Amit Chaudhuri was born in Calcutta in 1962, and grew up in Bombay. He read English at University College, London, where he took his BA with First Class Honours, and completed his doctorate on critical theory and the poetry of D.H. Lawrence at Balliol College, Oxford, where he was a Dervorguilla Scholar. He was Creative Arts Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford, from 1992-95, and Leverhulme Special Research Fellow at the Faculty of English, Cambridge University, until April 1999, where he taught the Commonwealth and International Literatures paper of the English Tripos. He was on the faculty of the School of the Arts, Columbia University, for the Fall semester, 2002. He was appointed Samuel Fischer Guest Professor of Literature at Free University, Berlin, for the winter term 2005.
He is now Professor in Contemporary Literature at the University of East Anglia. He was made Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2009.
His criticism and fiction have appeared regularly in most of the major journals in the world, including the London Review of Books, the Times Literary Supplement, the Observer, the Spectator, Granta, the New Republic, and the New Yorker. A short film was made about him by the BBC for their ‘India Week’ on theLate Show. He was one of the LondonObserver’s Twenty One writers for the Millennium, and one of India Today’s ‘Faces of the Millennium’.
In 2008, the Guardian wrote an editorial, 'In Praise of... Amit Chaudhuri', calling him a 'publisher's nightmare'.
He was one of the judges for the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, and judged the IMPAC Dublin International Literary Prize 2001. In 2009, he was one of the judges of the Man Booker International Prize.
He has written five novels. The first, A Strange and Sublime Address, published in 1991, won the first prize in the Society of Authors’ Betty Trask Awards for a first novel and the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best First Book (Eurasia). The second, Afternoon Raag(1993), won the Society of Authors’ Encore Prize for best second novel and the Southern Arts Literature Prize. Both books were shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize. His third novel, Freedom Song, appeared in 1998. All three novels were published in a single omnibus volume, Freedom Song: Three Novels, by Knopf in America in 1999. This omnibus volume was a New York TimesNotable Book of the Year, and an Independent bestseller in America; it was awarded the Los Angeles Times Book Award for Fiction, 2000, and was one of the New York Public Library’s 25 Books to Remember, 2000. His fourth novel, A New World, won the Sahitya Akademi award 2002, India’s highest literary honour for a single book. His fifth novel, The Immortals, was published in 2009, and was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best Book. It was a New Yorker Book of the Year 2009, a San Francisco Chronicle Book of the Year 2009, and Reviewers Choice, Best Books of 2009, in the Boston Globe and the Irish Times.
His writing has been translated into several languages. He is the editor of the Picador Book of Modern Indian Literature, which was also published in the US by Vintage in September 2004. His book of short stories,Real Time, was published in 2002 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in the U.S.A, and in Britain and India by Picador. His dissertation on D.H.Lawrence, D.H.Lawrence and ‘Difference’: Postcoloniality and the Poetry of the Present, appeared to critical acclaim from the Clarendon Press, Oxford, in June 2003, with an introduction by the renowned Irish poet-critic, Tom Paulin, who called it a ‘classic’. Terry Eagleton, in the London Review of Books, called it ‘probably the single best study of Lawrence’s poetry to date’. A book of poetry, St Cyril Road and other poems, was published by Penguin India in 2005.
He has given lectures and readings at various universities and institutions, including Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, Yale, the School of Oriental and African Studies, London, the Department of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, the University of California, Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, Wellesley College, the University of Chicago, Penn State University, and Emory University.
Recently, in October 2010, he spoke with the English philosopher Simon Critchley at the Rubin Museum in New York City about 'nothing' and then gave a concert with his band.
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Monday, 12 March 2012
Karan Chanana - www.amitchaudhuri.com
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