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Amit Chaudhuri (born 15 May 1962) is a novelist, poet, essayist, literary critic, editor, singer, and music composer from
India India, officially the Republic of India (Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by area, seventh-largest country by area, the List of countries and dependencies by population, second-most populous ...
. He was Professor of Contemporary Literature at the
University of East Anglia The University of East Anglia (UEA) is a public research university in Norwich, England. Established in 1963 on a campus west of the city centre, the university has four faculties and 26 schools of study. The annual income of the institution f ...
from 2006 to 2021, Since 2020, he has been at
Ashoka University Ashoka University is a philanthropy-driven private university located in the National Capital Region (NCR), India, focusing on a liberal education in the Humanities, the Social Sciences, and the Sciences. The university is on a mission to ...
,
India India, officially the Republic of India (Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by area, seventh-largest country by area, the List of countries and dependencies by population, second-most populous ...
as Professor of Creative Writing and is also since 2021, Director of the Centre for the Creative and the Critical, Ashoka University.


Life

Amit Chaudhuri was born in
Calcutta Kolkata (, or , ; also known as Calcutta , the official name until 2001) is the capital of the Indian state of West Bengal, on the eastern bank of the Hooghly River west of the border with Bangladesh. It is the primary business, commer ...
(renamed
Kolkata Kolkata (, or , ; also known as Calcutta , the official name until 2001) is the capital of the Indian state of West Bengal, on the eastern bank of the Hooghly River west of the border with Bangladesh. It is the primary business, comme ...
) in 1962 and grew up in
Bombay Mumbai (, ; also known as Bombay — List of renamed Indian cities and states#Maharashtra, the official name until 1995) is the capital city of the Indian States and union territories of India, state of Maharashtra and the ''de facto'' fin ...
(renamed
Mumbai Mumbai (, ; also known as Bombay — the official name until 1995) is the capital city of the Indian state of Maharashtra and the ''de facto'' financial centre of India. According to the United Nations, as of 2018, Mumbai is the secon ...
). His father was the first Indian CEO of Britannia Industries Limited. His mother, Bijoya Chaudhuri, was a highly acclaimed singer of Rabindra Sangeet, Nazrulgeeti, Atul Prasad and Hindi bhajans. He was a student at the Cathedral and John Connon School, Bombay. He took his first degree in English literature from
University College London , mottoeng = Let all come who by merit deserve the most reward , established = , type = Public research university , endowment = £143 million (2020) , budget = ...
, and wrote his doctoral dissertation on
D. H. Lawrence David Herbert Lawrence (11 September 1885 – 2 March 1930) was an English writer, novelist, poet and essayist. His works reflect on modernity, industrialization, sexuality, emotional health, vitality, spontaneity and instinct. His best-k ...
's poetry at
Balliol College, Oxford Balliol College () is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. One of Oxford's oldest colleges, it was founded around 1263 by John I de Balliol, a landowner from Barnard Castle in County Durham, who provided the ...
. He is married to Rosinka Chaudhuri, Professor of Cultural Studies and Director of the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta (CSSSC). They have one daughter. Chaudhuri began writing a series for ''
The Paris Review ''The Paris Review'' is a quarterly English-language literary magazine established in Paris in 1953 by Harold L. Humes, Peter Matthiessen, and George Plimpton. In its first five years, ''The Paris Review'' published works by Jack Kerouac, Phi ...
'' titled ''The Moment'' from January 2018. He also wrote an occasional column, 'Telling Tales', for ''
The Telegraph ''The Telegraph'', ''Daily Telegraph'', ''Sunday Telegraph'' and other variant names are popular names for newspapers. Newspapers with these titles include: Australia * ''The Telegraph'' (Adelaide), a newspaper in Adelaide, South Australia, publ ...
''.


