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Rao, Raja

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Encyclopaedia Britannica
About 1 pages (308 words)

greatreporter.com, December 31st, 2006

Indian novelist and short-story writer (b. Nov. 8, 1908, Hassan, Mysore [now Karnataka ], British India—d. July 8, 2006, Austin, Texas ), was, with R.K. Narayan and Mulk Raj Anand , one of the pioneers of English-language fiction in India . Rao placed a greater emphasis than his contemporaries on metaphysical questions and was successful in expressing the lyrical cadences of Indian speech and thought in English. His second novel, India and the West.

Rao was descended from a distinguished Brahman family in southern India . He studied (B.A., 1929) at Nizam College, Hyderabad , and then left India for France to study literature and history at the University of Montpellier and the Sorbonne. His first novel, India , where he edited a journal and engaged in underground activities against British rule. After World War II he alternated between India and France before joining (1966) the philosophy faculty at the University of Texas at Austin ; he became professor emeritus there in 1980. Rao 's works included the novels The University of Texas's Raja Rao Publication project announced plans to issue previously unpublished manuscripts, notably volumes two and three of the The Serpent and the Rope (1960), considered his masterpiece, was a philosophical semiautobiographical account of a young intellectual Brahman and his wife seeking spiritual truth in Kanthapura (1938), dealt with village life during the Indian independence movement. In 1939 he returned to The Cat and Shakespeare: A Tale of India (1965), Comrade Kirillov (1976; published first in French, 1965), and The Chessmaster and His Moves (1988); the short-story collections The Cow of the Barricades and Other Stories (1947) and The Policeman and the Rose (1978); a collection of essays, The Meaning of India (1996); and The Great Indian Way: A Life of Mahatma Gandhi (1998). The Chessmaster and His Moves trilogy.

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