Subject Index
Browse by Maps
|
| Chowdhury, Munier (1925-1971)
educationist, playwright, literary critic, was born on 27 November 1925
in the town of manikganj.
His ancestral home was in noakhali
district. His father, Khan Bahadur Abdul Halim Chowdhury, was a district
magistrate. In 1941 Munier Chowdhury matriculated from Dhaka Collegiate
School. After completing his ISc from Aligarh Muslim University, he enrolled
at Dhaka University and completed Honours (1946) and MA (1947) in English.
In 1954 he completed a second MA degree in Bangla and in 1958 obtained
an MA in Linguistics from Harvard University.
Munier Chowdhury taught
for some time at b
l college in Khulna (1947-1950) and at jagannath
college (1950). He then joined Dhaka University (1950-1971),
teaching in both the English and Bangla departments. He was associated
with leftist politics and progressive cultural movements. In 1948
he attended the Communist Party Conference in Kolkata. Towards the
end of the year he was elected Secretary of the Pragati Lekhak O
Shilpi Sangha (Progressive Writers and Artists' Association). |
|
Munier Chowdhury |
In 1952 he was arrested under the Preventive Detention
Act for protesting against police repression and the killing of students
on 21 February 1952. He remained in detention until 1954.While in jail
he sat for the MA examination in Bangla, topping the list of successful
candidates. In detention, he wrote a one-act play, Kabar (1953),
based on the language
movement. Considered to be his best play, Kabar was
staged inside the jail, with prisoners playing different parts. He was
also imprisoned on two other occasions.
Munier Chowdhury was a staunch nationalist and stood
up against all forms of cultural repression. In 1967 he protested against
the Pakistan government's directive to ban tagore
songs on Radio and TV. He also protested against the move to
reform the Bangla alphabet. Munier Chowdhury was associated with all contemporary
national movements. He declared his solidarity with the non-cooperation
movement called by bangabandhu
sheikh mujibur rahman in March 1971 and renounced the title
of Sitara-i-Imtiaz which he had received in 1966.
Munier Chowdhury achieved literary success chiefly as a progressive writer. He started by writing short stories, but his main interest was in writing plays, especially one-act plays. As in his short stories, his one-act plays are about the disparities and aberrations in contemporary social life as well as about the common humanity which unites all human beings. Twelve of his one-act plays have been compiled in Kabar (1966), Dandakaranya (1966) and Palashi Barrack O Anyanya (1969). Raktakta Prantar (1959), which is set during the time of the Third Battle of Panipat, is inspired by the feelings of a common humanity which rises above wars and communal strife. Another of his plays, Chithi (1966), exposes the selfishness and autocratic attitude of people in the name of popular movements. His plays, like western absurdist drama, successfully combine serious themes with lively dialogue and humour. Munier Chowdhury also translated a number of foreign plays into Bangla. He also acted and directed plays for the stage, radio, television and cinema. He was awarded the Bangla Academy Prize (1962) and the Daud Prize (1965) for his plays. In 1989,
Theatre introduced the Munier Chowdhury Award in his honour. Munier Chowdhury was also a perceptive literary critic, as evidenced from his two books Mir-Manas (1965) and Tulanamulak Samalochana (1969). His book Bangla Gadyariti (1970) discusses contemporary Bangla prose of East Bengal. Munier Chowdhury also devised a Bangla keyboard for typewriters (1965), known as Munier Optima. Just two days before the end of the liberation war, he was kidnapped from
his residence in Dhaka and killed by anti-liberation force. [Anupam
Hayat]
|
|
Subject Index
Browse by Maps
|