Fiction, non-fiction, poetry

''Fiction'' ''A Strange and Sublime Address'', Chaudhuri’s first novel, published in 1991, was republished by Penguin Random House India in 2016 as a 25th anniversary edition, with a foreword by Colm Toibin. ''Afternoon Raag'',  his second novel, interleaves experiences of Oxford with memories of Bombay. It was published in 1993 and won the Encore Award. The 25th anniversary edition was published by Penguin Random House India in 2019 with a foreword by James Wood. ''Freedom Song'', his third novel, was published four years later. Set against the background of the post-Babri Masjid demolition, it is a record of both the artificial quiet that such a socio-political situation creates as well as the evocation of a Calcutta winter where everyday life must go on. Published in America with the first two novels, in 2000 it won the ''Los Angeles Times Book Prize.'' ''A New World'' (2001), Chaudhuri’s fourth novel, tells the story of Jayojit Chatterjee, who returns after a divorce with his seven-year-old son Vikram (“Bonny”) to Calcutta to visit his aging parents. It won the Sahitya Akademi Award. ''Real Time'', Chaudhuri’s collection of short fiction, was published in 2002. The title story, ‘Real Time’ is prescribed reading for English in the GCSE syllabus in the UK. ''The Immortals'', his fifth novel, published in 2009, follows Nirmalya and his music teacher, Shyamji, as they learn and practice Indian classical music in a changing world. ''Odysseus Abroad'', Chaudhuri’s sixth novel, appeared in 2014-15. It unfolds over the course of a single day, in July in 1985 London, following the student protagonist, Ananda. ''Friend of My Youth'' is Chaudhuri's seventh novel. It was published in the UK and India in 2017 and in the US in 2019. It is an account of a narrator and novelist called Amit Chaudhuri who visits Bombay, a city where he grew up, for a book event. ''Sojourn'', Chaudhuri's eighth novel, was published in 2022. Here, an unnamed man arrives in Berlin as a visiting professor. His growing absorption in his surrounding is accompanied by a loosening of his grasp on memory. ''Non-fiction'' Chaudhuri’s D.Phil. dissertation at Oxford was published by Clarendon Press as a monograph titled ''D.H. Lawrence and Difference'' in 2003. It was called a ‘classic’ by Tom Paulin in his preface to the book, and a ‘path-breaking work’ by Terry Eagleton in the ''London Review of Books''. Chaudhuri edited the influential anthology ''The Picador Book of Modern Indian Literature'' in 2001. He also edited ''Memory’s Gold: Writings on Calcutta'' (2008) His first major work of non-fiction, ''Calcutta: Two Years in the City'', was published in 2013 as was ''Telling Tales'', his second book of essays. ''On Tagore'', a collection of Chaudhuri’s essays on Rabindranath Tagore, was awarded the Rabindra Puraskar in 2012. ''Origins of Dislike'', a third collection of essays, was published in 2019. ''Literary Activism'', a collection of essays by a variety of participants at the first symposium of the same name (see below), was published in 2017 by Boiler House Press in the UK, and by OUP in India and the US. ''Finding the Raga'', an exploration of Hindustani classical music, was published by Faber in the UK, NYRB Books in the US and Penguin in India in 2021. ''Poetry'' ''St. Cyril Road and Other Poems'', Chaudhuri’s first collection of poems, was published in 2005 by Penguin in India. ''Sweet Shop'', his second book of poems, appeared from Penguin Random House India in 2018, and from Salt (UK) in 2019. ''Ramanujan'', his third collection of poems, was published by Shearsman Books in the UK  in 2021.


