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  1. 11. Aug. 2016 · By N.M. MAHASWETA DEVI, a Bengali writer who died on July 28th, was one of independent India’s most moving and important writers, admired as much for her fiction as for being a fearless ...

  2. 27. Aug. 2021 · One of writer and activist Mahasweta Devi’s (1926-2016) most widely read books is Hajar Churashir Ma (Mother of 1084), which was adapted for theatre and film. Set in the backdrop of the violent ...

  3. Mahasweta Devi (14 January 1926 – 28 July 2016) was an Indian Bengali fiction writer and socio-political activist. Her notable literary works include Hajar Churashir Maa, Rudali, and Aranyer Adhikar. [1] She wrote over 100 novels and over 20 collections of short stories primarily written in Bengali but often translated to other languages.

  4. 31. Aug. 2017 · Mahasweta Devi’s powerful publications on themes of social realism, caste and most important, Adivasi (indigenous people) allows the readers to meander through the complex, often intense, struggle faced by the most defenseless people on the map of nation-state. Even when negotiating language differences, Devi’s words never fails to construct her character as docile, disempowered.

  5. Mahasweta Devi’s first novel Jhansir Rani, published in 1956, was an indication of the genre of her future literary work. She toured Jhansi extensively, collecting facts and myths, from local people and folk songs, on Laxmibai, the rebel queen. She went on to prove that traditionally recorded history was woefully

  6. Tief berührt scheint Rezensentin Monika Carbe von Mahasweta Devis "kühlem, distanziertem und ganz ohne Pathos" geschriebenem Roman, der sich "der Trauer der Mütter widmet". Devi erzählt die Geschichte einer Frau, deren Sohn während des bengalischen Naxalitenaufstand von 1970 erschossen wird und dessen Leichnam eben mit der Nummer 1084 ...

  7. 28. Juli 2016 · Mahasweta Devi was an Indian social activist and writer. She was born in 1926 in Dhaka, to literary parents in a Hindu Brahmin family. Her father Manish Ghatak was a well-known poet and novelist of the Kallol era, who used the pseudonym Jubanashwa. Mahasweta's mother Dharitri Devi was also a writer and a social worker.