Pratibha Ray
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Pratibha Ray | |
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File:Pratibha Ray at World Odia Language Conference.jpg | |
Born | Alabol, Balikuda, Jagatsinghpur, Odisha, India |
21 January 1944
Language | Odia |
Education | M.A. (Education), PhD (Educational Psychology)[1] |
Alma mater | Ravenshaw College |
Notable works | Yajnaseni, Shilapadma |
Notable awards | Jnanpith Award Moortidevi Award |
Website | |
pratibharay |
Pratibha Ray (born 21 January 1944) is an Indian academic and writer of Odia-language novels and stories. For her contribution to the Indian literature, Ray received the Jnanpith Award in 2011. She was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 2022.[2]
Contents
Life and career
She was born on 21 January 1944, at Alabol, a remote village in the Balikuda area of Jagatsinghpur district formerly part of Cuttack district of Odisha state.[3] She was the first woman to win the Moortidevi Award in 1991.[4] Her first novel Barsha Basanta Baishakha (1974)[5] was a best seller.
Her search for a "social order based on equality, love, peace and integration", continues, since she first penned at the age of nine. When she wrote for a social order, based on equality without class, caste, religion or sex discriminations, some of her critics branded her as a communist, and some as feminist.[6] But she says: "I am a humanist. Men and women have been created differently for the healthy functioning of society. The specialities women have been endowed with should be nurtured further. As a human being, however, woman is equal to man."
She continued her writing career even after her marriage and raising a family of three children and husband Akshay Ray who is an engineer. Her post-doctoral research was on Tribalism and Criminology of Bondo Highlander,[7][8][9] tribes of Odisha, India.
She started her professional career as a school teacher, and later she taught in various government colleges in Odisha for thirty years. She has guided doctoral research and has published many research articles. She took voluntary retirement as a Professor of Education from State Government Service and joined as Member, Public Service Commission of Odisha.[10]
She has active interest in social reform[11] and has fought against social injustice on many occasions. One important incident in her life is protesting against colour (caste/religion) discrimination by the high priests of Jagannath Temple at Puri. She is currently fighting a defamation case lodged by the priests against her for her newspaper article in which she wrote against the undesirable behaviour of the priests, titled "The Colour of Religion is Black" (Dharmara Ranga Kala).[12] She works in the cyclone-affected areas after the Odisha's Super Cyclone of October 1999 and she is working for rehabilitation of the orphans and widows of Cyclone affected areas.[13]
Travel
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Ray has travelled extensively inside India to participate in various national literary and educational conferences. She visited five republics of the erstwhile USSR in 1986 in a cultural exchange programme sponsored by ISCUS. She represented India as an Indian writer in the India Fair in Australia, "India Today 94". sponsored by Indian Council for Cultural Relations, New Delhi, in 1994. She gave readings and talks on Indian literature and languages in several universities of Australia. She has also visited the US, UK and France on speaking tours, represented India as an Indian writer in the India Festival in Bangladesh in 1996, and attended the 7th International Interdisciplinary Congress on Women in the University of Tromsø, Norway, in June 1999 as an Indian delegate. She visited Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark on a speaking tour in 1999. Visited Zurich, Switzerland, in 2000 to present a paper in the Third European Conference on Gender Equality in Higher Education.
Memberships
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. She is a member of a number of learned societies. She is connected with the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, Central Board of Film Certification, Indian Red Cross Society, India International Centre, National Book Trust of India, Central Academy of Letters etc. She has travelled extensively in India and abroad to participate in various literary and educational conferences. She has won a number of national and state awards for her creative writing.
Selected works
Novels
- Barsa Basanta Baishakha, 1974
- Aranya, 1977
- Nishiddha Prithivi, 1978
- Parichaya, 1979
- Aparichita, 1979. (A film was made & won Best Film-Story award from Odisha State Govt., Department of Culture)
- Punyatoya the story of village girl Meghi, 1979. (Tr. To Hindi)
- Meghamedura, 1980
- Ashabari, 1980
- Ayamarambha, 1981
- Nilatrishna, 1981. (Tr. to Hindi)
- Samudrara Swara, 1982. (Tr. to Hindi)
- Shilapadma, 1983. (Odisha Sahitya Academy Award, 1985; Tr. to Assamese, Hindi, Marathi, Malayalam, Punjabi and English)[14]
- Yajnaseni, 1984 (Moorti Devi Award,1991 and Sarala Award, 1990. Tr. to English, Hindi, Malayalam, Marathi, Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hungarian)[15]
- Dehatita, 1986
- Uttaramarg, 1988. (Tr. to Hindi & Punjabi)
- Adibhumi (Tr. to Hindi & English)
- Mahamoha, 1998 (To be published in Hindi, Bengali & Malayalam)
- Magnamati, 2004
- Maharani Putra, 2008
- Travelogue
- Maitripadapara Shakha Prashakha (USSR), 1990
- Dura Dwividha (UK, France), 1999
- Aparadhira Sweda (Australia), 2000
- Short Stories
- Samanya Kathana – 1978
- Gangashiuli – 1979
- Asamapta – 1980
- Aikatana – 1981
- Anabana – 1983
- Hatabaksa – 1983
- Ghasa O Akasa
- Chandrabhaga O Chandrakala – 1984
- Shrestha Galpa – 1984
- Abyakta (made into a Telefilm) – 1986
- Itibut – 1987
- Haripatra – 1989
- Prthak Isvara – 1991
- Bhagavanara Desa – 1991
- Manushya Swara – 1992
- Sva-nirvachita SreshthaGalpa – 1994
- Sashthasati – 1996
- Moksha (made into a Feature Film, that received the Best Regional Film award) – 1996[16]
- Ullaghna (Sahitya Akademi Award,2000) – 1998
- Nivedanam Idam – 2000
- Gandhinka – 2002
- Jhotipaka Kantha – 2006
Adaptations
- Yajnaseni (play) – Suman Pokhrel has rendered Ray's novel Yajnaseni as a solo play in Nepali.[citation needed]
Awards and recognition
- 1985 – Odisha Sahitya Academi Award' for the novel Sheelapadma
- 1990 – 'Sarala Award' for the novel Yajnaseni
- 1991 – 'Moortidevi Award' for the Novel Yajnaseni[17]
- 2000 – 'Sahitya Akademi Award' for the Short-Story Collection Ullaghna
- 2006 – Amrita Keerti Puraskar[18]
- 2007 – 'Padma Shri Award' in Literature and Education by the Government of India.
- 2011 – 'Jnanpith Award'[19]
- 2013 – Odisha Living Legend Award (Literature)[20]
- 2022 - Padma Bhushan from Government of India for literature and education[21][22]
See also
References
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External links
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- 1943 births
- Living people
- People from Jagatsinghpur district
- Recipients of the Padma Shri in literature & education
- Recipients of the Jnanpith Award
- Odia-language writers
- Odia short story writers
- Odia novelists
- Indian women academics
- Indian women novelists
- Indian women short story writers
- Recipients of the Sahitya Akademi Award in Odia
- Recipients of the Odisha Sahitya Akademi Award
- 20th-century Indian short story writers
- 20th-century Indian novelists
- Novelists from Odisha
- 21st-century Indian novelists
- 21st-century Indian short story writers
- 21st-century Indian women writers
- 20th-century Indian women writers
- Women writers from Odisha
- Odisha academics
- Women educators from Odisha
- Educators from Odisha
- Translators from English
- Translators of Suman Pokhrel
- Recipients of the Moortidevi Award
- Recipients of the Padma Bhushan in literature & education
- Recipients of the Utkal Ratna Samman