The Rabindranath Tagore\n Omnibus II brings together six of Tagore's most acclaimed works. It contains\n The Religion of Man (1931), delivered as the Hibbert Lectures in Oxford in\n 1931, an extensive exposition of Tagore's understanding of the meaning and\n significance in the cultural history of man, Red Oleanders or Rakta Karabi\n (1925), a symbolic play describing the conflict between machine and the human\n spirit, Four Chapters (1934), a political novel and love story, denouncing\n terrorism at time when it was seen as an act of courage, dedication and\n sacrifice, The Hidden Treasure and Other Stories, a collection of eight of\n the writer's short-stories, Shesh Lekha, a collection of mostly untitled\n poems, bare, striking and Spartan and My Reminiscences (1911), a series of\n memory-vignettes of the poet's life that provides a unique insight into the\n life of a great literary genius.
Somdatta Mandal is Professor and Head of English at the Department of English and Other Modern European Languages, Visva-Bharati, Santiniketan. Having a teaching career that spans 32 years, she has held several administrative posts in the university. Paper-setter, examiner and adjudicator for doctoral dissertations across several universities in India and the SAARC nations, she has lectured widely in national and international fora. A recipient of several prestigious international fellowships and awards from the Fulbright Foundation, Charles Wallace Trust, Rockefeller Foundation, Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute and Sahitya Akademi, her areas of interest are American literature, contemporary fiction, film and culture studies, diaspora studies and translation. She has published three books, five volumes of translation, edited and co-edited 22 books, published above 90 research articles in national and international journals and anthologies. Somdatta Mandal has published translations of several travel narratives, among which are Krishnabhabini Das?s A Bengali Lady in England (2015); Wanderlust: Travels of the Tagore Family (2014); Durgabati Ghose?s The Westward Traveller (2010) and Hariprabha Takeda?s The Journey of a Bengali Lady to Japan and Other Essays (2017).
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