Review: Tagore's writings in various Shades of Difference


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) From left: François Vandeville Director Embassy of France in India; Esha Béteille Publisher - Social Science Press; Samuel Berthet Associate Prof Shiv Nadar University; Actor Sharmila Tagore; Translator and Editor Radha Chakravarty; Writer Dancer and Cultural Activist Lubna Marium at the book launch; Inset of Book Cover

By Aparajita Gupta

Title: Shades of Difference - Selected Writings of Rabindranath Tagore | Edited by: Radha Chakravarty | Publisher: Social Science Press and 9.9 Media

Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore's work in diverse genres has always attracted and fascinated authors and readers alike. This collection of some of his greatest works talks about Tagore's attempt to approach the central impulse of contradiction in various aspects of life.

The collection includes short stories plays poems articles travel writing correspondence and conversations. It depicts his complex dynamic approach to commonly perceived dualities like life versus death nature versus culture male versus female tradition versus modernity East versus West local versus universal and urban versus rural to highlight his humanistic vision and its significance for the modern world.

The editor of the book Radha Chakravarty is a writer critic and translator. She has also co-edited The Essential Tagore which was nominated the New Statesman Book of the Year 2011. She is the author of Feminism and Contemporary Women Writers and Novelist Tagore: Gender and Modernity in Selected Texts.

The book also comes with a DVD which has paintings doodles music of Rabindranath Tagore among many other things.

The book has English translation of short stories of Tagore like 'A Fantastic Tale' 'The Living and the Dead' and 'Trespass'. It also has his plays like 'Chitra' and 'Chandalika'. Translation from his famous poem 'Gitanjali' is also there.

In Gitanjali the poet abjures the elitism of Brahminical temple-rituals and affirms his faith in a God who lives among the downtrodden toilers of this earth.

Chakravarty in her book said Tagore's intuitions and judgements were never value-neutral. His recognition of heterogeneity and insistence on inclusivity do not imply an absence of ethical moral social political and aesthetic discrimination.

"Nor is Tagore's thinking simplistic. While constantly alive to the heterogeneity of the world around him he refuses to reduce things to rigid binaries. In place of black and white categorisations we discover in his works fine-tuned shades of difference a whole spectrum of possibilities" she said.

Tagore was brought up in a household that followed eclectic cultural practices drawing elements from indigenous as well as European traditions. He was thus acutely aware of differences between cultures but was also receptive to a range of influences from traditions that did not always dovetail neatly Chakravarty observed.

The book mentions about Tagore's early life and how it was frequently touched by the shadow of death and how later it had left an impression on his writings.

It speaks about how Tagore's egalitarian impulse had found an expression in his opposition to communal strife and his espousal of a tolerant religious ethic.

Although Tagore's thought and creativity continued to evolve throughout his life certain core concerns remain central to his writings like freedom equality politics education rural reconstruction culture ecology science religion forms of domination and marginalisation collaboration between cultures tolerance creativity and philosophy.

IANS


The Peninsula

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Newsletter