Mokbula Manzoor
Mokbula Manzoor | |
---|---|
Native name | (Bengali: মকবুলা মনজুর |
Born |
1938 Bangladesh |
Nationality | Bangladeshi |
Other names | Makbula Manzoor |
Occupation | Author and novelist |
Years active | 1968-2010 |
Known for | Contributions to modern Bangladeshi literature |
Mokbula Manzoor or Makbula Manzoor (Bengali: মকবুলা মনজুর, born 1938 (1939 or 1945 also cited)) is a Bangladeshi author and novelist. Author Syedur Rahman cites her together with Akhtaruzzaman Ilias, Selina Hossain and Hasan Hafizur Rahman as one of the notable contributors to modern Bangladeshi literature.[1]
Manzoor is noted for writing from a woman's perspective in a male-dominated society; her 1998 novel Kaler Mandira is one such example, and references female exploitation during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971. She is considered to be an outstanding Bangladeshi female writer, inspired by the events which led to the creation of the country in 1971.[2]
Works
Novels
- Ar Ek Jiban (Another Life, 1968)
- Abasanna Gan (Tired Song,1982)
- Baishakhe Shirna Nadi (The River Shrunk in Baishakh, 1983)
- Jal Rang Chabi (Watercolour Painting, 1984)
- Atmaja O Amra (Sons and Ourselves, 1988)
- Patita Prithibi (The Fallen Earth, 1989)
- Prem Ek Sonali Nadi (Love: A Golden River, 1989)
- Shiyare Niyata Surja (The Perpetual Sun over the Lying Head, 1989);
- Acena Nakshatra (The Unknown Star, 1990)
- Kane Dekha Alo (Light for Observing the Bride, 1991)
- Nirbacita Premer Upanyas (Selected Novels of Love, 1992);
- Nadite Andhakar (Darkness on the River, 1996)
- LilaKamal (Woman’s Toy Lotus, 1996)
- Kaler Mandira (Time’s Cymbal, 1997)
Awards
- Bangladesh Lekhika Sangha Prize (1984)
- Qamar Kushtari Prize (1990)
- Rajshahi Lekhika Sangha Literary Award (1993)
- National Archives and Library Best Book Prize (1997)
- Bangla Academy Award (2006)
References
- ↑ Rahman, Syedur (27 April 2010). Historical Dictionary of Bangladesh. Scarecrow Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-8108-7453-4.
- ↑ Corporation, Marshall Cavendish (September 2007). World and Its Peoples: Eastern and Southern Asia. Marshall Cavendish. pp. 477–. ISBN 978-0-7614-7631-3.
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