Karunakar Vaidya
Nepalese writer (1914–1989)
Karunakar Vaidya | |
---|---|
करुणाकर वैद्य | |
Born | 1914 (1914) Swath Narayansthan, Lalitpur |
Died | 1989 (aged 74–75) |
Nationality | Nepalese |
Occupation | Writer |
Awards | Madan Puraskar (1957, 1979) |
Karunakar Vaidya (Nepali: करुणाकर वैद्य; 1914-1989) was a Nepalese writer and folklorist. He is one of the few writers to win the Madan Puraskar, the most prestigious literary award in Nepali literature, twice. He won the award for Mitrika Udhyog in 1956 and for Nepalko Paramparagat Parbidhi in 1979.
Biography
He was born in 1914 (1971 BS Shrawan) in Swath Narayansthan, Lalitpur.[1]
He received the prestigious Madan Puraskar for his books Mitrika Udhyog in 2014 BS (c. 1956) and Nepalko Paramparagat Parbidhi in 2036 BS (c. 1979).[2]
He died in 2046 BS (c. 1989).[3]
Notable works
- Mitrika Udhyog (1956; transl. Ceramic Industry)
- Nepalko Paramparagat Parbidhi (1979)
- Nepalko Lok Katha Sangraha (Nepalese Folktales Collection)
- Nepali Dantya Katha Sangraha (Nepalese Oral Tales Collection)
- Bishwa Lok Katha Sangraha (World Folktales Collection)
- Aanchalik Nepali Lok Katha (Nepalese Regional Folktales)[4]
See also
- Nityaraj Pandey
- Leeladhwaj Thapa
- Satya Mohan Joshi
References
- ^ "करुणाकर वैद्य – मदन पुरस्कार गुठी". guthi.madanpuraskar.org. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
- ^ "हालसम्म मदन पुरस्कार प्राप्त कृतिहरू". साहित्यपोस्ट. 2021-08-27. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
- ^ वैद्य, करुणाकर. "करुणाकर वैद्य, Author at Shabda Sopan". Shabda Sopan. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
- ^ वैद्य, करुणाकर. "करुणाकर वैद्य, Author at Shabda Sopan". Shabda Sopan. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
- v
- t
- e
Recipients of the Madan Puraskar
- Naba Raj Lamsal (2021)
- Bhagi Raj Ingnam (2020)
- Chandra Prakash Baniya (2019)
- Yogesh Raj (2018)
- Neelam Karki Niharika (2017)
- Ghanashyam Kandel (2016)
- Ramlal Joshi (2015)
- Vijay Kumar Pandey (2014)
- Radha Paudel (2013)
- Rajan Mukarung (2012)
- Amar Neupane (2011)
- Jhamak Ghimire (2010)
- Nar Bahadur Saud (2009)
- Yubraj Nayaghare (2008)
- Jagadish Ghimire (2007)
- Mahesh Bikram Shah (2006)
- Krishna Dharabasi (2005)
- Narayan Wagle (2004)
- Gopal Parajuli (2003)
- Rewati Raman Khanal (2002)
- Hariram Joshi (2001)
- Buddhi Narayan Shrestha (2000)
- Dinesh Adhikari (1999)
- Keshab Prasad Upadyaya (1998)
- Lokendra Bahadur Chand (1997)
- Dayaram Shrestha (1996)
- Binod Prasad Dhital (1995)
- William Bourke SJ (1994)
- Sarad Chandra Sharma Bhattarai (1993)
- Bhabeshwor Pangeni (1992)
- Saru Bhakta (1991)
- Bhanu Bhakta Pokhrel (1990)
- Rajesh Gautam (1989)
- Daulat Bikram Bista (1988)
- Rajeshwor Devkota (1987)
- Naya Raj Pant (1986)
- Mohanraj Sharma (1985)
- Kanchan Pudasaini (1984)
- Dhruba Chandra Gautam (1983)
- Madan Mani Dixit (1982)
- Mohan Koirala (1981)
- Jagdish Shumsher Rana (1980)
- Chabilal Gajurel (1979)
- Karunakar Vaidya (1979)
- Dhanush Chandra Gautam (1978)
- Basudev Tripathi (1977)
- Bhawani Bhikshu (1975)
- Dhana Bajra Bajracharya (1973)
- Ishwar Ballav (1972)
- Pradeep Rimal (1971)
- Chuda Mani Regmi (1971)
- Bihari Krishna Shrestha (1971)
- Sthirjunga Bahadur (1971)
- Satya Mohan Joshi (1971)
- Mahananda Sapkota (1970)
- Tara Nath Sharma (1969)
- Dharmaraj Thapa (1969)
- Parasmani Pradhan (1969)
- Grishma Bahadur Devkota (1967)
- Shankar Lamichhane (1967)
- Modanath Prasrit (1966)
- Uttam Kunwar (1966)
- Parijat (1965)
- Laxmi Bahadur Shrestha (1964)
- Nawaraj Chalise (1964)
- Mukunda Sharan Upadhyaya (1964)
- Bal Krishna Pokharel (1964)
- Janaklal Sharma (1963)
- Komalnath Adhikari (1963)
- Gopal Prasad Rimal (1962)
- Ramesh Bikal (1961)
- Bhim Nidhi Tiwari (1960)
- Satya Mohan Joshi (1960)
- Nityaraj Pandey (1959)
- Krishna Chandra Singh Pradhan (1958)
- Ganga Bikram Sijapati (1958)
- Leeladhwaj Thapa (1957)
- Karunakar Vaidya (1957)
- Satya Mohan Joshi (1956)
- Chittaranjan Nepali (1956)
- Bala Ram Joshi (1956)
This article about a Nepalese writer is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e