Professor Usha Nilsson Wins Eminent Award

Professor Emeritus of Languages and Cultures of Asia, Usha Nilsson has been awarded a distinguished civilian honor
in the field of art and culture in India, the Padmabhushan
Moturi Satyanarayan Puraskar by the Ministry of Education. This
award is for her outstanding contributions to Hindi literature
under her pen name Usha Priyamvada. She was presented the award
on February 16th in New Delhi from India's President Srimati
Pratibha Devisingh Patil. The picture above was taken at the
award ceremony when Professor Nilsson (right) received her
award by the President of India, Mrs. Srimati Pratibha Devisingh
Patil (left).
Usha Nilsson joined the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1964 as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian Studies. She taught Hindi at advanced level and courses on Indian Literature in translation. She created several text books for teaching Hindi under the contract from the Department of Education which were widely used all over the country as more and more universities concentrated on the study of South Asia.
She translated religious Hindi poetry of Mirabai and Surdas: two famous medieval poets. These translations were published by Sahitya Akademi in India and retranslated into several Indian languages, like Malayalam, Urdu, Tamil and Punjabi. She also translated modern Hindi shortstories and published the book as a dual language reader for advanced students of Hindi. Her courses not only concentrated on the language teaching but also included widely popular “Modern Indian Cinema: Empowering Women” and “Indian Folklore” with emphasis on women’s folklore and rituals.
Along with many scholarly articles and papers presented at the national conferences, under her pen name Usha Priyamvada she wrote five novels and published six volumes of shortstories. At present she is the leading fiction writing in Hindi with many Master’s and Ph.D. theses on her work.
She was honored by the Education Ministry, Government of India on February 16, 2009 with the prestigious Padmabhushan Moturi Saayanarayana Award for 2008 for her lifelong service to Hindi, both in India and in the United States.
The titles of her novels are:
Pachpan Khambe laal DivareN
Rugogi NahiN Radhika
Shesh Yatra
Antarvanshi
Bhaya Kabir Udaas.
Her story collections are
Banvaas, to be published by Penguin India in fall 2009
Sampoorn KahaniyaN
Shunya
Kitna Baraa JhooTh
Ek Koi Doosra
Zindagi aur Gulaab ke Phool
In her writing she has focused on women, mostly marginalized by the society, yet they emerge as survivors and fully empowered. In her two early novels she writes about the dilemma of educated urban women caught between the modernization of India and the stranglehold of cultural traditions and the struggle to find their place. Her last three novels concentrate on immigrant experiences of Indian women in America.
Please join me in congratulating Professor Usha Nilsson.
Sincerely,
J. Mark Kenoyer
Director, Center for South Asia