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Tagore: the Ubermensch
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Tagore: LifeGreatest writer in modern Indian literature, Bengali poet, novelist, educator, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Tagore was awarded the knighthood in 1915, but he surrendered it in 1919 as a protest against the Massacre of Amritsar, where British troops killed some 400 Indian demonstrators protesting colonial laws. Tagore's reputation in the West as a mystic has perhaps mislead his Western readers to ignore his role as a reformer and critic of colonialism. "Bigotry tries to keep truth safe in its hands. With a grip that kills it." (from Fireflies) Rabindranath Tagore was born in
Calcutta in a wealthy and prominent Brahman family. His father was Maharishi Debendranath Tagore, a religious reformer and scholar, his mother Sarada Devi. His
grandfather had established a huge financial empire for himself, and financed public projects, such as Calcutta Medical College. The Tagores were pioneers of
Bengal Renaissance and tried to combine traditional Indian culture with and Western ideas. All the children
contributed significantly to Bengali literature and culture.
Tagore, the youngest of the children, received his early education first from tutors and then at a
variety of schools, among them Bengal Academy where he studied Bengali history and culture, and University College, London, where he studied law but left after a year without completing his studies. In 1883 Tagore married Mrinalini Devi Raichaudhuri, with whom he had two sons and three daughters. He moved 1890 to East Bengal in 1890. His first book, a collection of poems, was published when he was 17. In East Bengal (now Bangladesh) he collected loca legends and folklore and wrote seven volumes of poetry between 1893 and 1900, including SONAR TARI (The Golden Boat), 1894 and KHANIKA, 1900. This was highly productive period in
Tagore's life, and earned him the rather misleading epitaph 'The Bengali Shelley.' More important was that Tagore wrote in the common language of the people and abandoned the ancient for of the Indian language. This also was something that was hard to accept among his critics and scholars. Highlights
Young Tagore: Child of English Romanticism
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Tagore & Einstein: two most accomplished figures of 20th century
Tagore and Ghandi: champions of modern India
| Year | Works | Year | Works |
| 1878 | Kabikahini: A Poet's Tale | 1882 | Sandhya Sangeet /Evening Songs |
| 1883 | Prabhat Sangeet/ Morning Songs | 1883 | BauThakuranir Hat |
| 1887 | Rajarshi | 1889 | Raja O Rani: The King and the Queen |
| 1890 | Bisharjan: Sacrifice | 1890 | Manasi |
| 1891 | Europe Jatreer Diary | 1893 | Balmiki Pratibha |
| 1894 | Sonar Tari: The Golden Boat | 1900 | Khanika: Moments |
| 1900 | Katha | 1900 | Kalpana |
| 1901 | Naibedya | 1901 | Nashta Neer: The Broken Nest |
| 1902 | Smaran | 1902 | Binodini |
| 1903 | Chokher Bali: Eyesore | 1905 | Nauka Dubi: |
| 1906 | Kheya | 1906 | Naukadubi: The Wreck |
| '07-09 | Gora | 1908 | Saradotsab: Autumn Festival |
| 1912 | Galpa Gucchha: A Bunch of Stories | 1912 | Chinna Patra: Torn Letter |
| 1912 | Biday Abhisap: The Curse at Farewell | 1912 | Geetanjali: Song Offerings |
| 1912 | Jiban Smriti: My Reminiscenes | 1912 | Dakghar: Post Office |
| 1913 | The Crescent Moon | 1913 | Glimpses of Bengal Life |
| 1913 | Khudita Pashan: The Hungry Stones and Other Stories | 1914 | Chitra |
| 1914 | Geet Malya | 1914 | The King of the Dark Chamber 1914 |
| 1914 | The Post Office | 1914 | Sadhana |
| 1916 | Ghare Bairey: The Home and the World | 1916 | Balaka: A Flight of Swans |
