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Jibanananda Das
Bengali poet, essayist, novelist, and English teacher
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
57/100
Raw Score
46/85
Confidence
68%
Evidence
Medium
About
Jibanananda Das reshaped Bengali poetry through a modernist language of landscape, loneliness, and historical fracture, and he kept writing through neglect, financial strain, and controversy. The public record shows a humane and resilient creative life, but it is much thinner on direct acts of charity, private worship, and family obligations than it is on literary influence.
The observable record supports a respectful but cautious profile. His strongest evidence lies in durable cultural contribution, moral seriousness in how he wrote about violence and dispossession, and steadiness through hardship. The score stays moderate because the available public evidence is not rich enough to make strong claims about repeated personal giving, devotional practice, or everyday reliability beyond his teaching and writing life.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Das scores best on resilience and integrity because the public record shows sustained work through neglect, controversy, and material instability without a corresponding record of public deceit or exploitation. The score remains moderate overall because the available evidence is much stronger on literary contribution and humane imagination than on repeated concrete charity or visible devotional discipline.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Brahmo family background and reformist upbringing support a meaningful theistic baseline.
His writing often frames life under judgment, consequence, and mortality, though not in explicit doctrinal terms.
The poetry repeatedly assumes a moral and metaphysical depth beyond surface life.
The public record shows scriptural and reformist influence, but not sustained explicit guidance language.
Reformist religious background suggests some respect for exemplary moral figures, but direct evidence is limited.
Contribution to Others
Public reporting is thin on direct family provision.
His long teaching life and influence on younger readers support a cautious positive score.
His work repeatedly dignified distressed people and rural decline, though direct material aid is not richly documented.
The humane reach of his writing extends beyond kin and community, but concrete assistance is thinly documented.
Teaching and editorial work suggest service to others, though evidence is modest.
His anti-communal and anti-dehumanizing writing offered moral resistance to destructive public pressures.
Personal Discipline
Routine devotional practice is not well documented in the public record.
Public proof of systematic giving is thin, but his reformist background and non-commercial life support a minimal positive score.
Reliability
He sustained teaching and writing commitments over decades without a public record of deception or exploitation.
Stability Under Pressure
Biographical accounts describe years of unstable work and neglect that he endured while continuing his vocation.
His record shows long endurance through obscurity, relocation, and inner strain.
His Partition-era writing answered communal terror with grief and human solidarity rather than revenge.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Published his first poem in Brahmabadi
Banglapedia records that Das published his first poem, Varsa Abahan, in Brahmabadi in 1919, beginning a public writing life shaped by the reformist and literary environment of his family.
→ Marked the start of a public literary vocation that later reshaped modern Bengali poetry.
mediumBegan a long teaching career in English
After completing his English studies, Das began teaching at Calcutta City College in 1922 and later taught at several colleges in Bengal and Delhi.
→ Established a durable professional track in education even as his literary reputation developed unevenly.
mediumFaced obscenity controversy after the poem Campe
The poem Campe provoked charges of obscenity after publication, becoming one of the clearest public controversies of Das's career. Later scholarship treats the episode as a literary dispute rather than evidence of personal misconduct.
→ The backlash did not stop his experimentation; it sharpened his reputation as a difficult and unconventional modern poet.
mediumPublished Banalata Sen and consolidated his own poetic language
Banglapedia identifies Banalata Sen as part of the body of work through which Das created a new poetic style in modern Bangla, while Britannica places him as the first major poet of a new post-Tagore generation.
→ Helped secure his long-term standing as one of the defining modern poets in Bengali literature.
highComposed the prose poem 1946-47 after the Bengal riots and Partition shock
Scholarship on Partition notes that Das was delayed in returning home by the 1946 Calcutta violence and that his prose poem 1946-47 captured the bloodshed, dispossession, and collapse of inter-communal fraternity rather than glorifying sectarian identity.
→ Strengthened the humane and historical conscience of his public work by mourning violence across communal lines.
highReceived the Rabindra memorial award for Banalata Sen after years of neglect
Banglapedia records that Banalata Sen received a major Rabindra literary award in 1953, and The Daily Star notes that by 1954 Das was finally gaining wider recognition after a long period of neglect.
→ Public recognition began to catch up with the influence his poetry had already been exerting.
highDied after a tram accident in Kolkata during a late period of recognition
The Daily Star and Banglapedia both record that Das was struck by a tram in Kolkata on 14 October 1954 and died on 22 October 1954, just as his work was attracting broader recognition.
→ His death cut short a difficult but increasingly recognized career; publication of manuscripts after his death deepened his long-term influence.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Years of insecure employment and limited recognition
1930His teaching career moved across multiple institutions and his major public recognition came late.
Response: He kept teaching, editing, and writing instead of withdrawing from literary work.
positiveCampe obscenity controversy
1932Critics publicly attacked one of his poems as obscene and incomprehensible.
Response: He continued to develop an unconventional poetic voice rather than reverting to safer styles.
positiveBengal riots and Partition dislocation
1946Communal violence delayed his return home and eventually forced relocation as Barisal became part of Pakistan.
Response: His poem 1946-47 answered the moment with grief over shared bloodshed and dispossession rather than sectarian triumph.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Historical violence and displacement deepened the public moral register of his work.
upcurrent stage
Recognition arrived late and was amplified after his death through awards, manuscripts, and canon formation.
stableearly years
A Brahmo-influenced literary upbringing and strong English education launched him into writing and teaching at a young age.
upgrowth years
He steadily separated himself from inherited styles and became a leading modernist voice.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly transformed private melancholy into durable public literature rather than self-mythology.
- • Returned again and again to shared human vulnerability across class, rural decline, and communal violence.
Concerns
- • The public record does not provide much direct evidence about everyday generosity, family duty, or organized philanthropy.
- • A large share of his moral signal must be inferred from texts and career patterns rather than from documented social action.
Evidence Quality
5
Strong
2
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.