- Ismat Chughtai
-
Ismat Chughtai
عصمت چغتائیBorn August 15, 1915
Badayun, Uttar Pradesh, British IndiaDied Bombay, India
October 24, 1991 (aged 76)Occupation Writer Language Urdu Notable award(s) Ghalib Award (1974)
Filmfare Best Story Award (1975)
Samman Award (1990)Ismat Chughtai (Urdu: عصمت چغتائی) (August 1915 – 24 October 1991)1 was an eminent Urdu writer, known for her indomitable spirit and a fierce feminist ideology. She was considered the grand dame of Urdu fiction, as one of the four pillars of modern Urdu short story, the other three being Saadat Hasan Manto, Krishan Chander, and Rajinder Singh Bedi.[1] Her outspoken and controversial style of writing made her the passionate voice for the unheard, and she has become an inspiration for the younger generation of writers, readers and intellectuals.
Contents
Life
She was born in Badayun, Uttar Pradesh and grew up largely in Jodhpur where her father was a civil servant. She was ninth of ten children (six brothers, four sisters), and since her older sisters got married while Ismat was very young, the better part of her childhood was spent in the company of her brothers, a factor which she admits contributed greatly to the frankness in her nature and writing. Her brother, Mirza Azim Beg Chughtai, already an established writer, when Ismat was still in her teens, was her first teacher and mentor.
In 1936, still working on her bachelor’s degree, she attended the first meeting of the Progressive Writers' Association in Lucknow. After her B.A., Ismat worked for a B.T. (a Bachelor’s in Education), thus becoming the first Indian Muslim woman to have earned both degrees. In this period she started writing in secret on account of violent opposition to her education from her Muslim family.
Awards
- 1974: Ghalib Award (Urdu Drama): Terhi Lakeer[2]
- 1975: Filmfare Best Story Award: Garam Hawa (with Kaifi Azmi)[3]
- 1990: Samman Award for Urdu Literature[4]
Significance
Ismat Chughtai is considered a path breaker for women writers in the subcontinent, as the many women writing at the time of Ismat's birth and childhood - including, notably, Muhammadi Begum, Sughra Humayun Mirza, Tyaba Bilgrami (to whose novel Anwari Begum Chughtai refers in Terhi Lakeer), and Khatun Akram, were considered to be too caught up in the ideology of slow, conservative and religiously sanctioned changes for women advocated by such male reformers as Mumtaz Ali, Rashidul Khairi and Shaikh Abdullah. However, in Ismat's formative years, Nazar Sajjad Hyder had established herself an independent feminist voice, and the short stories of two very different women, Hijab Imtiaz Ali and the Progressive Dr Rashid Jehan were also a significant early influence on Ismat. (See Aamer Hussein's article, Forcing Silence to Speak, on early women writers in the AUS online).
During her heyday, a lot of her writings were banned in South Asia due to their reformist and feminist content offending Islamic militants[5] (such as her view that the Niqab, the mask forced on women in Muslim societies, should be discouraged for Muslim women because it is oppressive and feudal[6]). Currently, many of her books are banned in Islamic countries, such as Pakistan and Bangladesh, on the grounds that her writings that advocate for reform in Muslim society are "anti-Muslim".[7]
Death
Ismat Chughtai died in Bombay on October 24, 1991 and was cremated in Chandanwadi crematorium according to her wish.
Select bibliography
- A Chughtai Collection, Sama Publishing, 2005. ISBN 969-8784-16-0.
- Lifting the Veil, Penguin, 2001.
- The Heart Breaks Free/The Wild One, South Asia Books, 1993.
- My Friend My Enemy: Essays, Reminiscences, Portraits, New Delhi, Kali for Women, 2001.
- Quilt and Other Stories, New Delhi, Kali for Women, 1996
- Terhi Lakhir (The Crooked Line), New Delhi, Kali for Women, 1995
Filmography
- Junoon (1978 film) - Dialogue, Actor
- My Dreams (1975) Documentary - Director
- Garam Hawa (1973) - Story
- Jawab Ayega (1968) - Director
- Sone Ki Chidia (1958) - Screenwriter, Producer
- Faraib (1953) - Director
- Arzoo (1950 film) - Screenwriter, Dialogue
- Ziddi (1948 film) - Story
End note and references
The Crooked Line is also being published, with a new afterword by the translator Tahira Naqvi, in the United States by the Feminist Press (publication date is July 2006). Naseeruddin Shah's Motley productions has staged three short stories of Ismat Chughtai in their production 'Ismat Aapa ke Naam'.
