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Munshi Premchand

Personal Profile

Munshi Premchand
  • Birth Name:
    Dhanpat Rai
  • Nickname:
    Nawab
  • Date of Birth:
    July 31, 1880
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Leo
  • Place of Birth:
    Lamahi, Varanasi, India
  • Place of Death:
    Varanasi, India
  • Date of Death:
    October 8, 1936
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    Indian

Family

Munshi Premchand
  • Father:
    Munshi Ajaib Lal
  • Mother:
    Anandi
  • Uncle:
    Mahabir
  • Spouse:
    Shivarani Devi

Career

Munshi Premchand

Trivia

Munshi Premchand
  • He also emphasized on the unity of Hindus and Muslims. Some of his well-known works are Godaan, Gaban, Karmabhoomi, Pratigya, etc.
  • His main focus remained rural India and exploitation faced by a common villager at the hands of priests, landlords, loan sharks, etc.
  • He wrote about the realities of life and the various problems faced by the common man in a turbulent society.
  • But as he became more and more conscious of what was happening around him, he started to write on social problems and his novels had the element of evoking the feeling of social consciousness and responsibility.
  • His style of writing novels began as fantasy tales of kings and queens.
  • His first short story was published in a magazine called Zamana that was circulated in Kanpur.
  • When Mahatma Gandhi announced the non-cooperation movement, Premchand quit his job and devoted his time to writing fully.
  • He managed to secure a job as a teacher in a primary school and rapidly got promoted to the post of Deputy Inspector of Schools.
  • In his writings the characters are always the ordinary people.
  • He changed his pen name to "Premchand" after his book Soje Vathan was banned by the then British government, which burned all the copies.

Quotes

Munshi Premchand
  • Trust is the first step to love.
  • To be successful in life what you need is education, not literacy and degrees.
  • Like timidity, bravery is also contagious.
  • Beauty doesn't need ornaments. Softness can't bear the weight of ornaments.
View all Quotes: Munshi Premchand

Biography

Munshi Premchand
Last Updated: Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Premchand brought realism to Hindi literature. Premchand wrote on the realistic issues of the day-communalism, corruption, zamindari, debt, poverty, colonialism etc. He avoided the use of highly Sanskritized Hindi and instead used the dialect of the common people. Premchand popularly known as Munshi Premchand was one of the greatest literary figures of modern Hindi literature. His stories vividly portrayed the social scenario of those times.

 Premchand lost his mother when he was just seven years old. His father married again. Premchand was very close to his elder sister. His early education was in a madarasa under a Maulavi, where he learnt Urdu. When he was studying in the ninth class he was married, much against his wishes. He was only fifteen years old at that time.

Premchand lost his father when he was sixteen years old. Premchand was left responsible for his stepmother and stepsiblings. He earned five rupees a month tutoring a lawyer's child. Premchand passed his matriculation exam with great effort and took up a teaching position, with a monthly salary of eighteen rupees. While working, he studied privately and passed his Intermediate and B. A. examinations. Later, Premchand worked as the deputy sub-inspector of schools in what was then the United Provinces.

In 1910, he was hauled up by the District Magistrate in Jamirpur for his anthology of short stories Soz-e-Watan (Dirge of the Nation), which was labelled seditious. His book Soz-e-Watan was banned by the then British government, which burnt all of the copies. Initially Premchand wrote in Urdu under the name of Nawabrai. However, when his novel Soz-e-Watan was confiscated by the British, he started writing under the pseudonym Premchand.

Before Premchand, Hindi literature consisted mainly of fantasy or religious works. Premchand brought realism to Hindi literature. He wrote over 300 stories, a dozen novels and two plays. The stories have been compiled and published as Maansarovar. His famous creations are: Panch Parameshvar, Idgah, Shatranj Ke Khiladi, Poos Ki Raat, Bade Ghar Ki Beti, Kafan, Udhar Ki Ghadi, Namak Ka Daroga, Gaban, Godaan, and Nirmala.

Premchand was a great social reformer; he married a child widow named Shivarani Devi. She wrote a book on him, Premchand Gharmein after his death. In 1921 he answered Gandhiji's call and resigned from his job. He worked to generate patriotism and nationalistic sentiments in the general populace. When the editor of the journal _Maryaada_ was jailed in the freedom movement, Premchand worked for a time as the editor of that journal. Afterward, he worked as the principalin a school in the Kashi Vidyapeeth.

The main characteristic of Premchand's writings is his interesting storytelling and use of simple language. His novels describe the problems of rural and urban India. He avoided the use of highly Sanskritized Hindi and instead used the dialect of the common people. Premchand wrote on the realistic issues of the day -communalism, corruption, zamindari, debt, poverty, colonialism etc.

Premchand's writings have been translated not only into all Indian languages, but also Russian, Chinese, and many other foreign languages. He died on October 8, 1936.

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