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Bharatendu Harishchandra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bharatendu Harishchandra

Born

September 9, 1850 vellore India

Died

January 6, 1885 (aged 34) Varanasi, India

Pen name

Rasa

Occupation

Novelist, Poet, Playwright

Bharatendu Harishchandra ( ) (September 9, 1850 January 6, 1885) is known as the father of modern Hindi literature as well as Hindi theatre.[1][2] He is considered one of the greatest Hindi writers of modern India. A recognized poet, he was also a trend setter in Hindi prose-writing. As an author of several dramas,[3] life sketches and travel accounts, Bharatendu Harishchandra represents the agonies of the people, country's poverty, dependency, inhuman exploitation, the unrest of the middle class and the urge for the progress of the country. He wrote under the pen name "Rasa".

Contents
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1 Biography 2 Major works 3 couplets 4 Play on Bharatendu Harishchandra 5 References 6 External links

[edit]Biography
Born in Banaras, Bharatendu Harishchandra's father Gopal Chandra was a poet. He wrote poems under the pseudonym Girdhar Das. Bharatendu's parents died when he was still young but they seem to have had an influence on him. Acharya Ramchandra Shukla has described how Bharatendu went to the Jagannath temple in Puri, Orissa with his family in 1865, when he was merely fifteen years of age.[4] It was during this trip that he was influenced by the Bengal Renaissance and decided to bring the genres of social, historical, and Puranic plays and novels into Hindi. This influence reflected in his Hindi translation of the Bengali drama Vidyasundar, just three years later, in 1868. Bharatendu devoted his life to the development of Hindi literature. In recognition of his services as a writer, patron and modernizer, the title of "Bharatendu" was conferred on him at a public meeting by scholars of Kashi in 1880. Reputed literary critic Ramvilas Sharma refers to the "great literary awakening ushered in under Bharatendu's leadership" as the "second storey of the edifice of renascent Hindi," the first being the Indian Rebellion of 1857.[5]

Bharatendu Harishchandra (1850-1885) Issued by Govt of India.

Bharatendu Harishchandra was multi-faceted. He made major contributions in the field of journalism, drama, and poetry. He edited the magazines Kavi Vachan Sudha in 1868,In 1873 Harishchandra Magazine , Harishchandra Patrika and Bal Vodhini.[6] He was a member of the Chowdhury family

ofVaranasi belonging to the Agrawal community and his home there is still in use. His ancestors were landlords in Bengal.[5] He had one daughter. He wrote the widely mentioned history of the Agrawal community. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting of India gives Bharatendu Harishchandra Awards since 1983 to promote original writings in Hindi mass communication.[7] His great granddaughter Pratibha Agarwal, (b. 1930), a Hindi writer, co-founded theatre group Anamika in Kolkata in 1955, with theatre director Shyamanand Jalan, which played a pioneering role in the revival of Hindi theatre and later remained director of Natya Sodha Sansthan.[8][9]

[edit]Major
Drama-

works

Bharatendu Harishchandra entered in theatre activity as an actor and soon become director, manager, and playwright. He used theatre as a tool to aware Indian society. his major plays are1-Vaidiki himsa hitnsa na bhavati ,1873 ( ) 2-Bharat durdasha ,1875 ( ) 3-The mythological classic Satya Harishchandra i.e. `Truthful Harishchandra` in 1876 4-Neel devi ,1881 () 5-The political Andher nagari i.e. City of Darkness in 1881 ( ) -One of the most popular plays of modern Hindi drama. Translated and performed in many Indian languages by prominent Indian directors like B. V. Karanth, Prasanna, Arvind Gaur and Sanjay Upadyaye.Andher nagari is a powerful political satire with universal appeal. Poetry Bhagat sarvagya ( ), Prem malika ( , ), Prem Maduri ( ,), Prem Tarang (-,), Prem Pralap (-`) (),Prem fuhalwari ( ,)and Prem Srowar , Holi()(), Madu Mukul ( ) (), Raag Sangraah ( -,), Varsha Vinod ( -1950 5455 ,), Vinya Prem Pachassa ( ,), Pholo ka Guchha ( ,), Chandravali in 1876, and Krishan Charitra(,), Utrarat Bhagat Mal ( ,-) Translations Harsha's Ratnavali, Visakhadattas Mudra-Rakshasa (), Vidya-Sundar (), from Bengali, Kapoor mnajari ()from Prakrat and Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice as Durlabh bandhu i.e. Invaluable Friend, incomplete. Essay collection

Bharatendu Grnthaaolly ( ),1885

[edit]couplets
The following two rhyming couplets are taken from his famous poem, - (For the Sake of MotherTongue or Towards Mother-Tongue). The poem has ten couplets in total. The poet asserts the importance of using mother tongue as a medium of instruction conversational and educational. , - , , , Translation: Progress is made in one's own language (the mother tongue), as it the foundation of all progress. Without the knowledge of the mother tongue, there is no cure for the pain of heart. Many arts and education infinite, knowledge of various kinds. Should be taken from all countries, but propagated in one mother tongue.

[edit]Play

on Bharatendu Harishchandra

Kannada writer and director Prasanna wrote & directed a play Seema Paar on Bharatendu for National School of Drama rep as tribute to Kashi and one of its greatest dramatists, Bharatendu Harishchandra and inevitably thus an involvement with death. For nowhere else is the end of life as palpable as on the Ghats of Kashi and few other lives as closely bound up with death as that of Bharatendu, the father of modern Hindi drama. The lilting dialects of Eastern Uttar Pradesh employed by players of Bharatendus theatre company and the typical patois of Kashi spoken by its denizens enliven the play

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