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⚫ | '''Mihir Sengupta''' is an Indian writer of [[Bengali people|Bengali]] origin, best known for his 2005 autobiography ''Bishaad Brikkho'' (''Tree of Sorrow'').<ref>[http://www.mcrg.ac.in/Spheres/Rajarshi.doc Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group document]</ref><ref>[http://kafila.org/2010/10/29/the-return-of-daya-prasanta-chakravarty/ Kafila essay]</ref> It describes the 1947 partition as seen by the author, who was uprooted from his native [[Barisal]] in present-day [[Bangladesh]] and ended up in Calcutta as a refugee. ''Bishaad Brikkho'' is regarded as an important literary document of the 1947 partition and won the [[Ananda Puroshkar]] literary prize. |
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'''Mihir Sengupta''' is an Indian writer of [[ |
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⚫ | Bengali people|Bengali]] origin, best known for his 2005 autobiography ''Bishaad Brikkho'' (''Tree of Sorrow'').<ref>[http://www.mcrg.ac.in/Spheres/Rajarshi.doc Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group document]</ref><ref>[http://kafila.org/2010/10/29/the-return-of-daya-prasanta-chakravarty/ Kafila essay]</ref> It describes the 1947 partition as seen by the author, who was uprooted from his native [[Barisal]] in present-day [[Bangladesh]] and ended up in Calcutta as a refugee. ''Bishaad Brikkho'' is regarded as an important literary document of the 1947 partition and won the [[Ananda Puroshkar]] literary prize. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 02:23, 12 September 2019
Mihir Sengupta is an Indian writer of Bengali origin, best known for his 2005 autobiography Bishaad Brikkho (Tree of Sorrow).[1][2] It describes the 1947 partition as seen by the author, who was uprooted from his native Barisal in present-day Bangladesh and ended up in Calcutta as a refugee. Bishaad Brikkho is regarded as an important literary document of the 1947 partition and won the Ananda Puroshkar literary prize.
References