Three novellas : Nashtnir, Dui Bon, Malancha
By: Tagore, Rabindra Nath.
Contributor(s): Ray, Sukhendu [tr.].
Material type: BookPublisher: Oxford Oxford University Press 2010Description: xxxvii, 165p.ISBN: 9780198068884..Subject(s): Tagore, Rabindranath, 1861-1941 | Novel -- English literatureDDC classification: 891.433 | T129tE Summary: Unconventional relationships-a married woman in love with a younger brother-in-law; a love triangle between a man, his wife, and his sister-in-law; an intimate affair between a married man and a distant cousin-are the subject of Rabindranath Tagore's three novellas Nashtanir (The Broken Home), Dui Bon (Two Sisters), and Malancha (The Garden and the Gardener). In these three novellas-written between 1901 and 1933-Tagore focuses on the subtle nuances of unsanctioned relationships, exploring feelings of loneliness and worthlessness in middle-class housewives in colonial Bengal. They display Tagore's remarkable understanding of a woman's psyche, with all three works underlining the incompatibility between husbands and wives, and how the ensuing void lead to forbidden relationships. In Charulata, Sharmila, and Neeraja-the three strong yet vulnerable heroines-Tagore presents emerging 'new women', with thoughts and desires of their own. While Sukhendu Ray's new translations retain the cultural and linguistic ambience of the original, Bharati Ray's Introduction places these works in the social context of early-twentieth-century Bengal.Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur | General Stacks | 891.433 T129tE (Browse shelf) | Available | A184527 |
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891.433 N131r RAMNAGARI | 891.433 P25n NITHALLE KI DAYARI | 891.433 P916gE GODAN | 891.433 R113nE Three novellas | 891.433 R137s SONA MATI | 891.433 R219d2 DIL EK SADA KAGAZ | 891.433 Sh23s SHUBHDA |
Unconventional relationships-a married woman in love with a younger brother-in-law; a love triangle between a man, his wife, and his sister-in-law; an intimate affair between a married man and a distant cousin-are the subject of Rabindranath Tagore's three novellas Nashtanir (The Broken Home), Dui Bon (Two Sisters), and Malancha (The Garden and the Gardener). In these three novellas-written between 1901 and 1933-Tagore focuses on the subtle nuances of unsanctioned relationships, exploring feelings of loneliness and worthlessness in middle-class housewives in colonial Bengal. They display Tagore's remarkable understanding of a woman's psyche, with all three works underlining the incompatibility between husbands and wives, and how the ensuing void lead to forbidden relationships. In Charulata, Sharmila, and Neeraja-the three strong yet vulnerable heroines-Tagore presents emerging 'new women', with thoughts and desires of their own. While Sukhendu Ray's new translations retain the cultural and linguistic ambience of the original, Bharati Ray's Introduction places these works in the social context of early-twentieth-century Bengal.
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