| 1916 | Chaturanga: Four Quartet | 1916 | Fruit Gathering |
| 1916 | The Hungry Stones | 1916 | Stray Birds |
| 1917 | Personality | 1917 | The Cycle of Spring |
| 1917 | Sacrifice and Other Plays | 1917 | My Reminiscene |
| 1917 | Nationalism |
1918 |
Mashi and Other Stories |
| 1918 | Stories from Tagore | 1918 | Palataka |
| 1919 | Japan Jatree: A Visit to Japan | 1921 | Greater India |
| 1921 | The Fugitive | 1921 | Creative Unity |
| 1922 | Lipika | 1922 | Muktadhara |
| 1923 | Poems | 1924 | Gora |
| 1924 | Letters from Abroad | 1924 | Rakta Karabi: Red Oleander |
| 1925 | Griha Prabesh | 1925 | Broken Ties and Other Stories |
| 1925 | Rabindranath Tagore: Twenty-Two Poems |
1925 | Rakta Karabi: Red Oleanders |
| 1926 | Sadhana | 1926 | Natir Puja |
| 1928 |
Letters to a Friend |
1929 | Sesher Kabita |
| 1929 | Mahua: The Herald of Spring | 1929 | Jatree |
| 1929 | Yogayog | 1930 | Manab Dharma: The Religion of Man |
| 1931 | The Child | 1931 | Rashiar Chithi: Letters from Russia |
| 1932 | Patraput | 1932 | Punaschya |
| 1932 | Mahatmahi and the Depressed Humanity | 1932 | The Golden Boat 1932 |
| 1932 | Sheaves: Poems and Songs | 1933 | Dui Bon 1933: Two Sisters |
| 1933 | Chandalika |
1934 | Malancha: The Garden |
| 1934 | Char Adhyay: Four Chapters | 1935 | Bithika |
| 1935 | Shesh Saptak | 1936 | Ptrapath |
| 1936 | Shyamali | 1936 | Collected Poems & Plays |
| 1937 | Khapchara | 1938 | Senjutee |
| 1938 | Prantik | 1939 | Prahasini |
| 1939 | Pather Sanchay 1939 |
1939 | Akash Pradeep |
| 1939 | Shyama | 1940 | Nabajatak |
| 1940 | Shanai | 1940 | Chhelebela: My Boyhood Days |
| 1940 | Rogshajyay: On Sick Bed | 1941 | Arogya |
| 1941 | Janma Din: The Birth Day | 1941 | Galpa Salpa: Just Stories |
| 1941 | Last Poems | 1944 | The Parrots Training |
| 1945 | Rolland and Tagore 1945 | 1950 | Three Plays |
| 1950 | Crisis in Civilization | 1951 | Sheaves |
| 1951 | More Stories from Tagore | 1955 | A Tagore's Testament |
| 1958 | Our Universe | 1959 | The Runaway & Other Stories |
| 1960 | Wings of Death | 1960 | Geet Bitan |
| 1961 | A Tagore Reader (ed. Amiya Chakraborty) | 1961 | Towards Universal Man |
| 1961 | On Art and Aesthetics | 1961 | Bichitra 1961 |
| '60-61 | Galpa Gucchha 1960-62 (4 vols.) | 1964 | Boundless Sky |
| 1964 | The Housewarming | 64-66 | Rabindra Rachanabali (27 vols) |
| 1969 | Patraput | 1972 | Imperfect Encounter |
| 1974 |
Later Poems |
1977 | The Housewarming |
| 1985 | Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Poems | 1991 | Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Short Stories |
| Rabindranath Tagore:Krishna Kripalani (1962) Rabindranath Tagore:H. Banerjee (1971) Rabindranath Tagore:BC Chakraborty (1971) An Introduction to Rabindranath Tagore: VS Narabene (1977) The Humanism of Rabindranath Tagore:MR Anand (1979) Rabindranath Tagore: S Ghose (1986) The Unversal Man: S Chattopadhyay (1987) Sir Rabindranath Tagore: KS Ramaswami Sastri (1988) Gandhi and Tagore: DW Atkinson (1989) Rabindranath Tagore: K Basak (1991) Rabindranath Tagore: EJ Thompson (1991) Ketaki Kushari Dyson: Translations of Tagore's Poems |
| Tagore's Detailed Biography |
| Tagore's Conversation with HG Wells |
| Tagore's Conversation with Albert Einetein |
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Tagore's conversation
with H.G . Wells |
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http://www.pa.uky.edu/~sugata/rabin.html |
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http://www.math.brockport.edu/~smitra/tagore.html |
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http://home1.swipnet.se/~w-17889/gpr.htm |
page to be completed
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