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Shantabai Kamble
Indian writer (1923–2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Shantabai Krushnaji Kamble (1 March 1923 – 25 January 2023) was an Indian Marathi writer and Dalit activist. She wrote the first female Dalit autobiography.
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Biography
Early age
Shantabai Krushnaji Kamble was born in a Mahar Dalit family on 1 March 1923. Her birthplace was Mahud which is located in Solapur. She was from a poor family. The social and economic status of her community was quite low.[citation needed]
Educational struggle
The traditional attitude in India towards education for people of lower class and women at the time made it so education was prohibited for, however her parents decided to send her to school because of her extraordinary talent. She was awarded a three rupees scholarship for paper, ink, notebooks, and more school supplies,[1] but she wasn't allowed to sit inside the classroom and had to learn from outside.[2]
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Autobiography
Shantabai Kamble's autobiography Majya Jalmachi Chittarkatha translated as The Kaleidoscope Story of My Life was published as a complete book in 1986. First presented to reading audience in Purva Magazine in 1983. Later it was tele-serialized for the viewers as Najuka on the Mumbai Doordarshan in 1990 and translated into French and English. Kamble started writing her Chittarkatha after her retirement as a teacher. It is considered the first autobiographical narrative by a Dalit woman writer.[3] This book is included in the University of Mumbai's syllabus.[4] Chiefly the book raises the issue of two-fold marginalization and oppression, both caste oppression and gendered discrimination towards women by their male peers.[5] In this context she portrays her struggle as a female Dalit writer. In the dedication to her book she writes, "To my Aaye-Appa [mother and father] who worked the entire day in the hot glaring sun, hungry and without water, and through the drudgery of labor, with hunger pinching their stomach, educated me and brought me from darkness into light."[citation needed]
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Death
Shantabai Kamble died at her daughter's home in Pune, on 25 January 2023, at the age of 99.[6][7]
Videos
Bibliography
- Poisoned Bread: Translations from Modern Marathi Dalit Literature by Arjuna Ḍāṅgaḷe[10]
Contributor Arjuna Ḍāṅgaḷe Edition: reprint[11]
References
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