Anthropologist at Royal Thimphu College in Bhutan ( also Literary Groupie, Over-thinker, LookingMonster, Occasional Foley Artist and Advent Calendar Captain.)
“What inspires me is the people around me"
In conversation with @TheAsmitaPant, at the recent edition of the #JaipurLiteratureFestival, Kunzang Choden, Bhutan’s first woman novelist in English, talks about her love for writing, the impact of oral storytelling on her work & more
https://t.co/oYRkOL3Vdr
In ‘I, The Song’ (2024), Roder turns a personal catastrophe into a commentary on collective harm.
Sakshi Salil Chavan (@sakshisalilchavan) writes.
@DIFFindia#DIFF#DharamshalaFilmFestival#Bhutan#BhutanFilm
https://t.co/Q5obQovjGF
The first woman in Bhutan to be published in English, Kunzang Choden, in her memoir Telling Me My Stories, gives an account of belonging, loss, and displacement.
Read more here: https://t.co/aT6NZc4HsC
#BloomsburyIndia#books
If you are in Delhi and an art lover- please do check out my BIL's solo exhibition " Inbetween Dreams" #PemaTshering#ArtBhutan#BhutaneseArt https://t.co/oHO4t0sPYM
#BookReview | ‘Telling Me My Stories’ by Kunzang Choden offers a unique glimpse into a lesser-known and fast-disappearing worldview. Ishan Marvel reviews in The Tribune @thetribunechd#SpectrumTheTribune@BloomsburyIndia
https://t.co/QKK1aAR75o
Kunzang Choden is the first Bhutanese woman to be published in English, celebrated for capturing the soul of her country through stories. In her memoir Telling Me My Stories, Kunzang Choden reflects on a childhood shaped by loss, change, and the fading world of old Bhutan