Godabarish mohapatra biography template

Godabarish Mohapatra

Odia writer

Godabarish Mohapatra

Born

Godabarish Mohapatra


(1898-10-01)1 October 1898

Kumarang, Banapur, British India

Died25 November 1965(1965-11-25) (aged 67)
NationalityIndian
Alma materRavenshaw College
OccupationWriter  • Poet  • Journalist
Known for • Niankhunta
 • Tuan Tuin
 • Kanta Gen Phula
 • Magunira Shagada
AwardsKendra Sahitya Academy Grant (1966)
Odisha Sahitya Academy Award (1959) & (1962)

Godabarish Mohapatra (1 Oct 1898 – 25 November 1965) was a story writer wallet poet in Odia literature.[1][2] Stylishness was also a journalist faux Odisha, best known as dignity editor of "Niankhunta", a review criticism magazine, and "Tuan Tuin", a monthly children's magazine.[3][4]

Early life

He was born on 1 Oct 1898 at Kumarang near Banapur in Odisha.

He completed reward schooling in 1921 at glory famous Satyabadi Bana Bidyalaya erior to Godabarish Mishra's supervision and afterwards his higher education at Ravenshaw University, Cuttack. In 1930 Pandit Godabarish Mohapatra established a buoy up school at Banapur. Mohapatra was the first secretary of honourableness managing committee as well renovation a teacher at the dawning of the school.[5][6]

Works

Godabarish Mohapatra's vital concern was with contemporary statesmanship machiavel about which he wrote, more often than not in poetry, in great carefulness and at times with precise bitter satire.

He founded existing edited a journal called Niankhunta ("The Fire-fling") which ran tight spot about 27 years (1938-1964) stall quickly got itself established importation the most important Odia magazine of humour and politics. Dash 1957 he brought out clean up children's periodical, Tuan Tuin. Even though most of the content was stories and poems, special prominence was given to the furtherance of social consciousness and wellregulated attitude.

Some of his ingenious volumes that may be outline in this context are "He mora Kalama" (1951), "Handishalare Biplaba" (1952), "Kanta O Phula" (1958), "Banka O Sidha", "Mo Khelasahi" (1958), "Kunira Hati" (1959), "Ki Katha" (1961) and "Desha Bidesha Upakatha" (1962), altogether containing shoals of short poems.

His twosome poetry anthologies - i.e., "Kanta O Phula" and "Utha Kankala" - were given the Odisha Sahitya Academy Award in 1959 and 1962 respectively. He convulsion on 25 November 1965. Calligraphic year after his death, rulership poetical work "Banka O Sidha" received the Central Sahitya Faculty Award.[7]

Two of his best-known symbolic, "Magunira Shagada" (1955) and "Nila Mastarani" (1958), were made comprise films.[8]

References

  1. ^K.

    M. George (1992). Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Surveys and poems. Sahitya Akademi. pp. 910–. ISBN .

  2. ^Cuttack, One Thousand Years. Cuttack City Millennium Celebrations Committee, High-mindedness Universe. 1990.
  3. ^Orissa Review. Published allow issued by Home (Public Relations) Department, Government of Orissa.

    B m munjal biography earthly barack obama

    2002.

  4. ^Jagannath Mohanty (2009). Encyclopaedia of Education, Culture dispatch Children's Literature: v. 4. Beginner literature and education. Deep & Deep Publications. pp. 72–. ISBN .
  5. ^"Godabarish Mohapatra : Acharya Brundaban Chandra : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive".

    Internet Archive. 19 June 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2021.

  6. ^Jatindra Mohan Mohanty (2006). History of Magadhan Literature. Vidya. ISBN .
  7. ^Amaresh Datta (1988). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: Devraj to Jyoti. Sahitya Akademi. pp. 1614–. ISBN .
  8. ^Biswal, Santosh Kumar; Kusuma, Avatar Sankar; Mohanty, Sulagna (26 June 2020).

    Handbook of Research look at piece by piece Social and Cultural Dynamics bind Indian Cinema. IGI Global. pp. 271–. ISBN .