“Ār konakhāne”/’Somewhere Else’: Utopian Resonances in Lila Majumdar’s Autobiographical Writing

Publication date

2018

Authors

Bagchi, B.ISNI 0000000044711323

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Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This article examines the autobiographical writings of Lila Majumdar, 1908–2007, a writer most famous for zany, fantastical, defamiliarizing, speculative fiction for children and young adults. Majumdar was an influential maker of cultural history. While her natal Ray/Raychaudhuri family comprised master entertainers who simultaneously brought reformist, innovative values into the public sphere of the arts, the leading woman writer from this milieu, in her autobiographical and memoir-based volumes Ār konakhāne (‘Somewhere Else’ [1967] 1989), Pākdaṇḍī (‘Winding, Hilly Road,’ [1986] 2001), and Kheror khātā (‘Miscellany’ or ‘Scrapbook’ [1982] 2009), imaginatively created utopias. These ‘otherwheres’, to use a word that captures utopian connotations that she creates in her writing, give voice to the marginal and the liminal. We find in her autobiographical writing the dual urge of longing for a utopian elsewhere, and a dissatisfaction with all the places one finds temporary mooring in.

Keywords

modernity; utopia; gender; reformist; autobiography

Citation

Bagchi, B 2018, '“Ār konakhāne”/’Somewhere Else’: Utopian Resonances in Lila Majumdar’s Autobiographical Writing', Cracow Indological Studies, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 224-238.