Shobhanasundari Mukhopadhyay (born Shovona Devi Tagore in 1877 in Calcutta; died 26 May 1937, in Howrah[1]) was an Indian writer, known for her collections of folktales. She was the daughter of Hemendranath Tagore and the niece of writer Rabindranath Tagore.
Shobhanasundari Mukhopadhyay | |
---|---|
Born | 1877 Calcutta, British India |
Died | 1937 Howrah, British India |
Other names | Shovona Devi, Shovona Tagore, Shovana Devi, Shovana Tagore |
Father | Hemendranath Tagore |
Relatives | Niece of Rabindranath Tagore |
Biography
editThe fifth daughter of Hemendranath Tagore, Shovona Devi Tagore was raised in an upper-class, English-educated Hindu family in Calcutta (Kolkata).[2][3] She married Nagendranath Mukhopadhyay, who was an English professor in Jaipur.[3]
She died in 1937 at age sixty of complications relating to high blood pressure.[1]
Writing
editOne of Mukhopadhyay's first projects was an English translation of her aunt Swarnakumari Devi's Bengali novel Kahake?[3][4] After this, Mukhopadhyay became interested in recording local oral traditions and folktales.
The Orient Pearls (1915)
editThe Orient Pearls: Indian Folklore contains twenty-eight folktales, gathered by Mukhopadhyay herself, some from family servants.[2][5][3] Her prefatory note to the book describes her inspiration and process:
The idea of writing these tales occurred to me while reading a volume of short stories by my uncle, Sir Rabindranath Tagore; but as I have none of his inventive genius, I set about collecting folk-tales and putting them into an English garb; and the tales contained in the following pages were told to me by various illiterate village folks, and not a few by a blind man still in my service, with a retentive memory, and a great capacity for telling a story.[6]
The Orient Pearls was reviewed in publications such as The Dial and The Spectator and appeared in libraries around the world shortly after its publication.[7][8][9] The book brought Bengali folktales to the attention of English-speaking folklorists around the world, who used it as a source in their comparative work, including new forms of computer-aided study.[10][11][12][13] Her stories have been republished in recent academic collections of the writings of Indian women.[14]
Some scholars have positioned Mukhopadhyay's work as similar in method and tone to British colonial ethnography.[2][15] Others describe its similarity to other Victorian short story collections produced in India and elsewhere, filled with subtle ideas about social reform,[16] or as demonstrative of the complex sociopolitical circumstances of translating folktales into the colonizer's language.[citation needed] Others view her interest in local culture as a precursor to Indian nationalism.[17] Another scholar argues that Tagore's preface acknowledges the constrained position of a female author.[18]
Later works
editMukhopadhyay published four books on Indian folklore, religion, culture, and myths for the London-based publishing firm Macmillan between 1915 and 1920. In Indian Fables and Folk-lore (1919) and The Tales of the Gods of India (1920), she includes information on her source material for the stories, something she had not previously done.[3][19]
Works
edit- To Whom? An Indian Love Story (translation of Kahake? by Swarnakumari Devi, her aunt) (1898[4] or 1910[3])
- The Orient Pearls: Indian Folktales (1915) (At Wikisource; at Archive.org)
- Indian Nature Myths (1919) (open access at Internet Archive)
- Indian Fables and Folk-lore (1919) (transcription project; open access on HathiTrust; open access on GoogleBooks)
- The Tales of the Gods of India (1920)
Family tree
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Deaths". The Times of India. Mumbai, India. 10 June 1937. p. 2.
- ^ a b c Prasad, Leela (15 November 2020). The Audacious Raconteur: Sovereignty and Storytelling in Colonial India. Cornell University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-5017-5228-5.
- ^ a b c d e f Deb, Chitra (6 April 2010). Women of The Tagore Household. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-93-5214-187-6.
- ^ a b Rani, K. Suneetha (25 September 2017). Influence of English on Indian Women Writers: Voices from Regional Languages. SAGE Publishing India. ISBN 978-93-81345-34-4.
- ^ Prasad, Leela (October 2015). "Cordelia's Salt: Interspatial Reading of Indic Filial-Love Stories". Oral Histories. 29 (2): 253. eISSN 1542-4308.
- ^ Mukhopadhyay, Shobhanasundari (1915). The Orient Pearls. New York: MacMillan and Co., Ltd.
- ^ Bulletin of the Public Library of the City of Boston. Boston: The Trustees of the Boston Public Library. 1916. p. 123.
- ^ "New Books". The Dial. LX (716): 394. 13 April 1916 – via Google Books.
- ^ "The Orient Pearls by Shovona Devi (book review)". The Spectator. 115 (4564): 885. 18 December 1915 – via ProQuest.
This is a collection of fairy-stories, fables, and folklore which may take a good place among the numerous books of this kind that now come to us from India. If the English is the unaided work of Sir Rabindranath Tagore's niece, it is a remarkable achievement; little naïvetés of expression and unexpected terms add piquancy rather than detract from the effect.
- ^ Brown, W. N. (1921). "Vyaghramari, or the Lady Tiger-Killer: A Study of the Motif of Bluff in Hindu Fiction". American Journal of Philology. XLII (166): 139 – via GoogleBooks.
- ^ Bruce, James Douglas (1923). The Evolution of Arthurian Romance from the Beginnings Down to the Year 1300. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press. p. 22.
- ^ Davidson, Hilda Ellis; Davidson, Hilda Roderick Ellis; Chaudhri, Anna (2006). A Companion to the Fairy Tale. DS Brewer. p. 245. ISBN 978-1-84384-081-7.
- ^ Colby, B. N.; Collier, George A.; Postal, Susan K. (1963). "Comparison of Themes in Folktales by the General Inquirer System". The Journal of American Folklore. 76 (302): 318–323. doi:10.2307/537928. ISSN 0021-8715. JSTOR 537928.
- ^ Souza, Eunice de; Pereira, Lindsay (2004). Women's Voices: Selections from Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Indian Writing in English. Oxford University Press India. p. 380. ISBN 978-0-19-566785-1.
- ^ Prasad, Leela (2003). "The Authorial Other in Folktale Collections in Colonial India: Tracing Narration and its Dis/Continuities". Cultural Dynamics. 15 (1): 7. doi:10.1177/a033107. S2CID 219962230.
- ^ K., Naik, M. (1987). "Chapter 3: The Winds of Change: 1857 to 1920". Studies in Indian English literature. Sterling Publishers. ISBN 81-207-0657-9. OCLC 17208758.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Islam, Mazharul (1985). Folklore, the Pulse of the People: In the Context of Indic Folklore. Concept Publishing Company. p. 117.
- ^ Roy, Sarani (31 July 2021). "Defining the Rupkatha: Tracing the Generic Tradition of the Bengali Fairy Tale". Children's Literature in Education. 53 (4): 488–506. doi:10.1007/s10583-021-09457-6. ISSN 0045-6713. S2CID 238761580.
- ^ Shovona, Devi (1919). Indian Fables and Folk-lore. Macmillan.