Bengali Language
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State |
Family |
Some Facts |
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West Bengal |
Indo-Aryan |
Bengali is spoken by 200 million
people the world over. It is also the language of Bangladesh.
Bengali developed into a distinct language around 10AD. |
¤ The Birth of Bengali
Language
Bengali or Bangla as a Bengali would say, is also a member of the
Indo-European family of languages. It takes its birth from a form of
Prakrit or Middle Indo-Aryan to finally emerge from the
Apabhramsa-Avahatta in the tenth century.
The Bengali script has been derived from the Brahmi alphabet of the
Ashokan inscriptions (273 to 232BC).
History of Bengali has been divided into three eras Old
Bengali (950-1350), Middle Bengali (1350-1800) and Modern Bengali
(1800 to the present day). Old Bengali is survived only through a
collection of forty-eight poems (1050-1200) known as the charva songs.
These were composed by the siddhacharyas (enlightened ones) who were
mainly Buddhist.
¤ Middle Bengali Period
Middle Bengali covers a huge period. The 15th century
mostly covered the narrative poetry genre, the theme being mainly of
religious content. Among these, Krittivas' Ramayan has been credited
to be a classic.
Other narrative poems include Srikrishnavijaya by Maladhar Vasu and
Srikrishnakirttan by Baru Chandidas. Literary exploits of the 15th
century also include Chaitanyamangal or Chaitanya Bhagavat (1540), the
biography of Saint Chaitanya, by Brindavan Das.
In the 16th century Bengali literature contained
narrative epic poems dealing mainly with the stories of popular
goddesses like Chandi (Chandimangal by Kavikanan Mukundaram
Chakravarti) and Manasa. Towards the end of this century there was a
wave of Vaishnavism and this gave way to the new lyrical activity in
the form of music combined with poetry.
The 17th century has nothing much to boast of, except for
its secular romantic verse tales that were written solely by Muslims.
Even the Muslims of Arrakan, who had close intellectual contact with
Bengal, were active in literary pursuits in Bengali. Daulat Kazi, the
first Bengali Arrakanese poet wrote the romantic verse tale Sati
Mayana. Eighteenth century saw Bengali literature take an affinity to
secular poetry and the narrative verse.
Rameshvar Bhattacharya's Sivasankirttan portrayed Shiva as a poor
farmer and Gauri, his wife, as a human heroine. The end of the
eighteenth century saw two new forms of poetry come into age, the Kavi
and the Panchali.
¤ Period of Actual Renaissance of Bengali Literature
Nineteenth century was the period when the actual literary
renaissance of Bengali took place.
Michael Madhusudan Datta (1834-1873) and Bankim Chandra Chatterjee
(1838-1898) were the founders of the modern age in Bengali literature.
Madhusudan was the first Bengali poet to write in blank verse and
combined western influences into the essence Indian literature. His
Meghnadvadhkavya (1861) written in blank verse has the same flavour of
Milton's Paradise Lost. Madhusudan treated Meghnad, one of the
villains of Ramayana, in the same human angle as Milton portrays
Satan, absolutely away from the traditional approach.
¤ The Beginning of Bengali Theatre
The first Bengali theatre was established by a Russian adventurer,
Gerasim Lebedoff (1749-1818). For about 25 years productions were
mostly adaptations of Sanskrit or English plays with exceptions like
Dinabandhu Mitra's Nildarpan (1860).
The era of Bengali novel started in the later half of the 19th
century. The first truly romantic Bengali novel is Bankim Chandra's
Durgeshnandini (1865), while the first Bengali novel of social realism
is Peary Chand Mitra's Alaler Gharer Dulal (1858). The leading
novelist of the age was Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, who gave the nation
its national song Vandemataram from his political novel Anandamath.
This century also saw the advent of the periodical press in the form
of Digdarshan (a monthly magazine) and Samachardarpan (a weekly), both
published by the Serampore missionaries. Drama and literary prose also
saw a huge renewal in this age. The great dramatists of the 19th
century were Girishchandra Ghosh (1844-1911), Amritlal Bose
(1853-1929) and D L Ray (1863-1913), and the great prose writers were
Debendranath Tagore and Ishvarchandra Vidyasagar.
¤ The Famous Bengali Poets
Popularity of poetry also grew in this period. Biharilal Chakravartis
(1834-94) Saradamangal (1879) and Sadhar Asan (1888-1889) brought in a
breath of fresh air by its tender and refined lyrics.
This style of writing even influenced Rabindranath Tagore who himself
gave a new meaning to Bengali literature.
Tagore was a poet, novelist, short-story writer, dramatist, essayist
and literary critic all rolled into one.
No other Bengali had written at such length and breadth of a language
and age. He was the first Indian to receive a Nobel Prize, which he
got for his poem Gitanjali. The post Tagore age had very few writers
of his calibre, some of whom were Sarat Chandra Chatterjee
(1876-1938), Prabhatkumar Mukherjee (1873-1932) and Abanindranath
Tagore (1871-1951).
¤ The Modern Era
The modern age begins with a group of writers who wrote for Kallol, a
modernist movement magazine founded in 1923. The most popular among
the group were Kazi Nazrul Islam and Mohitlal Majumdar.
In this age two people who had the same literary ability as Tagore
were Jibananda Das (poet) and Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyaya (novelist).
Pramathanath Bisi and Rajshekhar Basu were exponents in literary
criticism and humourous writings respectively. Tarashankar Bannerji is
most notable for his novels while Annadashankar for his prose of
ideas.
The contemporary period is led undoubtedly by Sunil Gangopadhyaya
(poet, novelist, childrens story writer), Buddhadev Guha
(fiction writer dealing mainly with jungle stories), Mahashweta Devi,
Nirendranath Chakraborty and Samaresh Majumdar.
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