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Kajal Bandyopadhyay (born February 13, 1954) is a Bangladeshi poet, writer, and translator. He teaches English literature at the University of Dhaka. Bandyopadhyay graduated and postgraduated from the University of Dhaka and completed his Phd from Jadavpur University, Calcutta on Wole Soyinka.〔 As a Marxist poet, Bandyopadhyay vividly portrays the "lives of toiling masses, particularly their problems, social conflicts, intrigues and inner complexes" with poignant poetic expressions.〔 A presidium member of Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council, Bandyopadhyay is also a vehement activist against communal violence in Bangladesh. He champions secularism and non-communalism in Bangladesh; to protest attacks on minority communities in Bangladesh, he wanted to receive self-imprisonment in 2013. ==Selected publications〔== Collections of poems *''Kangal Dirghakal'' (Seeker for a Long Time, 1985) *''Dagdha Dhulikana'' (Burnt-out Speck, 1986) *''Prithibir Grihakone'' (In a Home of the Earth, 1988) *''Utthaner Mantra Nei'' (No Chant to Rise, 1989) *''Hese Othe Ashrujal'' (Tears smiles, 1998) Books of essays *''Samrajyabad: Anya Unmocan'' (Imperialism: Other Exposures, 1986) *''Swapna'' (Dream, 1985) Others *''Ahmedur Rahman'' (1990) *''Bangladesher Buddhibritti: Dharma Sampradayikotar Sangkat'' (Intellectual Practices in Bangladesh: A Crisis of Religious Communalism, 1999) *''Tritiya Bishwer Kobita'' (Poems of the Third World, jointly with others, 1998) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kajal Bandyopadhyay」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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