Every January, as the winter chill settles over Bengal, the literary world pauses to remember one of its most beloved storytellers, Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, whose death anniversary on January 16 serves as an annual reminder of the extraordinary legacy he left behind. Widely regarded as one of the most popular and translated Indian authors of all time, Sarat Chandra’s works continue to resonate with readers nearly nine decades after his passing in 1938. While he is often celebrated for his deeply empathetic portrayals of rural Bengal and the plight of women in a patriarchal society, there is a fiercer, more politically charged dimension to his writing that is sometimes overshadowed.
This dimension is best exemplified by his novel Pather Dabi (Right of Way or Demand of the Road), a revolutionary work that was banned by the British colonial government in 1926 for its anti-colonial sentiments, and which is now being reimagined for a new generation through a film adaptation by Bengali director Srijit Mukherji. Yet to understand the full magnitude of Sarat Chandra’s cultural footprint, one must also reckon with Devdas, perhaps his most famous creation, a tragic romance that has been adapted into films time and again across nearly a century, and whose emotional power continues to...
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