Critical responses

James Wood, writing about Chaudhuri in ''The New Yorker'', said, "He has beautifully practiced that 'refutation of the spectacular' throughout his career, both as a novelist and as a critic. ... how little Chaudhuri forces anything on us — there is no obvious plot, no determined design, no faked 'conflict' or other drama ... The effect is closer to documentary than to fiction; gentle artifice — selection, pacing, occasional dialogue — hides overt artifice. The author seems to say, Here he is; what do you think? The literary pleasure is a human pleasure, as we slowly encounter this strolling, musing, forceful self." ''Afternoon Raag:'' ‘It is a meditation, a felicitous prose poem.’ Karl Miller, ''The Independent.'' ''A New World'': ‘The condition of a stranger in a familiar land is dramatized with beguiling simplicity and tact in this deeply moving fourth novel…. A pitch-perfect analysis of repressed and stunted emotion, and another triumph to set beside those of Desai, Rushdie, Roy, and especially (the Chekhovian master Chaudhuri most closely resembles) R.K. Narayan.’ ''Kirkus Reviews'' ''The Immortals'': ‘Amit Chaudhuri, himself a composer and musician, excels in the passages devoted to music, "the miracle of song and its pleasure". Steven Poole, ''The Guardian.'' ''Odysseus Abroad'': ‘Chaudhuri is a singular writer. He defies form; instead he has perfected an observational fiction based on insight and memory.’ Eileen Battersby, ''Irish Times'' ''Telling Tales'': ‘Chaudhuri’s intellectual project is not so much to cross academic boundaries as to remove the sign that says: “No playing on the grass”. Like Barthes (and Lacan), he sees merit in concentrating less on the meaningful and more on the apparently meaningless.' Deborah Levy in the ''New Statesman'' ''Friend of My Youth'': 'With the publication of ''Friend of My Youth'', Amit Chaudhuri is now the author of seven novels, greatly admired, especially by his peers... The drama of the self, spun from Chaudhuri's meditations and recollections, is artfully composed and utterly absorbing.' Kate Webb in the ''Times Literary Supplement''. ''Sojourn'': 'Chaudhuri is one of the most consistently interesting writers working today. You get the feeling that with each book he has to begin again to reconfigure from the ground up what he wants the novel to be and to do. It's this radical questioning that makes him such a consistently engaging writer, and what makes this novel so memorable.'


Activism

Literary activism In response to the marginalisation of the literary by both the market (that is, mainstream publishing houses) and by academia, Chaudhuri began, in December 2014, a series of annual symposiums on what he called 'literary activism', thereby attempting to create a space akin neither ‘to the literary festival or the academic conference’, bringing together writers, academics, and artists each year. One of the features of Chaudhuri’s initiative has been a resistance to specialisation, or what he calls 'professionalisation'. The project has involved the fashioning of a new terminology by Chaudhuri, in which he creates terms like 'market activism', and assigns very particular means to terms like 'literary activism' and 'deprofessionalisation’. Some of his positions are contained in his mission statement, and in his n+1 essay. 'So there may well be in literary activism a strangeness that echoes the strangeness of the literary. Unlike market activism, whose effect on us depends on a certain randomness which reflects the randomness of the free market, literary activism may be desultory, in that its aims and value aren’t immediately explicable.' A collection of essays titled ''Literary Activism: A Symposium'' from the first symposium was published in 2017 by Boiler House Press in the UK, and by OUP in India and the US. A new website for literary activism, www.literaryactivism.com, edited by Chaudhuri, came into existence on 4 August 2020. Architectural activism In 2015, Chaudhuri began drawing attention to Calcutta’s architectural legacy and campaigning for its conservation. Writing about these houses made in the twentieth century, he lists their characteristics:


