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Gauri Deshpande
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Gauri Deshpande (11 February 1942 – 1 March 2003) was a novelist, short story writer, and poet from Maharashtra, India. She wrote in Marathi and English.

Key Information

Biography

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Deshpande was born in Pune to Irawati and Dinkar Dhondo Karve, youngest of three children.[citation needed] She is also the granddaughter of the social reformer Maharshi Dhondo Keshav Karve.

Her daughter Urmila Deshpande is also an author and published the novels Kashmir Blues,[1] A Pack of Lies,[2] and Equal to Angels; the short story collection, Slither: Carnal Prose, and edited Madhouse: True stories of the Inmates of Hostel 4.[citation needed]

Education

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Deshpande finished her high school education at Ahilyadevi School in Pune.[citation needed] She then attended Fergusson College to receive an M.A in English Literature. She eventually received her PhD in English from Pune University.[1]

Professional life

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Deshpande taught at the Department of English at Fergusson College[3] and later as a professor at the department of English at the then University of Pune.

Death

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Deshpande died in Pune on 1 March 2003 due to complications arising as a result of alcohol abuse.[1] She is survived by two daughters from her first husband,[2] one daughter from her second husband,[2] three grandsons and a granddaughter.[citation needed]

Works

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Deshpande wrote in Marathi and English. Her works include fiction, non-fiction, short stories, articles and translations.

Marathi works

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  • Paus Ala Motha (1973)[4]
  • Ekek Pan Galawaya (1985) (fiction)[5] ISBN 978-8174868510
    • translated to Gujarati as Ekek aa khare pandadun in 1989 by Jayantilal Mehta[6]
  • Teruo Te Ani Kahi Door Paryant (1985) (fiction)[7] ISBN 978-8174868664
  • Ahe He Ase Ahe (1986)[8] ASIN B07H57L8RR
  • Niragathi Ani Chandrike Ga Sarike Ga (1987) (fiction)[9] ASIN B07NVXCTS6
  • Dustar Ha Ghat Ani Thang (1989)(Marathi fiction)[10] ISBN 978-8174867681
  • Mukkam (1992) (fiction)[11] ISBN 978-8174867445
  • Vinchurniche Dhade (1996)(fiction)[12] ASIN B00P97H35O
  • Goph (1999) (fiction)[13] ISBN 978-8174867605
  • Utkhanan (2002) (fiction)[14] ISBN 9788184989540
  • She also translated the ten volumes of "Arabian Nights" written by Sir Richard Burton from English to Marathi. The volumes were published in 1976-77.[citation needed]

English works

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  • "Between Births" (1968)[15]
  • Lost love (1970)[16]
  • The Murder (Article)[17]
  • Beyond the Slaughterhouse (1972) (poems)[18]
  • The position of women in India (1973) (Pamphlet)[19]
  • An anthology of Indo-English poetry (1974)[20]
  • Small is beautiful (Article)[21]
  • That's the way it is (1982)(Article published in Journal of South Asian literature)[22] ISBN 9780226256092
  • Collected Plays of Satish Alekar (1989) co-editor. Within the book, the story The Dread Departure was the english translation of the 1974 Marathi play Mahanirvan by Satish Alekar[23][24][25]
  • Right on, Sister! (1995) (Article co-authored with Vidyut Aklujkar published in Journal of South Asian literature)[26]
  • --and Pine for What Is Not (1995) (translation of Sunita Deshpande's Ahe Manohar Tari...)[citation needed] ISBN 9780863115790
  • The Lackadaisical Sweeper (1997) (short story collection)[27] ISBN 9788186852040
  • Diary of a decade of agony (translation of Avinash Dharmadhikari's Aswastha dashakachi diary)[citation needed] ISBN 9780863116285
  • The female of the Species (a short poem)[28] ISBN 9780062320896

Influence

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  • In 1989, her book Ekek Pan Galawaya was translated to Gujarati as Ekek aa khare pandadun by Jayantilal Mehta[6]
  • In 2010, her book Niragathi Ani Chandrike Ga Sarike Ga was translated to English as Deliverance: a Novella by Shashi Deshpande[29][30][31]
  • In 2018, her book Paus Ala Motha was adapted into the Marathi film Aamhi Doghi.[4]

References

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