Mrinal Pande

Mrinal Pande (born 26 February 1946) is an Indian television personality, journalist and author, and until 2009 chief editor of Hindi daily Hindustan.

Mrinal Pande
Born (1946-02-26) 26 February 1946
Alma materAllahabad University George Washington University
OccupationHindi story writer, editor, columnist, essayist
Years active1967-present

Early life and education

Pande was born in Tikamgarh, Madhya Pradesh, 26 February 1946. She studied initially at Nainital and then completed her Master's degree from Allahabad University.[1]

Career

Mrinal Pande has taught at the Universities of Allahabad, Delhi and Bhopal before switching to journalism in mid 1980s . She has edited well known Hindi periodicals, Vama and Saptahik Hindustan for the Times of India and the Hindustan Times group respectively.  She has worked in the visual media as Editor- Anchor for Hindi news at NDTV and India’s public broadcaster, Doordarshan. In 2000, she became India’s first woman Chief Editor of a multi edition Hindi daily, Hindustan (Hindustan Times Group). She was also the first woman to be Secretary General of the Editors’ Guild of India. She is the founder President of the Indian Women’s Press Corps , a national body of India’s women journalists. Pande has been a member of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in India and also a member of the National Board for Film Certification . She was a member of the group that prepared Shramshakti , India’s first documentation of the status and lives of women workers in the unorganised informal sector . The report was published in 1989 . After retiring in 2009, she was appointed Chairman of India’s national broadcaster, Prasar Bharati in 2010. She completed her term in March 2014. Currently she is Group Editorial Advisor to The National Herald Group. Pande writes in both Hindi and in English. Her work covers fiction, plays and essays on contemporary India and its women and a study of India’s rural women and their sexual and reproductive lives. She was awarded the Padma Shri in  2006 for her services in the field of journalism.[2]

Bibliography

  • Devi, Tales of the Goddess in our time; 2000, Viking/Penguin.
  • Daughter's Daughter, 1993. Penguin Books.[3]
  • That Which Ram Hath Ordained, 1993, Seagull Books.[4]
  • The Subject is Woman, 1991. Sanchar Publishing House, New Delhi.
  • My Own Witness, New Delhi, Penguin, 2001, ISBN 0-14-029731-6.
  • The Other Country: Dispatches from the Mofussil, New Delhi, Penguin, 2012

See also

References

Works online

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