This document provides a summary of Nirad C. Chaudhuri's autobiography "The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian". It discusses how the autobiography is divided into four books describing Chaudhuri's time in Calcutta from 1910 to 1942 and the impact it had on him. It also summarizes Chaudhuri's views on Indian history and civilization, and how he remained a prolific writer publishing works until his death at age 102 in Oxford, England. The autobiography is considered a landmark work in Indo-Anglian literature that described the environment and conditions of growing up in India under British rule.
This document provides a summary of Nirad C. Chaudhuri's autobiography "The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian". It discusses how the autobiography is divided into four books describing Chaudhuri's time in Calcutta from 1910 to 1942 and the impact it had on him. It also summarizes Chaudhuri's views on Indian history and civilization, and how he remained a prolific writer publishing works until his death at age 102 in Oxford, England. The autobiography is considered a landmark work in Indo-Anglian literature that described the environment and conditions of growing up in India under British rule.
This document provides a summary of Nirad C. Chaudhuri's autobiography "The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian". It discusses how the autobiography is divided into four books describing Chaudhuri's time in Calcutta from 1910 to 1942 and the impact it had on him. It also summarizes Chaudhuri's views on Indian history and civilization, and how he remained a prolific writer publishing works until his death at age 102 in Oxford, England. The autobiography is considered a landmark work in Indo-Anglian literature that described the environment and conditions of growing up in India under British rule.
This document provides a summary of Nirad C. Chaudhuri's autobiography "The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian". It discusses how the autobiography is divided into four books describing Chaudhuri's time in Calcutta from 1910 to 1942 and the impact it had on him. It also summarizes Chaudhuri's views on Indian history and civilization, and how he remained a prolific writer publishing works until his death at age 102 in Oxford, England. The autobiography is considered a landmark work in Indo-Anglian literature that described the environment and conditions of growing up in India under British rule.
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Although, the book, ‘An unfinished revolution’, is
by nature an account of autobiography yet it is more
concerned with the story of the struggle of a civilization with a hostile environment in which the destiny of the British rule become necessarily involved. It is about the maturity of a scholar’s mind in that environment. It seeks to show how the mind and character of a typical Indian were made, shaped and quickened by the same British rule. This Autobiography has been divided into four different books in which each book has four chapters about Nirad’s stay in Calcutta from 1910 to 1942 and the impact it had on his mind. Nirad’s school education was a total disappointment. However, he learned a lot from museums and libraries. This book also tells about his failure in the M.A. examination in History. Book 4 is entitled “Into the World” and its four chapters are : Man and Life in Calcutta New Politics Vanishing Landmarks An Essay On the Course of Indian History. In this book, Nirad describes in details the life in Calcutta, the different sections of society both Bengali and English, the missions of the rich and the houses of the middle class. The book also describes the advent of Gandhi on the sense and Nirad’s disillusionment with Gandhi’s passive resistance movement because it degenerated into mob-violence. Anyway, Gandhism was the victory of a new kind of nationalism and nationality. According to him, these new politics had destroyed all the other form of Indian nationalism and the moral awareness created by Brahmanism and the new Hinduism of the 19th century. It also destroyed the concept of synthesis between the values of “the East” and “the West”. In the end, only the imitation of the west emerged as the conspicuous feature of our life. Nirad C. Chaudhuri concludes his best “Autobiography” with his views of “Indian History”. He believes that that the tropical land of India has ever been a corrupting influence on its people. The land was rejuvenated only when foreign invasions took place. He hopes that in the future the USA alone or along or along with the British Commonwealth may come to rejuvenate India again. The Autobiography ends here; “In the words of Nirad C. Chaudhuri himself”. It is more of a national than personal history. The book also brings out Chaudhuri as a great Anglophile. Nirad C. Chaudhuri’s “The Autobiography of An Unknown Indian” is a landmark in the development of the Autobiographical genre in Indo-Anglian literature. In fact, this literary genre in Indo-Anglian literature came to its maturity in the period of the Gandhian whirlwind (1920-1947) due to the emergence of a large number of thinkers, political leaders, whose lines interested the people and they wanted to know about them from their own method. Nirad had a balance and subtle motions for the exclusive situation with exclusive men. Nirad Chaudhuri was born in Kishoregunj, Mymensingh, East Bengal, British India (now Bangladesh), the second of eight children of Upendra Narayan Chaudhuri, a lawyer, and of Sushila Sundarani Chaudhurani. His parents were liberal middle-class Hindus who belonged to the Brahmo Samaj movement. Chaudhuri was a prolific writer even in the very last years of his life, publishing his last work at the age of 99. His wife Amiya Chaudhuri died in 1994 in Oxford, England. He too died in Oxford, three months short of his 102nd birthday, in 1999. He lived at 20 Lathbury Road from 1982 until his death and a blue plaque was installed by the Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board in 2008. Why was he always in love with England, though he had never visited the land before the age of 57? Perhaps Nirad Chaudhuri was in search of a home that he could call his own. And perhaps this street in 1980s took him closer to the novels of Hardy and Austen. Lovers of literature not only see texts through their lives but also sculpt live through the texts they read. His textual affinity was coupled with the colonial aura he grew up with- we must remember that he spent his first 50 years in an empire where the sun never set. His England stay was a realisation of certain dominant sensibilities and visions he idealised but they were far from reality. Places like 20, Lathbury road makes me wonder why people choose to migrate and why certain places