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Dinesh Chandra Sen
Indian folklorist

Dinesh Chandra Sen

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Indian folklorist
Places
Gender
Male
Place of death
Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Age
73 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Rai Bahadur Dinesh Chandra Sen (Bengali: দীনেশ চন্দ্র সেন) (3 November 1866 – 20 November 1939) was a Bengali writer, educationist and researcher of Bengali folklore. He was the founding faculty member and the Ramtanu Lahiri Research Fellow of the Department of Bengali Language and Literature of the University of Calcutta. He died in Calcutta in 1939.

Early life and family

Sen was born in a Vaidya-Brahmin family to Ishwar Chandra Sen and Rupalata Devi, in the village of Suapur (in present-day Dhaka District, Bangladesh). His mother's family was from Bogjuri in Manikganj District. Hiralal Sen was a cousin on that side. His grandson Samar Sen was a noted Bengali poet.

Education and career

In 1882, he passed his University Entrance examination from Jagannath University in Dhaka. In 1885, he passed his F.A. examination from Dhaka College. He passed his B.A. examination with Honours in English literature in 1889 as a private student. In 1891, he became the headmaster of the Victoria School in Comilla. During 1909-13, he was a Reader in the newly founded Department of Bengali Language and Literature of the University of Calcutta. In 1913, he became the Ramtanu Lahiri Research Fellow in the same Department. In 1921, the University of Calcutta conferred on him the Doctorate of Literature in recognition of his work. In 1931, he received the Jagattarini gold medal for his contribution to the Bengali literature. He retired from service in 1932.

Works

He worked on collection and compilation of Bengal folklore. Along with Chandra Kumar De, he published Mymensingh Gitika (Ballads of Mymensingh), a collection of 21 ballads.

In Bengali

  • Banga Bhasa O Sahitya (1896)
  • Tin Bandhu (Three Friends) (1904)
  • Ramayani Katha (Tales of Ramayana) (1904)
  • Behula (a folk tale) (1907)
  • Sati (1907)
  • Phullara (1907)
  • Jada Bharat (1908)
  • Sukatha (a collection of essays) (1912)
  • Grihashri (1916)
  • Nilmanik (1918)
  • Mukta Churi (1920)
  • Saral Bangla Sahitya (1922)
  • Vaidik Bharat (Vedic India: based on stories from the Vedas) (1922)
  • Gharer Katha O Yugasahitya (autobiographical work) (1922)
  • Aloke Andhare (1925)
  • Chaukir Vidambana (1926)
  • Oparer Alo (1927)
  • Pauraniki (Tales from the Puranas) (1934)
  • Brihat Banga (Greater Bengal: a social history) in two volumes (1935)
  • Ashutosh Smriti Katha (1936)
  • Shyamal O Kajjal (1936)
  • Padavali Madhurya (1937)
  • Puratani (1939)
  • Banglar Puranari (1939)
  • Prachin Bangla Sahitye Musalmaner Avadan (1940)
  • Rakhaler Rajgi

In English

  • History of Bengali Language and Literature (1911)
  • Sati (1916)
  • The Vaishnava Literature of Medieval Bengal (1917)
  • Chaitanya and His Companions (1917)
  • The Folk Literature of Bengal (1920)
  • The Bengali Ramayana (1920)
  • Bengali Prose Style, 1800-1857 (1921)
  • Chaitanya and His Age (1922)
  • Eastern Bengal Ballads in four volumes (1923–1932)
  • Glimpses of Bengal Life (1925)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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