Sarojini Vaidya
Sarojini Shankar Vaidya (Devanagari: सरोजिनी शंकर वैद्य) (15 June 1933 – 3 August 2007) was a Marathi writer and specialist in the society and culture of 19th and 20th-century Maharashtra.[1]
Sarojini Vaidya | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 3 August 2007 74) | (aged
Nationality | Indian |
Occupation | Professor and head of the department of Marathi, University of Bombay |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Bombay |
Academic work | |
Main interests | Society and culture of 19th and 20th-century Maharashtra |
Academic career
Vaidya received her PhD from the University of Bombay, submitting a thesis on the Marathi writer Natyachhatakar Diwakar.[1] She later became a professor and head of the University's department of Marathi.[1]
Works
Her works traversed the boundaries of the forms of criticism, the personal essay, short story, biography and autobiography.[1] They include Pahatapani (1975), a collection of literary essays; Mati ani murti (1976), a collection of articles on Marathi literature; and a biography of the social thinker Gopalrao Hari, written in 1975.[1] Also in 1975, she edited and completed Atmacharitra, ani charitra, the autobiography of the Marathi writer Kashibai Kanitkar.[1] She later published Shabdayan (1980), a collection of personal essays; and Sankramana (1985), a volume of essays on figures including the scial reformer Pandita Ramabai, the physician Anandi Gopal Joshi.[1] She was also the coauthor of the biographies Natavarya Nanasaheb Phatak vyatki ani kala (1982), about a Marathi theatre performer; and Shrimati Ramabai Ranade vyatki ani karya (1989), about the social worker Ramabai Ranade.[1] Volumes edited by Vaidya include Sanjeevani (1958), Jara javoon yeto (Selected stories of D. B. Mokashi) (1987), Vangamayeen mahatta (1990), T. S. Eliot and Modern Marathi Poetry and Literary Criticism (1990), Streejivan vatchal ani vikas (1992), and Samagra Divakar (1992).[2]
Bibliography
As author
As editor
- Sanjeevani (1958)[1]
- Jara javoon yeto (Selected stories of D. B. Mokashi) (1987)[2]
- Vangamayeen mahatta (1990)[2]
- T. S. Eliot and Modern Marathi Poetry and Literary Criticism (1990)[2]
- Streejivan vatchal ani vikas (1992)[2]
- Samagra Divakar (1992)[2]
References
- Bandivadekar, Chandrakant (1992). "Vaidya, Sarojini Shankar". In Lal, Mohan (ed.). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature, Volume V: Sasay to Zorgot. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 4465.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bandivadekar 1992, pp. 4465–4466.