Rajendra Yadav | |
---|---|
Born |
Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India |
28 August 1929
Died | 28 October 2013 New Delhi, India |
(aged 84)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | Indian |
Citizenship | Indian |
Rajendra Yadav (Hindi: राजेन्द्र यादव; 28 August 1929 – 28 October 2013) was a Hindi fiction writer, and a pioneer of the Hindi literary movement known as Nayi Kahani. He edited the literary magazine HANS, which was founded by Munshi Premchand in 1930 but ceased publication in 1953 – Yadav relaunched it on 31 July 1986, (Premchand's Birthday).
His wife Mannu Bhandari is also a famous Hindi fiction writer.
Rajendra Yadav was born in Agra, Uttar Pradesh on 28 August 1929 and died in New Delhi on 28 October 2013 night, around 12 o'clock in the mid night. According to one of his friends, former Chief Minister of Uttarakhand, BJP leader and noted author Dr. Ramesh Chandra Pokhriyal Nishank "He was not keeping well for long time, died in the mid of the night while being taken to the hospital."
He received his early education at Agra, and later also studied at Mawana, Meerut. He graduated in 1949, and later completed his MA in Hindi at Agra University in 1951.
His first novel was Pret Bolte Hain (Ghosts Speak), published in 1951 and later retitled as Sara Akash (The Infinite Cosmos) in the 1960s. It was the first Hindi novel to try to shock orthodox Indian cultural traditions. It was adapted into a movie of the same title, Sara Akash, by Basu Chatterjee in 1969 and which along with Mrinal Sen's Bhuvan Shome, launched Parallel Cinema in Hindi. The films was shot the Yadav's ancestral home in Raja Ki Mandi, Agra.
Ukhre Huey Log, ('The Rootless People) his next novel, depicts the trauma of a couple arising out of socio-economic condition which forced them to desert the conventional path – and, still they failed to acclimatise themselves to a corrupt and devilish world. This novel envisages "living in" concept for the first time.