Rabindranath Tagore: The Poet Who Wrote Nations but Feared Nationalism

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life of Rabindranath Tagore, the polymath whose work helped define the cultural identity of more than one nation while challenging the very idea of nationalism itself. Tagore wrote “Jana Gana Mana,” later adopted as India’s national anthem, wrote “Amar Shonar Bangla,” later adopted as Bangladesh’s anthem, and influenced Sri Lanka’s anthem as well. He was also the first Asian person to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. Born in 1861 into the wealthy Tagore family of Calcutta, he grew up inside the Jorasanko mansion, a cultural engine of the Bengal Renaissance filled with writers, musicians, artists, reformers, and intellectuals. Yet Tagore hated formal schooling, lasting only one day at Presidency College, and instead learned through immersion, curiosity, nature, literature, music, and self-directed study.

The episode also follows how Tagore’s art was shaped by rural Bengal, grief, and political contradiction. While managing his family’s estates in Shilaidaha, he encountered village poverty, Baul folk music, and the rhythms of everyday Bengali life, which helped him reshape modern Bengali literature and develop the Bengali short story. Personal losses, including the death of Kadambari Devi, his wife, and two children, gave his work emotional depth. His English translation of Gitanjali made him a global literary sensation and earned him the 1913 Nobel Prize, but his relationship with empire and nationalism stayed complicated. He renounced his British knighthood after the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, supported Indian independence, and still warned that aggressive nationalism could become its own kind of prison. The discussion also covers his disagreements with Gandhi, the 1916 assassination plot against him in San Francisco, his late-life turn to painting, his debates with Einstein, his critique of fascism, the translation problems that weakened his Western reputation, and the enduring power of Rabindra Sangeet in Bengali culture.

Key topics covered:

• Tagore’s Jorasanko childhood, Bengal Renaissance roots, and rejection of formal schooling

• The “Sun Lion” poetry prank, immersive learning, and The Parrot’s Training

• Shilaidaha, rural Bengal, Baul music, grief, and the birth of modern Bengali storytelling

Gitanjali, the Nobel Prize, knighthood, Jallianwala Bagh, and anti-imperial protest

• National anthems, anti-nationalism, Gandhi, painting, Einstein, translation, and legacy

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting literary, historical, and biographical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

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