Kavita Mahajan (Marathi: कविता महाजन; 5 September 1967 – 27 September 2018) was an Indian author and translator who wrote in Marathi. She is noted for her critically acclaimed novels Brr (2005), Bhinna (2007) and Kuhoo (2011), as well as a non-fiction work Graffiti Wall (2009). She was the winner of the 2011 translation award conferred by the Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters.[1]
Mahajan was born in the city of Nanded in Maharashtra.[2] She was the daughter of S.D. Mahajan, the ex-secretary of Marathi Vishwakosh and the granddaughter of the painter Tryambak Vasekar.[2]
Mahajan wrote on themes of social emancipation and against discrimination. Mahajan's book Brr is a collection of stories about women's sarpanch and their experience after the Panchayati Raj system was implemented whilst she wrote Bhinna to describe the lives of those affected by HIV/AIDS. Both books bring out the politics of representation at three levels – one of the institutions like the Panchayats, the corruption in the non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and the intricacies of human relationships. Mahajan's work focuses on political, social, and economic matters rather than maternal or romantic considerations.[3]
Mahajan's 2011 novel, Kuhoo (Marathi: कुहू) dealt with the relationship between human and nature, and was marketed as a 'multimedia novel'. It came with a DVD containing sights and sounds from nature, including a few animations.[4] She is also renowned for her poetry, including a collection entitled Dhulicha Awaz.[2] She was awarded Sahitya Akademi Translation Prize (2011)[5] [1] for her translation Rajai, a collection of 17 short stories by Ismat Chughtai which she translated from Urdu into Marathi.
Mahajan also authored children's literature and published a collection of short stories Joyanache Ranga (Marathi: जोयानाचे रंग) in 2011. This collection won her the Shashikalatai Agashe Award for Children's Literature in 2013.[6]
Speaking in April 2016 at a programme organised by T. M. A. Pai Chair for Indian Literature at Manipal University (now), she said: "I am a woman and before that I am a human being. If all are human beings, why is there discrimination? That is a question, which has haunted me from my childhood."[7]
Mahajan died on 27 September 2018 of pneumonia at the Chellaram Diabetes Hospital.[2] She was survived by her daughter.[8]