“Contemporarising Tagore and the World" Some Information of this book: Tagore was indeed a biswa-kabi, or poet of the world. In the first half of the twentieth century, few had travelled as much as him, visiting more than thirty countries on five continents Shying away from being a ‘patriot’ and ‘seeking compatriots around the world,’ Rabindranath laid faith in humans, no matter of what nation, race or caste, in overcoming limitations and perils of all kinds. It is this faith that made him cross boundaries, both intellectual and territorial. Tagore knew that ‘poverty lay in the separation, and wealth in the union’. It is this ‘original truth’ that he attempted to express in every form known to him, from poetry to painting, from education to aesthetics, from music to modes of thoughts. Deliberations on issues of life and living, including what is now referred to as social sciences, came naturally to him, testified by his essays on society, religion, philosophy, politics, education, rural development, literature, aesthetics and history. If Tagore’s innumerable poems, over 2,200 songs and over 2,500 drawings and paintings provide solace to the mind, then the breadth of his writings on issues of state, society and disempowered persons play a role in challenging and transforming the mind. This volume is an outcome of the 150th Birth Anniversary celebrations of Tagore. It emerged from discussions at the conference, Contemporarising Tagore
Dr Imtiaz Ahmed is Professor of International Relations and Director, Centre for Genocide Studies at the University of Dhaka. He is also currently Visiting Professor at Sagesse University, Beirut, Lebanon. He has authored, co-authored, and edited 33 books and nine monographs. Dr Ahmed heads several national and international projects and published more than 120 research papers and scholarly articles in leading journals and edited volumes. His recent publications are the following books: Women, Veiling and Politics: The South Asian Conundrum, edited (Dhaka: The University Press Limited, 2020); Civil Society, State & Democratic Futures in Bangladesh (Dhaka: Prothoma Prokashan, 2020); COVID-19: the otherside of living through the pandemic, edited (Dhaka: Pathak Shamabesh, 2021); and Rights, Rivers, and the Quest for Water Commons: The Case of Bangladesh (Berlin: Springer, 2021).