Music

Chaudhuri is a singer in the North Indian classical tradition, who has performed internationally. He learned singing from his mother, Bijoya Chaudhuri, and from the late Pandit Govind Prasad Jaipurwale of the Kunwar Shyam gharana. HMV India (now Saregama) has released two recordings of his singing, and a selection of the khayals he has performed on CD. Bihaan Music brought out a collection called ''The Art of the Khayal'' in 2016. A selection of classical recordings: * 'Puriya Kalyan khayal' * 'Jog Bahar khayal and tarana' * 'E parabase rabe ke' (Rabindra Sangeet) * 'Chandrasakhi bhajan' In 2004, he began to conceptualise a project in experimental music, ''This is Not Fusion'', released in Britain on the independent jazz label, Babel Label. His second CD, ''Found Music'', came out in October 2010 in the UK from Babel and was released in India from EMI. It was an allaboutjazz.com Editor’s Choice of 2010. Songs from ''This is Not Fusion'' include 'Berlin' and 'The Layla Riff to Todi'. His version of 'Summertime', incorporating the notes of raga Malkauns, was featured in BBC 4's documentary, ''Gershwin's Summertime: the Song that Conquered the World''. In 2015, Chauhuri was invited to write the libretto for the opera composed by Ravi Shankar, ''Sukanya''. It had its world premiere at the Royal Festival Hall, London, in 2017. In 2022, he created a new raga as part of a project that sees the raga as experiment and based on his feeling 'that the ''raga'' in North Indian classical music is primarily a reshaping of what Marcel Duchamp called "found material". That is, tunes and melodies aren't set to ragas; instead, ragas are a slowing down of, and minute investigation into, particular tunes and melodies, with their characteristic clusters of notes and progressions.' Basing it on the Western song, 'O Sole Mio', he calls the composition 'Khayal: O Sole Mio'. He performed it for the first time at Holywell Music Room, Oxford, in July 2022. As part of this ongoing experimental exploration, he created, in the year of Raj Rammohun Roy's 250th birth anniversary, a raga called Rammohan, combining ragas Mohankauns and Ramkeli to do so. He performed a short version of this at Smith College, Massachusetts, on 17th September 2022, and the complete version, including slow and fast khayal compositions, in Calcutta on 5th December 2022.


Awards and honours

*1991
Betty Trask Award The Betty Trask Prize and Awards are for first novels written by authors under the age of 35, who reside in a current or former Commonwealth nation. Each year the awards total £20,000, with one author receiving a larger prize amount, called the ...
and
Commonwealth Writers' Prize Commonwealth Foundation presented a number of prizes between 1987 and 2011. The main award was called the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and was composed of two prizes: the Best Book Prize (overall and regional) was awarded from 1987 to 2011; the Best ...
for Best First Book for ''A Strange and Sublime Address'' *1994 Encore Award and Southern Arts Literature Prize, ''Afternoon Raag'' *1999
Los Angeles Times Book Prize Since 1980, the ''Los Angeles Times'' has awarded a set of annual book prizes. The Prizes currently have nine categories: biography, current interest, fiction, first fiction (the Art Seidenbaum Award added in 1991), history, mystery/thriller ...
, ''Freedom Song'' *2002
Sahitya Akademi Award The Sahitya Akademi Award is a literary honour in India, which the Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters, annually confers on writers of the most outstanding books of literary merit published in any of the 22 languages of the ...
, ''A New World'' *2012 Rabindra Puraskar, ''On Tagore'' *2012
Infosys Prize The Infosys Prize is an annual award given to scientists, researchers, engineers and social scientists of Indian origin (not necessarily born in India) by the Infosys Science Foundation and ranks among the highest monetary awards in India to r ...
for the Humanities in Literary Studies He was elected Fellow of the
Royal Society of Literature The Royal Society of Literature (RSL) is a learned society founded in 1820, by King George IV, to "reward literary merit and excite literary talent". A charity that represents the voice of literature in the UK, the RSL has about 600 Fellows, ele ...
in 2009. Awards for his fiction include the Commonwealth Writers Prize, the Betty Trask Prize, the Encore Prize, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction, and the Indian government's Sahitya Akademi Award. ''Finding the Raga'' (2021) won the James Tait Black Prize at Edinburgh in August 2022. Dr. Simon Cooke, one of the judges in the Biography category, called ''Finding the Raga'' “a work of great depth, subtlety, and resonance, which unobtrusively changed the way we thought about music, place, and creativity. Folding the ethos of the raga into its own form, it is a beautifully voiced, quietly subversive masterpiece in the art of listening to the world.” He received the Rabindra Puraskar from the Government of West Bengal for his book ''On Tagore''. He was also given the Sangeet Samman by the Government of West Bengal for his contribution to Hindustani classical music. He is an honorary fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. In 2022, he was awarded the James Tait Memorial Prize for his book ''Finding the Raga: An Improvisation on Indian Music''. In September 2020, he was elected as an Honorary Fellow of the Modern Language Association (MLA). In 2013, Chaudhuri became the first person to be awarded the Infosys Prize for outstanding contribution to the humanities in Literary Studies, by a jury comprising Amartya Sen, Akeel Bilgrami (Columbia University), Homi Bhabha (Harvard), Sheldon Pollock (Columbia), former Indian chief justice Leila Seth, and legal thinker Upendra Baxi (Warwick). In his prize-giving address, Amartya Sen said: 'He haudhuriis of course a remarkable intellectual with a great record for literary writing showing a level of sensibility as well as a kind of quiet humanity which is quite rare. It really is quite extraordinary that someone could have had that kind of range that Amit Chaudhuri has in terms of his work and it could be so consistently of the highest quality.'