- Women Writing in India Vol II, edited by Susie Tharu and K. Lalita.
- An Uncivil Woman: Ismat Chughtai - Geeta Patel, The Annual of Urdu Studies.Urdu Studies
- Ismat Chughtai—A Tribute: Tahira Naqvi.[3]
- Ismat Chughtai: An Unexplored Territory
- Ismat Chughtai, Sawnet
- ^ Urdu Studies
- ^ List of winners of Ghalib Award in Urdu, 1976 onwards ghalibinstitute.com.
- ^ Awards Internet Movie Database.
- ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_8204/is_20090413/ai_n52150423/
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ Literary radicalism in India: gender, nation and the transition to independence, By Priyamvada Gopal, Chapter 3
Books on Ismat Chughtai
- Ismat: Her Life, Her Times. Sukrita Paul Kumar, Katha, New Delhi,2000. ISBN-81-85586-97-7.
- Ismat Chughtai, A Fearless Voice. Manjulaa Negi, Rupa and Co, 2003.81-29101-53-X.
Articles on Ismat Chughtai
- Torchbearer of a literary revolution. The Hindu, Sunday, 21 May 2000.[4]
- Kashmir Uzma Urdu weekly, Srinagar, 27 December 2004, 2 January 2005.[5]
- Ismat Chughtai - Pakistan-India (1915–1991), World People, 5 May 2006.[6]
External links
- Ismat Chughtai at the Internet Movie Database
- Ismat Chughtai (1915-1991)
- Biography and bibliography
- Ismat Chughtai's Short Stories
- Book Extract
- Naseer pays tribute to Ismat Chughtai
- Ismat Chughtai: An Iconoclast Muslim Dame of Urdu Fiction
Filmfare Award for Best Story 1955 – 1970 Mukhram Sharma (1955) · Rajinder Singh Bedi (1956) · Amiya Chakrabarty (1957) · Akhtar Mirza (1958) · Mukhram Sharma (1959) · Subodh Ghosh (1960) · Ruby Sen (1961) · C. V. Sridhar (1962) · K.P. Kottarakara (1963) · Jarasandha (1964) · Ban Bhatt (1965) · Akhtar Mirza (1966) · R. K. Narayan (1967) · Manoj Kumar (1968) · Sachin Bhowmick (1969) · Vasant Kanetkar (1970)
1971 – 1990 Chandrakant Kakodkar (1971) · Hrishikesh Mukherjee (1972) · Basu Bhattacharya (1973) · Salim-Javed (1974) · Kaifi Azmi, Ismat Chughtai (1975) · Salim-Javed (1976) · Balaichand Mukherjee (1977) · Sharat Chandra Chatterji (1978) · Dinesh Thakur (1979) · Shanker Shesh (1980) · Vijay Tendulkar (1981) · Chetan Anand (1982) · Samresh Basu (1983) · S. D. Palwalker (1984) · Mahesh Bhatt (1985) · Aleem Masroor (1986) · no award (1987) · no award (1988) · Subodh Ghosh (1989) · Kasinadhuni Viswanath (1990)
1991 – 2010 Rajkumar Santoshi (1991 ) · Honey Irani (1992) · no award given (1993) · Sutanu Gupta (1994) · K. K. Singh (1995) · Ram Gopal Varma (1996) · Gulzar (1997) · Kamal Haasan (1998) · Mahesh Bhatt (1999) · Vinay Shukla (2000) · Honey Irani (2001) · Ashutosh Gowariker (2002) · Jaideep Sahni (2003) · Nagesh Kukunoor (2004) · Aditya Chopra (2005) · Sudhir Mishra, Ruchi Narain & Shivkumar Subramaniam (2006 ) · Rajkumar Hirani & Vidhu Vinod Chopra (2007) · Amol Gupte (2008) · Abhishek Kapoor (2009) · Abhijat Joshi & Rajkumar Hirani (2010)
2011 – present Anurag Kashyap & Vikramaditya Motwane (2011)
Categories:- 1915 births
- 1991 deaths
- Indian writers
- Indian screenwriters
- Filmfare Awards winners
- Indian women writers
- Indian Muslims
- People from Badaun
- Urdu short story writers
- Urdu writers from India
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