CHATTERJEE, BANKIM CHANDRA


Meaning of CHATTERJEE, BANKIM CHANDRA in English

born June 26/27, 1838, near Naihati, Bengal, India died April 8, 1894, Calcutta Chatterjee also spelled Catterji, Bengali Bankim Candra Cattopadhyay Indian author, whose novels firmly established prose as a literary vehicle for the Bengali language and helped create in India a school of fiction on the European model. Bankim Chandra was a member of an orthodox Brahman family and was educated at Hooghly College, at Presidency College, Calcutta, and at the University of Calcutta, of which he was one of the first graduates. From 1858, until his retirement in 1891, he served as a deputy magistrate in the Indian civil service. Some of Bankim Chandra's youthful compositions appeared in the newspaper Sambad Prabhakar, and in 1858 he published a volume of poems entitled Lalita O Manas. For a while he wrote in English, and his novel Rajmohan's Wife appeared serially in Indian Field in 1864. His first notable Bengali work was the novel Durgesnandini, which features a Rajput hero and a Bengali heroine. In itself it is of indifferent quality, but in the philosopher Debendranath Tagore's words, it took the Bengali heart by storm, and with it the Bengali novel was full born. Kapalkundala, a love story against a gruesome background of Tantric rites, was published in 1866; and Mrnalini, which was set at the time of the first Muslim invasion of Bengal, in 1869. Bangadarsan, Bankim Chandra's epochmaking newspaper, commenced publication in 1872, and in it some of his later novels were serialized. Bisabrksa, which poses the problem of widow remarriage, and Indira were published in 1873; Yugalanguriya in 1874; Radharani and Candrasekhar in 1875; Rajani in 1877; Krsnakanter Uil, which the author considered his greatest novel, in 1878; Rajsimha, a story of Rajput heroism and Muslim oppression, in 1881; Anandamath, a patriotic tale of the revolt of the sannyasis against the Muslim forces of the East India company, in 1882; Debi Caudhurani, a domestic novel with a background of dacoity, in 1884; and finally, in 1886, Sitaram, a marital tangle and a struggle of Hindus against Muslim tyranny. Bankim Chandra's novels are considered exciting to read but structurally faulty. Serial publication was partly responsible for imperfect integration of the various episodes. Evolution of plot depends too frequently on chance or supernatural intervention, and characterization is often subordinated to an overriding didactic purpose. His achievements, however, outweigh these technical imperfections. To his contemporaries his voice was that of a prophet; his valiant Hindu heroes aroused their patriotism and pride of race. In him nationalism and Hinduism merged as one; and his creed was epitomized in the song Bande Mataram (Hail to thee, Mother)from his novel Anandamathwhich later became the mantra (hymn) and slogan of Hindu India in its struggle for independence.

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