Abstract
Abstract
Entering Jibanananda Das’s poetics through his life, particularly his life in Barisal, his parents, and his initiation through them into literature, this chapter studies the philosophy and composition of ‘Rupashi Bangla’, the Bengal that is history, mythology, personal history, dream, geography, botany, and astronomy brought together into a universe where even the tiniest drop of dew has an unexpected significance. Moving through Das’s favoured forms of plant life, the flowers and fruits, the trees, and, of course, grass—Das’s attachment to grass is revolutionary, anticipating Deleuze and Guattari’s rhizome—we encounter a cosmology that is Bengal but also more than Bengal. It is from the plant world that Das gets his unique understanding of time and history, and it is the impress of this that allows us to understand why he wants to return to Bengal over and over again, as plant, as tree, as grass.
Publisher
Oxford University PressOxford
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