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  1. Nabarun Bhattacharya (23 June 1948 – 31 July 2014) was an Indian writer who wrote in the Bengali language. He was born at Berhampur, West Bengal. He was the only child of actor and playwright Bijon Bhattacharya and writer and activist Mahashweta Devi. [1]

  2. Nabarun Bhattacharya (1948–2014) was an award-winning Bengali poet, short-story writer, and novelist. He published eight novels, seven short-story collections, three volumes of poetry, and some collections of prose.

  3. 26. Juni 2019 · I first came across the work of Nabarun Bhattacharya (1948–2014) about a decade ago in Calcutta, after a long afternoon of wandering conversation of the kind that Bengalis call adda, a session that no doubt included numerous cups of tea, many cigarettes, much talk about books, films, and politics before peaking, in the evening, with kebabs and c...

  4. 28. Mai 2020 · The quest mode here becomes the vehicle of a literary-critical, social-scientific investigation into the politics of Naxalism. In Nabarun Bhattacharya’s novels, Harbart (1994) and Kāngāl Mālshāt (2003; Warcry of the Beggars), the narrative is structured as an urban fantasy. This mode, produced through a stylistic use of ...

    • Sourit Bhattacharya
    • sourit.bhattacharya@glasgow.ac.uk
    • 2020
  5. 31. Juli 2014 · Nabarun Bhattacharya was an Indian Bengali writer deeply committed to a revolutionary and radical aesthetics. He was born at Baharampur (Berhampur), West Bengal. He was the only child of actor Bijon Bhattacharya and writer Mahashweta Devi.

    • (1,1K)
    • July 31, 2014
    • June 23, 1948
  6. Nabarun, like his mother, the Magsaysay award winning writer, Mahasweta Devi and his father, the actor playwright Bijan Bhattacharya, has sharpened and reinforced the idea of the writer as the literary crusader, as the emancipatory agent. When the elitist cult of the writer is being valorised and appropriated by the ideology of the market ...

  7. 28. Mai 2020 · Nabarun Bhattacharya, son of Mahasweta Devi, satirises these practices in his novels, Harbart (1994) and Kāngāl Mālshāt (2003). Bhattacharya’s writing has mainly dealt with the victimised and marginalised communities in the postcolonial urban metropolis—beggars, hawkers, domestic helps, small state-level workers and ...