. . . . . . . . . "Anupama Niranjana (en kannada : \u0C85\u0CA8\u0CC1\u0CAA\u0CAE\u0CBE \u0CA8\u0CBF\u0CB0\u0C82\u0C9C\u0CA8, n\u00E9e en 1934 et morte en 1991) \u00E9tait une femme m\u00E9decin en Inde et une auteure de fiction et de non-fiction. Elle d\u00E9fendait le point de vue de la femme et \u00E9tait l'un des \u00E9crivains indiens d\u2019expression kannada. Son roman Runamuktalu a \u00E9t\u00E9 adapt\u00E9 en un film."@fr . "Venkata Lakshmi"@en . "Venkata Lakshmi"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Anupama Niranjana (en kannada : \u0C85\u0CA8\u0CC1\u0CAA\u0CAE\u0CBE \u0CA8\u0CBF\u0CB0\u0C82\u0C9C\u0CA8, n\u00E9e en 1934 et morte en 1991) \u00E9tait une femme m\u00E9decin en Inde et une auteure de fiction et de non-fiction. Elle d\u00E9fendait le point de vue de la femme et \u00E9tait l'un des \u00E9crivains indiens d\u2019expression kannada. Son roman Runamuktalu a \u00E9t\u00E9 adapt\u00E9 en un film."@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Doctor, writer"@en . . . . . . . . . "Tirthahalli, India"@en . . . . . . "Anupama Niranjana"@en . . "Anupama Niranjana (Kannada: \u0C85\u0CA8\u0CC1\u0CAA\u0CAE\u0CBE \u0CA8\u0CBF\u0CB0\u0C82\u0C9C\u0CA8) (1934\u20131991) was a doctor in India and writer of modern Kannada fiction and non-fiction. She advocated the woman's point of view and was one among such writers in Kannada, which includes others like Triveni and M. K. Indira. Her novel Runamuktalu was made into a film by Puttanna Kanagal. Anupama died of cancer. An award has been instituted in her name for women writing in Kannada."@en . . . "1934"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "3639"^^ . . . . . . . "Anupama Niranjana"@en . "Anupama Niranjana"@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "18313243"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1107475875"^^ . . "Anupama Niranjana"@en . "Anupama Niranjana (Kannada: \u0C85\u0CA8\u0CC1\u0CAA\u0CAE\u0CBE \u0CA8\u0CBF\u0CB0\u0C82\u0C9C\u0CA8) (1934\u20131991) was a doctor in India and writer of modern Kannada fiction and non-fiction. She advocated the woman's point of view and was one among such writers in Kannada, which includes others like Triveni and M. K. Indira. Her novel Runamuktalu was made into a film by Puttanna Kanagal. Born Venkatalakshmi, Anupama practiced as a physician in Dharwad and Bangalore. Anupama took to writing early in life and wrote several novels and stories dealing with social issues, particularly women's issue. She was married to the Kannada writer Niranjana, a novelist of the Progressive school of modern Kannada literature. Their daughters Tejaswini and Seemanthini are academics. Anupama died of cancer. An award has been instituted in her name for women writing in Kannada."@en . . . . . . . . . .