In Our Time: History

Tagore

05.07.2015 - By BBC Radio 4Play

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Rabindranath Tagore was the first non-European to win a Nobel Prize for Literature. He has been called one of the outstanding thinkers of the 20th century and the greatest poet India has ever produced. His Nobel followed publication of Gitanjali, his English version of some of his Bengali poems. WB Yeats and Ezra Pound were great supporters. Tagore was born in Calcutta in 1861 and educated partly in Britain; King George V knighted him, but Tagore renounced this in 1919 following the Amritsar Massacre. A key figure in Indian nationalism, Tagore became a friend of Gandhi, offering criticism as well as support. A polymath and progressive, Tagore painted, wrote plays, novels, short stories and many songs. The national anthems of India and Bangladesh are based on his poems. With Chandrika Kaul

Lecturer in Modern History at the University of St Andrews Bashabi Fraser

Professor of English Literature and Creative Writing at Edinburgh Napier University And John Stevens

Leverhulme Postdoctoral Fellow at SOAS, University of London Producer: Simon Tillotson.

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