,
Malay Roy Choudhury and
Subhas Ghose Basudeb Dasgupta, David Garcia and
Subimal Basak. This movement is characterized by expression of closeness to
nature and sometimes by tenets of
Gandhianism and
Proudhonism. Although it originated at Patna, Bihar and was initially based in
Kolkata, it had participants spread over North Bengal,
Tripura and
Benares. According to Dr.
Shankar Bhattacharya,
Dean at
Assam University, as well as Aryanil Mukherjee, editor of Kaurab Literary Periodical, the movement influenced
Allen Ginsberg as much as it influenced
American poetry through the Beat poets who visited Calcutta, Patna and Benares during the 1960-1970s. Arvind Krishna Mehrotra, now a professor and editor, was associated with the Hungry generation movement.
Shakti Chattopadhyay,
Saileswar Ghosh,
Subhas Ghosh left the movement in 1964. More than 100 manifestos were issued during 1961–1965.
Malay Roy Choudhury's poems have been published by Prof
P. Lal from his
Writers Workshop imprint.
Howard McCord published Malay's controversial poem
Prachanda Boidyutik Chhutar (i.e.
Stark Electric Jesus) from Washington State University in 1965. The poem has been translated into several
languages of the world. Into German by Carl Weissner, in Spanish by Margaret Randall, in
Urdu by Ameeq Hanfee, in Assamese by Manik Dass, in Gujarati by Nalin Patel, in
Hindi by
Rajkamal Chaudhary, and in English by Howard McCord. == Impact ==