fiction.wikisort.org - WriterRimi Barnali Chatterjee is an Indian author and professor of English at Jadavpur University.
Indian writer, translator, and professor
Rimi B. Chatterjee |
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Occupation | Professor, author, translator |
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Nationality | Indian |
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Education | Oxford University (Ph.D) |
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Period | Modern, historical |
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Genre | Fiction, science fiction, nonfiction, comics |
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Career
Chatterjee is an author, translator, and professor of English at Jadavpur University. She completed her Ph.D at Oxford University in 1997.[1] She began teaching at Jadavpur University in 2004.[2] During her time as a professor, Chatterjee and professor Abhijit Gupta helped develop one of the first programs to include the study of comics as part of the study of literature.[3] Chatterjee also contributed to the comics magazine Drighangchoo produced by the English department and has created other comics.[3]
Selected publications
Novels
- Black Light (2010)[4]
- The City of Love (2007)[5]
- Signal Red (2005)[6][7]
Stories
- "The Garden of Bombahia", about sixteenth-century scientist and heretic Garcia da Orta, appeared in Wasafiri 24(3): pp. 98–106.
- "The First Rasa", about a woman printer in Calcutta's nineteenth-century pleasure district, came out in Kolkata: Book City: Readings, Fragments, Images, ed. Sria Chatterjee and Jennie Renton (Edinburgh: Textualities, 2009).
- "Jessica", about an Anglo-Indian woman hairdresser of Portuguese descent in a Bengali neighbourhood in Calcutta, came out in Vislumbres: Bridging India and Iberoamerica 1 (2008): pp. 58–9.
- "The Key to All the Worlds", appeared in Superhero: The Fabulous Adventures of Rocket Kumar and Other Indian Superheroes, published by Scholastic India in 2007. ISBN 81-7655-821-4
- "A Night with the Joking Clown". (2019). In Saint, Tarun K. (ed.). The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction.[8]
- "Arisudan" (Mithila Review #15, 2021)[9]
Graphic stories
- "How Zigsa Found Her Way" in the Longform Anthology published by HarperCollins India.
- "Killer" in Comix India Vol. 2: Girl Power
- "The Bookshop on the Hill" in Drighangchoo Issue 3, Kolkata 2010. Part 2 of the story forthcoming in Drighangchoo Issue 4.
Other books
- Empires of the Mind: A History of the Oxford University Press in India During the Raj (2006)[10]
- Apon Katha: My Story by Abanindranath Tagore (translation from Bengali to English) (Chennai: Tara, 2004)
- Titu Mir by Mahasweta Devi (Bhattacharya) (translation from Bengali to English) (Calcutta: Seagull, 2000) ISBN 81-7046-174-X
Honors and awards
- 2007 SHARP DeLong Prize for History of the Book (Empires of the Mind: A History of the Oxford University Press in India During the Raj)[11]
- 2007 English Fiction shortlist, Vodafone Crossword Book Award (City of Love)[12]
References
- "Dr. Rimi Barnali Chatterjee". www.jaduniv.edu.in. Jadavpur University. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
- "Prof Rimi Barnali Chatterjee". Jadavpur University Faculty Profiles. Indian Research Information Network System. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
- De, Pinaki (2021). "Post-millennial comics anthologies in India: the long haul to Longform". Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. 12 (6): 1410–1422. doi:10.1080/21504857.2021.2010981. S2CID 245571722. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
- Black Light, New Delhi: HarperCollins, 2010, ISBN 978-81-7223-839-1. Reviews:
- The City of Love, New Delhi: Penguin, 2007, ISBN 0-14-310381-4. Reviews:
- Signal Red: A Novel, New Delhi: Penguin, 2005, ISBN 0-14-303262-3
- Banerjee, Suparno (2009). "Alternative Dystopia: Science, Power, and Fundamentalism in Rimi B. Chatterjee's Signal Red". Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts. 20 (1): 24–41, 155. JSTOR 24352312. ProQuest 231092990.
- Rimi B. Chatterjee (2019). "A Night with the Joking Clown". In Saint, Tarun K. (ed.). The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction. Hachette India. ISBN 978-93-88322-05-8. Reviews:
- Burnham, Karen (23 February 2022). "The Year in Review 2021 by Karen Burnham". Locus. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
- Empires of the Mind: A History of the Oxford University Press in India During the Raj, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 0-19-567474-X. Reviews:
- "DeLong Book History Prize Winners | SHARP". Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
- "Book awards: Vodafone Crossword Book Award Shortlist". LibraryThing. Retrieved 28 June 2021.[dead link]
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На других языках
- [en] Rimi B. Chatterjee
[ru] Чаттерджи, Рими
Рими Чаттерджи (англ. Rimi B. Chatterjee) — индийская писательница из Калькутты, Индия. Опубликовала три романа и одну научную историю, получившую в 2006-м году премию SHARP deLong в номинации «История книги», а также ряд переводов и коротких рассказов[1]. Дважды выдвигалась на присвоение премии Vodafone Crossword Book Award — один раз с художественным произведением, а один раз с переводом. Преподает английский язык в Джадавпурском университете.
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2019-2025
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