receive more sanctity than others. For Nirad Chaudhuri, England was sacred and for some America is. The solution to this onerous puzzle cannot be found in better living standard or socio-economic conditions of higher wages. Furthermore, certain places celebrate certain people. Nirad Chaudhuri would have been immensely happy if he knew about the blue plaque as it would fit his sensibilities perfectly. Even Oxford County Council was happy enough to remember this “an original thinker, forthright in his opinions and an internationalist, in the sense of one who embraces the best of all cultures but never loses his own. Major works[edit] His masterpiece, The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian, published in 1951, put him on the long list of great Indian writers. Chaudhari had said that The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian is 'more of an exercise in descriptive ethology than autobiography'. He is concerned with describing the conditions in which an Indian grew to manhood in the early decades of the century, and as he feels that the basic principle of book is that environment shall have precedence over its product; he describes its affectionate and sensuous detail the three places that had the greatest influence on him: Kishoreganj,the country town in which he lived till he was twelve; Bangram; his ancestral village; and Kalikutch, his mother's village. A fourth chapter is devoted to England, which occupied a large place in his imagination. Later in the book he talks about Calcutta, the Bengali Renaissance, the beginnings of the nationalist Movement, and his experience of Englishmen in India as opposed to the idyllic pictures of a civilization he consider perhaps the greatest in the world. These themes remains preoccupations in most of Chaudhari's work, as does his deterministic view of culture and politics. He courted controversy in the newly independent India due to the dedication of the book, which ran thus: To the memory of the British Empire in India, Which conferred subjecthood upon us, But withheld citizenship. To which yet every one of us threw out the challenge: "Civis Britannicus sum" Because all that was good and living within us Was made, shaped and quickened By the same British rule. Chaudhuri was hounded out of government service, deprived of his pension, blacklisted as a writer in India and forced to live a life of penury. Furthermore, he had to give up his job as a political commentator in All India Radio as the Government of India promulgated a law that prohibited employees from publishing memoirs. Chaudhuri argued that his critics were not careful-enough readers; "the dedication was really a condemnation of the British rulers for not treating us as equals", he wrote in a 1997 special edition of Granta. [6] Typically, to demonstrate what exactly he had been trying to say, he drew on a parallel with Ancient Rome. The book's dedication, Chaudhuri observed, "was an imitation of what Cicero said about the conduct of Verres, a Roman proconsul of Sicily who oppressed Sicilian Roman citizens, who in their desperation cried out: "Civis romanus sum".[6] At the age of 57, in 1955 for the first time Chaudhari went to abroad. After coming back he wrote a novel Passage to England (1959). In this novel he talked about his visits of five weeks in England, two weeks in Paris and one week in Rome. He has given all these figures only as he wants to show the intensity and range of the experience he went through in these eight weeks. During this period he visited statues, paintings, plays and other work of arts. He also visited buildings, landscapes and gardens and also heard music and poetry. Honours[edit] Duff Cooper Memorial Award in 1967 Ananda Purashkar in 1988 DLitt from Oxford University in 1990.[7] Vidyasagar Purashkar in 1997 by the Govt of West Bengal Desikottama in 1997 by Viswabharati Books[edit] The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian (1951) A Passage to England (1959) The Continent of Circe (1965) The Intellectual in India (1967) To Live or Not to Live (1971) Scholar Extraordinary, The Life of Professor the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller, P.C. (1974) Culture in the Vanity Bag (1976) Clive of India (1975) Hinduism: A Religion to Live by (1979) Thy Hand, Great Anarch! (1987) Three Horsemen of the New Apocalypse (1997) The East is East and West is West (collection of pre- published essays) From the Archives of a Centenarian (collection of pre-published essays) Why I Mourn for England (collection of pre- published essays)
Some Excerpts from Nirad C. Chaudhuri- “The
Autobiography of An Unknown Indian
I am a Bengali and an Englishman.
I am a striking illustration of the survival of the unfittest. I am often asked: `We hear so many stories about you. Are they true?' I reply, `If they are for me, you should discount 95 per cent, but if against, the whole of 100 per cent.' When I write in English I am not writing as an Indian or an Englishman. I am just a writer. Writers know no nationality. I would also set down, as a matter of moral obligation, that I consider Kipling to be the only English writer who will have a permanent place in English literature with books on Indian themes, and who will also be read by everyone who wants to know not only British India but also timeless India. The Beeb does not have the faintest idea of Victorian norms and etiquette. They play to the popular culture. Britain is a corrupt civilization now. Do you know what religion is? It is a revolt against death. A revolt against biology, a reaction against decay. A man who cannot endure dirt, dust, stench, noise, ugliness, disorder, heat and cold has no right to live in India. Do we live at all? This would seem an absurd question, for none of us commit suicide, though to be honest, I would confess that I have come to feel that a large majority of the persons I know should do so, because I cannot see any point in their remaining alive. The conduct of American women, however, I cannot even now understand unless I attribute it to the sad but inexorable law of American impingement on Asia that the United States will never export any of its products to the East except those of which every decent American is ashamed, taken with its compliment that in retaliation, the East will set its lowest adventurers on the distributors of American money. Salvation is never the object of religious observances and worship of the Hindus. The main object is worldly prosperity, and this absorption in the world has made the doctrine of rebirth in it the most appealing and strongly held belief among all notions put forward by them about existence of life after death. They so loved the world that they made the possibility of leaving it for good even after many cycles of rebirth as remote and difficult as possible.