Bibliography


Novels

*''Afternoon Raag''. Heinemann, 1993, *''Freedom Song''. Picador, 1998; Alfred A. Knopf, 1999,
excerpt
*; Random House Digital, Inc., 2002, * *''A strange and sublime address''. Penguin, 2012, * * Friend of My Youth, 2017, Penguin Random House India


Collected short stories

*


Poetry

*


Libretto

* ''
Sukanya Sukanya ( sa, सुकन्या, lit=wonderful virgin, translit=Sukanyā) is a princess In Hindu mythology. She is the daughter of Sharyati, the son of Vaivasvata Manu, and the wife of the sage Chyavana. Legend Marriage According to ...
'', the only opera by
Ravi Shankar Ravi Shankar (; born Robindro Shaunkor Chowdhury, sometimes spelled as Rabindra Shankar Chowdhury; 7 April 1920 – 11 December 2012) was an Indian sitarist and composer. A sitar virtuoso, he became the world's best-known export of North In ...


Non-fiction

* *''Small Orange Flags'' (Seagull, 2003) * * ''Calcutta: Two Years in the City'', Union Books (2013) *


Edited Anthologies

* *''Memory's Gold: Writings on Calcutta'' (2008)


Critical studies and reviews

* Review of ''Odysseus Abroad''. *


Reprints


Newspaper articles

* *


See also

*
List of Indian writers This is a list of notable writers who come from India India, officially the Republic of India (Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by area, seventh-largest country by area, the List of countri ...


References


External links

*
Amit Chaudhuri
at
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*
Amit Chaudhuri
at the
Munzinger-Archiv Munzinger-Archiv is an encyclopedia created by Ludwig Munzinger Ludwig Munzinger (1877-1957) was the founder of the German encyclopedia Munzinger-Archiv. Following his death, his son Ludwig Munzinger Jr. took over the running of the organizat ...

Amit Chaudhuri
at the
Los Angeles Review of Books The ''Los Angeles Review of Books'' (''LARB'' is a literary review magazine covering the national and international book scenes. A preview version launched on Tumblr in April 2011, and the official website followed one year later in April 2012. ...

‘Surpanakha’
story at The Little Magazine

''
The Hindu ''The Hindu'' is an Indian English-language daily newspaper owned by The Hindu Group, headquartered in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. It began as a weekly in 1878 and became a daily in 1889. It is one of the Indian newspapers of record and the sec ...
''
A date with Amit Chaudhuri
''The Telegraph'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Chaudhuri, Amit 1962 births Bengali writers Bengali Hindus Writers from Kolkata Alumni of University College London Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford English-language writers from India Indian male novelists Indian male essayists Recipients of the Sahitya Akademi Award in English Academics of the University of East Anglia Living people Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature Chauduri, Amit Indian emigrants to England 20th-century Indian novelists 20th-century Indian essayists 20th-century Indian male writers Writers from Mumbai