Google celebrates the Indian author's birthday with a colourful doodle.
Born in Budaun, Uttar Pradesh on August 21, 1911, Chughtai championed free speech, social liberation, and gender equality through her writing. Her best-known works, according to Google's blog post, questioned double standards and encouraged liberation.
'Her short story 'Lihaf' (The Quilt), narrated in the voice of a young girl, was viewed as controversial, given its portrayal of a relationship between an upper class woman and her servant. This was also the case for another of her famous stories, 'Gainda' (Marigold), which told the tale of a domestic worker who falls in love outside the caste system. Chughtai's character violated the rules prohibiting different castes from associating with one another, as well as the social custom forbidding widows from pursuing a second love,' it added.
With a large body of works, Ismat Chughtai established herself as a significant author in the realm of 20th-century Urdu literature.
In 1973, she won the Filmfare best story award for the film Garm Hawa. She shared the award with Kaifi Azmi.
In 1976, she was awarded the Padma Shri by the Government of India "in recognition of her literary accomplishments and her fearless dedication to her beliefs."
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