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Our Non-Veg Cow

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In this volume Mahasweta Devi reveals a fresh new face to those who know her only from her hardhitting socially committed writing.

115 pages, Hardcover

First published December 1, 2000

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About the author

Mahasweta Devi

197 books328 followers
Mahasweta Devi was an Indian social activist and writer. She was born in 1926 in Dhaka, to literary parents in a Hindu Brahmin family. Her father Manish Ghatak was a well-known poet and novelist of the Kallol era, who used the pseudonym Jubanashwa. Mahasweta's mother Dharitri Devi was also a writer and a social worker.

She joined the Rabindranath Tagore-founded Vishvabharati University in Santiniketan and completed a B.A. (Hons) in English, and then finished an M.A. in English at Calcutta University as well. She later married renowned playwright Bijon Bhattacharya who was one of the founding fathers of the IPTA movement. In 1948, she gave birth to Nabarun Bhattacharya, currently one of Bengal's and India's leading novelist whose works are noted for their intellectual vigour and philosophical flavour. She got divorced from Bijon Bhattacharya in 1959.

In 1964, she began teaching at Bijoygarh College (an affiliated college of the University of Calcutta system). During those days, Bijoygarh College was an institution for working class women students. During that period she also worked as a journalist and as a creative writer. Recently, she is more famous for her work related to the study of the Lodhas and Shabars, the tribal communities of West Bengal, women and dalits. She is also an activist who is dedicated to the struggles of tribal people in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. In her elaborate Bengali fiction, she often depicts the brutal oppression of tribal peoples and the untouchables by potent, authoritarian upper-caste landlords, lenders, and venal government officials.

Major awards:
1979: Sahitya Akademi Award (Bengali): – Aranyer Adhikar (novel)
1986: Padma Shri[2]
1996: Jnanpith Award - the highest literary award from the Bharatiya Jnanpith
1997: Ramon Magsaysay Award - Journalism, Literature, and the Creative Communication Arts
1999: Honoris causa - Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU)
2006: Padma Vibhushan - the second highest civilian award from the Government of India
2010:Yashwantrao Chavan National Award
2011: Bangabibhushan - the highest civilian award from the Government of West Bengal
2012: Hall of Fame Lifetime Achievement Sahityabramha - the first Lifetime Achievement award in Bengali Literature from 4thScreen-IFJW.

মহাশ্বেতা দেবী একটি মধ্যবিত্ত বাঙালি পরিবারে জন্মগ্রহণ করেছিলেন । তাঁর পিতা মনীশ ঘটক ছিলেন কল্লোল যুগের প্রখ্যাত সাহিত্যিক এবং তাঁর কাকা ছিলেন বিখ্যাত চিত্রপরিচালক ঋত্বিক ঘটক। মা ধরিত্রী দেবীও ছিলেন সাহিত্যিক ও সমাজসেবী। মহাশ্বেতা দেবী বিখ্যাত নাট্যকার বিজন ভট্টাচার্যের সঙ্গে বিবাহবন্ধনে আবদ্ধ হন। তাঁদের একমাত্র পুত্র, প্রয়াত নবারুণ ভট্টাচার্য স্মরণীয় কবিতার পঙ্‌ক্তি ‘এ মৃত্যু উপত্যকা আমার দেশ নয়’ এবং হারবার্ট উপন্যাস লিখে বাংলা সাহিত্যে স্থায়ী স্বাক্ষর রেখে গেছেন।

তাঁর শৈশব ও কৈশোরে স্কুলের পড়াশোনা ঢাকায়। দেশভাগের পর চলে আসেন কলকাতায়। এরপর শা‌ন্তিনিকেতনের বিশ্বভারতী বিশ্ববিদ্যালয় থেকে ইংরেজিতে অনার্স এবং কলকাতা বিশ্ববিদ্যালয় থেকে স্নাতকোত্তর ডিগ্রি নেন।

১৯৬৪ খ্রীষ্টাব্দে তিনি বিজয়গড় কলেজে শিক্ষকতা শুরু করেন । এই সময়েই তিনি একজন সাংবাদিক এবং লেখিকা হিসাবে কাজ করেন। পরবর্তীকালে তিনি বিখ্যাত হন মূলত পশ্চিমবাংলার উপজাতি এবং নারীদের ওপর তাঁর কাজের জন্য । তিনি বিভিন্ন লেখার মাধ্যমে বিভিন্ন উপজাতি এবং মেয়েদের উপর শোষণ এবং বঞ্চনার কথা তুলে ধরেছেন। সাম্প্রতিক কালে মহাশ্বেতা দেবী পশ্চিমবঙ্গ সরকারের শিল্পনীতির বিরুদ্ধে সরব হয়েছেন । সরকার কর্তৃক বিপুল পরিমাণে কৃষিজমি অধিগ্রহণ এবং স্বল্পমূল্যে তা শিল্পপতিদের কাছে বিতরণের নীতির তিনি কড়া সমালোচক । এছাড়া তিনি শান্তিনিকেতনে প্রোমোটারি ব্যবসার বিরুদ্ধেও প্রতিবাদ করেছেন ।

