publishers Private Ltd. Calcutta.
  • Oprkashitô Ekanno (Unpublished Fifty-one), published posthumously in 1999, Mawla Brothers, Dhaka.
  • Krishna Dasami, Pathak Samabesh, Dhaka. published posthumously in 2015.
  • Surya Osuryaloke, Suchoyoni, Dhaka. published posthumously in 2021.

Major collected texts

  • Bandopdhaya, Deviprasad : Kabya Songroho − Jibanananda Das (tr. Collection of Poetry of Jibanananda Das), 1993, Bharbi, 13/1 Bankim Chatterjje Street, Kolkata-73.
  • Bandopdhaya, Deviprasad : Kabya Songroho − Jibanananda Das (tr. Collection of Poetry of Jibanananda Das), 1999, Gatidhara, 38/2-KA Bangla Bazaar, Dhaka-1100, Bangladesh.
  • Bandopdhaya, Deviprasad : Jibanananda Das Uttorparba (1954–1965), 2000, Pustak Bipani, Calcutta.
  • Chowdhury, Faizul Latif (editor) (1990), Jibanananda Das'er Prôbôndha Sômôgrô, (tr: Complete non-fictional prose works of Jibanananda Das), First edition : Desh Prokashon, Dhaka.
  • Chowdhury, Faizul Latif (editor) (1995), Jibanananda Das'er Prôbôndha Sômôgrô, (tr: Complete non-fictional prose works of Jibanananda Das), Second edition : Mowla Brothers, Dhaka.
  • Chowdhury, F. L. (ed) : Oprokashito 51 (tr. Unpublished fifty one poems of Jibanananda Das), 1999, Mawla Brothers, Dhaka.
  • Shahriar, Abu Hasan : Jibanananda Das-er Gronthito-Ogronthito Kabita Samagra, 2004, Agaami Prokashoni, Dhaka.

Books on Jibanananda

  • (1965) 'Ekti Nakkhatro Ase', Ambuj Basu, Mousumi.
  • (1970) 'Kobi Jibanananda Das', Sanjay Bhattacharya, Varbi.
  • (1971) 'Jibanananda (ek khando)', Gopal Chandra Roy, Sahittya Sadan;
  • 'Manus Jibanananda', Labanya Das, Bengal Publishers;
  • 'Jibanananda Smriti', Debkumar Basu edited, Karuna Prokasani.
  • (1972) 'Suddhatamo Kobi', Abdul Mannan Saiyad, Knowledge Home, Dhaka; 'Rupasi Banglar Kobi Jibanananda', Bijan Kanti Sarkar, Bijoy Sahitya Mandir; 'Rupasi Banglar Kobi Jibanananda', Shaymapada Sarkar, Kamini Prokasan.
  • (1973) 'Jibanananda das', edited by Birendra Bhattacharya, Onnisto.
  • (1975) 'Kobi Jibanananda', Suddhaswatto Basu, Sankha Prokasan.
  • (1976) 'Jibanishilpi Jibanananda Das', Asadujjan, Bangladesh Book Corporation, Dhaka.
  • (1979) 'Rupasi Banglar Kobi Jibanananda', Bijan Kanti Sarkar, Bijoy Sahitya Mandir; 'Rupasi Banglar Kobi Jibanananda', Shyamapada Sarkar, Kamini Prokashan.
  • (1980) 'Rupasi Banglar Dui Kobi', Purnendu Patri, Ananda Publishers Ltd.
  • (1983) 'Kacher Manus Jibanananda', Ajit Ghose, Bijoy Krishna Girls' College Cheap Store;'Rabindranath Najrul Jibanananda ebong aekjon Probasi Bangali', Kalyan Kumar Basu, Biswagaen;'Adhunikata, Jibanananda o Porabastob', Tapodhir Bhattacharya and Swapna Bhattacharya, Nobark;'Jibananander Chetona Jagot', Pradumno Mitra, Sahityshri;'Jibanananda Das:Jiboniponji o Granthoponji', Provat Kumar Das, Hardo;'Prosongo:Jibanananda', Shibaji Bandopadhaya, Ayon.
  • (1984) 'Jibanananda', Amalendu Basu, Banishilpo,;'Uttor Probesh', Susnato Jana;'Jibanananda', edited by Abdul Manna Sayad, Charitra, Dhaka;'Jibanananda Prasongiki', Sandip Datta, Hardo,
  • (1985) 'Ami sei Purohit', Sucheta Mitra, A.Mukherji and Co;'Probondhokar Jibananada', Subrata Rudro, Nath Publishing;'Jibanananda Jiggasa', edited by Tarun Mukhopadhaya, pustok Biponi.
  • (2003) 'Jibananda : Kabitar Mukhamukhi', Narayan Haldar.
  • (2005) 'Amar Jibanananda', Dr. Himabanta Bondopadhyay, Bangiya Sahitya Samsad.
  • (2008) 'Essays on Jibanananda Das', edited by Chowdhury F. L., Pathak Samabesh, Dhaka.
  • (2009) 'Etodin Kothay Chilen', Anisul Hoque.
  • (2014) 'Jibananander Andhokaare', Rajib Sinha, Ubudash, Kolkata-12.
  • Ekjon Komolalebu (Reincarnation as an Orange: The Story of Jibanananda), Sahaduzzaman

Awards

The Kolkata Poetry Confluence, in collaboration with Bhasha Samsad, has instituted the Jibanananda Das Award for poetry translation.[39] Jibanananda Das awards for translation were given away in ten different languages.[40]

A literary award named Jibanananda Puroshkar, also known as the Jibanananda Prize, has been instituted in Bangladesh.[41] It confers annual awards to the best works of poetry and prose by Bangladeshi authors.[42]

Footnotes

  1. Bengali pronunciation: ['dʒibonˌanondoː daʃ]

Citations

Further reading

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