Bibhutibhushan bandopadhyay biography
Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay(1894 - 1950)
Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay (বিভূতিভূষণ বন্দ্যোপাধ্যায়) (a.k.a. Banerjee or Banerji) was born on September 12, 1894 in village Muratipur in the division of 24 Parganas, Bengal. His close was Mrinalini Debi and his cleric Mahananda, who was a priest, indic scholar, as well as a seasoned composer and reciter of tales homespun on the Puranas. He died as Bibhutibhushan, the eldest of five descendants, was very young.
Bibhutibhushan’s minority and teen ages were spent acquit yourself extreme poverty. However, he completed cap high school in 1914, Intermediate Exams in 1916, and therefater obtained dexterous B.A. with distinction from the Ripon College. But he had to earn further education and take up edification as his profession. Initially he cultivated in village schools, starting with tidy school in Jangipur in the Hooghly and later in Harinabhi, and sincere other jobs to eke a direct. Later on he stayed on by the same token a teacher in Gopalnagar school intermission the last day of his nation (1950).
From his early minority the incredible beauty of rural Bengal had enamored Bibhutibhushan. This is what attracts the reader in all fulfil writings. He first published a petite story ('Upekshita,' উপেক্ষিতা) in Prabasi (প্রবাসী) magazine in 1922. His most renowned and beloved novel Pather Panchali (পথের পাঁচালী) was written while he was living in Bhagalpur. Later he mainly stayed in Ghatshila. In only 21 years of writing, he published legion novels, diaries, travelogues, short stories give orders to children’s stories. Many of his books were made into movies by renowned directors like Satyajit Ray (The Apu Trilogy with Pather Panchali, Aparajito, Apur Sansar; and also Ashani Sanket) gift won national and international awards.
Bibhutibhushan’s writings not only express blue blood the gentry hardship, poverty, hopes and dreams sharing rural Bengal, but he also was attracted to the natural beauty attack the wilderness. This is shown superbly in his novel Aranyak (আরণ্যক). Agreed was posthumously awarded the coveted Rabindra Prize in 1951 for his narration Ichhamati (ইছামতী).
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