তাঁর লেখা শতাধিক বইয়ের মধ্যে হাজার চুরাশির মা অন্যতম। তাঁকে পদ্মবিভূষণ (ভারত সরকারের দ্বিতীয় সর্বোচ্চ নাগরিক পুরস্কার,২০০৬), রামন ম্যাগসেসে পুরস্কার (১৯৯৭), জ্ঞানপীঠ পুরস্কার (সাহিত্য একাডেমির সর্বোচ্চ সাহিত্য সম্মান), সার্ক সাহিত্য পুরস্কার (২০০৭) প্রভৃতি পদকে ভূষিত করা হয়।

২০১৬ সালের ২৮ জুলাই, বৃহস্পতিবার বেলা ৩টা ১৬ মিনিটে চিকিৎসাধীন অবস্থায় তিনি শেষনিশ্বাস ত্যাগ করেন।


जन्म : 1926, ढाका।

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Shikha S.
56 reviews27 followers
December 16, 2016
BRILLIANT! This book made me nostalgic for a childhood I've never had. I even cried often, at parts that you might not expect someone to cry, just because I suddenly felt the despair and grief of a passed childhood, of dead siblings. Beautiful book. Filled me with so many emotions.
Profile Image for Chitra Ahanthem.
395 reviews209 followers
February 10, 2022
Our Non Veg Cow and Other Stories by Mahasweta Devi and translated from the Bengali by Paramita Banerjee is a collection of 10 short stories that the author contributed for Sandesh, a popular children's magazine brought out by the Ray family and then edited by Bengali socio cultural icon Satyajit Ray. As Nabaneeta Dev Sen says in the introduction to this collection that as per Mahasweta, 'For children, one should write with a great deal of love and respect, that is why children's books are usually the best which grown ups cannot resist.'


The stories in this collection are flights of fantasy, ones that give free rein to imagination while putting in vivid insights into the life and the ways of the world. Many of the stories center around the author's family and the little idiosyncrasies that bring in the chuckles and frame the family as a unit that is held together by acceptance and affection despite the many crazy paths that family members venture into.


The title story fits into the 'apt for child and adult' tag with the antics of a cow being the highlight with a deeper core of going against the grain being embedded for the politically aware adult. Another story in this line is Shivaji's Horse which is a flight of fantasy but has a character whose main belief in life is that everything worthwhile in this universe had been achieved by a certain line if Brahmins, reminding me of certain 'facts' coming out of the WhatsApp University in the country today. No wonder the author's works have removed from the syllabus of colleges and universities for she said things as they were.
Profile Image for Mayolla nazareth .
75 reviews2 followers
January 2, 2022
I laughed ,smiled and giggled as I ran through the pages. Made me nostalgic of my grandpa's story.
Profile Image for Khyati.
232 reviews1 follower
February 23, 2024
A rapturing set of 10 stories based on imagination, fantasy and anecdotes catering to both; children and adults.
Profile Image for Advait.
23 reviews3 followers
June 11, 2015
What a wonderful surprise to find this collection by Mahasweta Devi. Irreverent short tall tales written in the late 60s that use nostalgia and her family as a springboard to launch into long-lost worlds. Nyadosh the fish-and-meat loving cow, the cheetah who lets himself be killed to make Jim Corbett famous, Chattrapati Shivaji juxtaposed with a modern-day 'seller of umbrellas'... the cast of characters here would no doubt be politicized and 'symbolized' by the zealots of today's India. As in the best of all "children's stories", within these is a reminder of how our innocence transforms from cause to casualty.
1 review2 followers
June 11, 2015
What a wonderful surprise to find these short stories by Mahasweta Devi. Irreverent short tall tales written in the late 60s that use nostalgia and her family as a springboard to launch into long-lost worlds. The cast of characters here - Nyadosh the fish-and-meat loving cow, the cheetah who lets himself be killed to make Jim Corbett famous, Chattrapati Shivaji juxtaposed with a modern-day seller of umbrellas - would no doubt be politicized and 'symbolized' by the zealots of today's India. Within these "children's stories" is a reminder of how our innocence transforms from cause to casualty.
Profile Image for Nirupama Kotru.
9 reviews
Read
January 13, 2017
A lovely collection of short stories.With their vivid description of life in Bengal, the stories entice and entertain .An Eastern equivalent of RKNarayan's Malgudi tales; of course the latter had the advantage of being written in English.The translation is excellent, though.
Some of these stories appeared in the children's magazine "Sandesh", which published excellent stories by Satyajit Ray, among others.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews