Education
In the process, she never finished her bachelor"s degree - this she would complete many years later, from Asutosh College.
In the process, she never finished her bachelor"s degree - this she would complete many years later, from Asutosh College.
She is noted for her modernist stance, rejecting the traditional housebound role for Bengali women, a theme echoed later in the work of other poets including Mallika Sengupta and Taslima Nasrin. Born into a literary family, she started writing as a child. A rebellious spirit, she was involved in dissidence movements in the 1950s.
She worked for some years as a schoolteacher before joining the West Bengal government as an editors
In 1965 she joined All India Radio and was at one point station director at Darbhanga, Bihar. In 1981, she was invited to the Iowa International writer"s workshop.
In the 1980s she launched a number of programs involving the youth in All India Radio. Although Kabita Sinha is primarily known for her poetry, it was as a novelist that she first entered Bengali literature.
Her first novel, chArjan rAgI JubatI (four angry young women) was published in 1956.
This was followed by ekTi khArAp meyer galpa (story of a bad girl, 1958), nAyikA pratinAyikA (heroine, anti-heroine, 1960). In the meantime, she was also writing poetry in various magazines, but her first volume of poetry, sahaj sundarI (easy beauty), was published only in 1965. The 1976 collection kavitA paramesvarI (poetry goddess) became particularly well known.
Many of her poems address the woman"s place vis-a-vis man in poems like AjIban pAthar pratimA (stone goddess, all my life), Iswarke Eve (Eve speaks to God), or apamAner janya fire Asi (because I crave your insults).
Other collections include hariNAbairI (enemy deer, 1985), and her shreShTa kabitA (selected poems) which came out in 1987. In total, she published nearly fifty books, including some under the pen name Sultana Choudhury.
She has been anthologized in a wide range of poetry collections, and has also been widely translated.