Bhubaneswar: On the call of the Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi, various programs are being organized under Mo Mati, Mo Desh Abhiyan across the country, including Odisha, to pay honor to the heroes who sacrificed for the country. The aim of th
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Goa Governor P. S. Sreedharan Pillai on Sunday participated as the chief guest at the 24th-anniversary of the monthly family magazine 'Kadambini' and the 13th-anniversary of children's magazine 'Kunikatha, lauding the contribution of Odia writers in enriching India’s literary landscape.
Jatindra Kumar Nayak has played a prominent role in a variety of literary and educational institutions in the state of Odisha and his translations, essays and lectures have been instrumental in presenting Odia literature to the larger world. For the last four decades, he has been exploring the print culture of Odisha. In this free-wheeling conversation with Murali Ranganathan, Nayak talks about how he has engaged with print Jatindra Kumar Nayak
How did your engagement with print get stimulated?
My father, Kashinath Nayak, was a writer of textbooks and books for children and managed the printing press owned by the Primary Teachers’ Federation at Puri. I was fascinated by the work of compositors and printers at this press. My father also used to take me along to the offices of some of his publishers in Cuttack during Dussehra. As a student at Ravenshaw College, Cuttack in the 1970s, I was actively involved in the publication of