Kunzang_Choden

Kunzang Choden

Kunzang Choden

Bhutanese writer


Kunzang Choden (Dzongkha: ཨམ་ཀུན་བཟང་ཆོས་སྒྲོན་གྱི་སྐོར།; born 1952)[1] is a Bhutanese writer. She is the first Bhutanese woman to write a novel in English.

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...

Choden was born in Bumthang District. Her parents were feudal landlords. At the age of nine, her father sent her to school in India, where she learned English.[2] She has a BA Honours in Psychology from Indraprastha College in Delhi and a BA in Sociology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She has worked for the United Nations Development Program in Bhutan. She and her Swiss husband currently live in Thimphu.[3]

The Circle of Karma, published by Zubaan Publishers Pvt. Ltd in 2005, is her first novel. It takes place in the 1950s, the initial period of imperially regulated modernization in Bhutan. The main character, a Bhutanese woman and road-builder by occupation, is forced to deal both with the traditional, restrictive gender roles of pre-modern Bhutan and the new kinds of sexism developing as men gain economic freedom.[4] Much of the novel is also set in North India.

In 2012, Choden and her family founded the publishing house, Riyang Books, in Thimphu.[5][6]

During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Choden's film-maker daughter, Dechen Roder, made video recordings of her mother reading her stories and posted them to YouTube for children stuck at home during the lockdown.[7]

Bibliography

  • Folktales of Bhutan (1994) ISBN 974-8495-96-5
  • Bhutanese Tales of the Yeti (1997) ISBN 1-879155-83-4
  • Dawa: The Story of a Stray Dog in Bhutan (2004) ISBN 99936-644-0-5
  • The Circle of Karma (2005) ISBN 81-86706-79-8
  • Chilli and Cheese- Food and Society in Bhutan (2008) ISBN 978-974-480-118-0
  • Tales in Colour and other stories (2009) ISBN 978-81-89884-62-8
  • Membar Tsho - The Flaming Lake (2012) ISBN 9993689912

References

  1. Zubaan Books. Circle of Karma website Archived 2007-10-20 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. Avijit Ghosh. "Coming full circle." The Telegraph (Kolkata). 3 April 2005.
  3. Mathai, Anna Sujatha (17 July 2005). "Rooted in the soil and earth". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 20 December 2015. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  4. "Our own Penguin". The Bhutanese. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  5. "About". Riyang Books. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  • Chaubey, Ajay K, et al. Women Writers of the South Asian Diaspora. Jaipur: Rawat, 2020

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