Subhas Mukhopadhyay (poet)

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Subhas Mukhopadhyay (Bangla: সুভাষ মুখোপাধ্যায় Shubhash Mukhopaddhae) (February 12, 1919 - July 8, 2003) was one of the foremost Bengali poets of the 20th century.

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[edit] Life and career

Subhas Mukhopadhyay was born in Krishnanagar, a town in Nadia district in the province of West Bengal. An excellent student, he studied philosophy at the Scottish Church College in Calcutta, graduating with honours in 1941. Subhas married Gita Bandyopadhyay, also a well-known writer, in 1951.

Like his contemporary Sukanta Bhattacharya, Mukhopadhyay developed strong political beliefs at an early age. He was deeply committed to the cause of social justice, and was active in left-wing student politics through his college years. Following graduation, he formally joined the Communist Party of India. He thus became one of a handful of literary practitioners with first-hand experience as a party worker and activist.

Cover of Padatik, first published in 1940
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Cover of Padatik, first published in 1940

In 1940, while still a student, he published his first volume of poetry Padatik (The Foot-Soldier). Many critics regard this book as a milestone in the development of modern Bengali poetry. It represented a clear departure from the earlier Kallol generation of poets; and Subhas' distinctive, direct voice, allied with his technical skill and radical worldview, gained him great popularity. In his poetry, Subhas grappled with the massive upheavals of that era which ruptured Bengali society from top to bottom. The 1940s were marked by world war, famine, partition, communal riots and mass emigration in Bengal. Subhas' writings broke away from the traditional moorings of the establishment poets, and instead addressed the despair and disillusion felt by the common people. He remained throughout his life an advocate of the indivisibility of the Bengali people and Bengali culture. His radical activitism continued unabated. He was one of the leaders of the "Anti-Fascist Writers' and Artists' Association", formed in March 1942 in reaction to the murder of Somen Chanda, a fellow-writer and Marxist activist. Subhas remained attached with the Communist Party until 1982, and spent time in jail as a political prisoner briefly in the late 1960s. From the late 1950s onwards, Subhas' poetry evolved into something more personal and introspective. The lyricism of Phul phutuk na phutuk, aaj Boshonto, one of his most famous poems, was a result of this period.

Later in the 1970s, Subhas' poetry took a turn toward the narrative and the allegorical. But he never lost his technical facility nor his unique voice. Besides verse, Subhas also wrote works of prose including novels, essays and travelogues. He was active in journalism too, having served on the editorial staff of daily and weekly newspapers. He was an editor of the leading Bengali literary journal Parichay. He was also an accomplished and popular writer for children.

Mukhopadhyay received numerous awards and honours in his lifetime, including the two highest literary prizes in India: the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1964 (for Joto Dureii Jai), and the Bharatiya Gyanpith Award in 1991.

According to those close to him, Subhas Mukhopadhyay had become disillusioned with politics in his final years. He suffered from severe heart and kidney ailments, and died in Kolkata in July 2003. He was 84.

[edit] Sample Work

Excerpt from Phul phutuk na phutuk, aaj Boshonto

Phul phutuk na phutuk, aaj Boshonto
Shaan-badhano footpath-ey
Pathorey paa dubiye
Ek katth-khotta gachh
Kochi kochi patae
Pajor fatiye hashchhey.

(Whether flowers bloom or not, it's Spring today / Standing on the concrete pavement / Dipping his toes into the rock / A curmudgeonly tree / Decked out in new leaves / Laughs his heart out.)

[edit] Notable works

  • Padatik
  • Chirkut
  • Agnikone
  • Phul Phutuk
  • Joto Dureii Jai
  • E Bhai
  • Kaal Modhumash
  • Choley Gechhey Boney
  • Bangali'r Itihaash
  • Desh Bidesher Rupkotha

[edit] External links