Age, Biography and Wiki

Raj Kamal Jha was born on 1966 in Bhagalpur, India. Discover Raj Kamal Jha's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 57 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Editor, journalist, novelist
Age 57 years old
Zodiac Sign N/A
Born , 1966
Birthday
Birthplace Bhagalpur, India
Nationality India

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on . He is a member of famous with the age 57 years old group.

Raj Kamal Jha Height, Weight & Measurements

At 57 years old, Raj Kamal Jha height not available right now. We will update Raj Kamal Jha's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Not Available
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Raj Kamal Jha Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Raj Kamal Jha worth at the age of 57 years old? Raj Kamal Jha’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from India. We have estimated Raj Kamal Jha's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

Raj Kamal Jha Social Network

Instagram
Linkedin
Twitter Raj Kamal Jha Twitter
Facebook Raj Kamal Jha Facebook
Wikipedia Raj Kamal Jha Wikipedia
Imdb

Timeline

2019

Jha's journalism informs and influences his fiction. His latest novel The City And The Sea, published by Penguin Hamish Hamilton in 2019, "cleaves open India's tragedy of violence against women with a powerful story about our complicity in the culture that supports it." Nobel Laureate, economist and philosopher Amartya Sen has called it a "gripping narrative of human predicament and surviving hope, yielding an extraordinary combination of philosophy and allegory. A book you have to read."

"Not everyone’s kind of tales, they are dense and surreal, contain dark, brooding, even repugnant elements," said OPEN (magazine).

2017

In 2017, for his "outstanding contribution" to journalism and literature by telling stories about a changing India with "honesty, compassion and courage," Jha was awarded the Distinguished Alumnus Award by his alma mater Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, at its annual convocation. Past recipients of this honour include Google's Sundar Pichai, Arvind Kejriwal and Harish Hande.

2016

As a member of the "International Consortium of Investigative Journalists", the newspaper, in April 2016, investigated The Panama Papers and revealed details of Indian names and companies related to offshore accounts in tax havens. Following the revelations, the Government set up a panel to probe each account. For his "exemplary stewardship" of The Indian Express that saw a "focus on investigative journalism," Jha was named Journalist of the Year by the Mumbai Press Club at Redink Awards, 2017. Besides taking investigative journalism to new areas like health and education, Jha has expanded and strengthened the newspaper's explanatory journalism backed by its network of national correspondents and specialist editors. The Indian Express's Editor (Investigations) Ritu Sarin won the fourth IPI award for the newspaper in 2018 for her investigative work including the Panama Papers.

Delivering the vote of thanks at the Ramnath Goenka Memorial Awards in 2016, Jha underlined that questioning those in power and holding them accountable, inviting their criticism, was the hallmark of good journalism, an obvious truth that often gets lost in the "selfie journalism" of "likes and retweets" and turning the camera on yourself. The next year, Jha said that the only counter to fear in the newsroom was to get up and switch the lights on rather than find a safe blanket to hide under.

2014

The newspaper's fierce independence has earned it critics from both the Left and the Right—the Communists once called it The American Express—but both sides accept that it is non-partisan and, therefore, the media group readers can most trust. It was under the Congress regime that the newspaper's editor was sent to jail during The Emergency for standing up to press censorship. The Indian Express vs the Union of India case is one of the seminal cases that define the contours of press freedom in India. The newspaper's opinion pages invite voices from across the political spectrum and its column, "Dear Editor, I Disagree," is a regular showcase of views that counter those in the newspaper's editorials.

In his review, poet Sudeep Sen wrote that "The City and the Sea," is a book that "everyone should read in our dark times — both for the urgent story it contains and for its high literary value."

2013

His fourth novel She Will Build Him A City was published by Bloomsbury in India, Australia, UK and US and by Actes Sud in French. Pankaj Mishra has called it the "best novel from and about India I have read in a long time." Writer Neel Mukherjee has said its "revelations about the New India are explosive." Describing its writing as "gorgeous," Kirkus Reviews says it uses "magic to illuminate violence, poverty and loss" and shines light on the "ugly highs and lows of modern India.". Writer and critic Alex Clark writes in The Guardian: "Everywhere, scale is out of whack: tiny dwellings are dwarfed by teetering towers; choked roads are closed by massing protesters and water cannons; spiralling sums of money are set against almost unfathomable deprivation. The sense throughout is of inescapable oppression. No wonder the characters – both human and animal – occasionally break the bonds of earth and fly across the sky in search of less constrained lives.".

2012

Taking off from the 2012 Delhi gang rape, the novel "builds a narrative around a life disrupted by such an incident by delving into the past of one of the perpetrators (the juvenile), and the victim’s impossible future (as a mother)." Writing in The Indian Express, eminent Malayalam writer N S Madhavan said: The layers upon layers of Jha's novel dress the "collective wound" of a nation.

Jha's novels have been translated into more than a dozen European languages, including French, German, Italian, Dutch, Greek, Hebrew, Turkish, Spanish and Finnish. His short stories have appeared in French and German anthologies as well. His work has been featured in several international literary festivals, including Hay-on-Wye, Munich Writers' Festival, Berlin International Literature Festival, Ubud Readers and Writers Festival in Bali, Frankfurt Book Fair, Jaipur Literature Festival, Melbourne Writers' Festival, Los Angeles Times Book Festival and the festivals in Galle, Sri Lanka, and Pokhara, Nepal. To mark 200 years of the Grimm Brothers' Fairy Tales in December 2012, Jha, with five German writers, including Uwe Timm and Ingo Schulze, was invited to "rewrite" a fairy tale at the Munich Literaturhaus.

2007

Japanese video artist and photographer Noritoshi Hirakawa created four video art installations taking scenes from Jha's three novels for an exhibition at the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi in 2007 as part of a special exhibition of contemporary Japanese art called Vanishing Points.

2005

Jha was a visiting professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley where he taught a course on reporting on India. He was also a fellow at the Yaddo Residency in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 2005. He was selected as Artist-in-Residence (Literature) in Berlin by the German Academic Exchange Service for 2012–2013 under the Berliner Künstlerprogramm, offering grants to artists in the fields of visual arts, literature, music and film." Recent Berlin fellows include writer Kiran Nagarkar, artist N Harsha and Academy Award-winning filmmakers Asghar Farhadi and Sebastian Lelio.

2002

Fireproof is set against the backdrop of the 2002 Gujarat violence, the first attack on Muslims (In retaliation of attacks on Karsevaks in Godhra) after 9/11. The novel is a chilling tale of a father and his deformed son on a journey across a city where the ghosts of those killed have decided to seek justice. Commenting on Fireproof, India Today said: "Here is a chronicle for the 21st century, then, a bildungsroman that tracks the education of the crime-infested soul, completed when the soul cries 'I am guilty.

1990

Since 1990, Jha has been working full-time in newsrooms. He was an Assistant Editor (News) at The Statesman in Kolkata between 1992 and 1994, a Senior Associate Editor at India Today, New Delhi (1994–1996), and since 1996 has been with The Indian Express first as its Deputy Editor, then as Executive Editor, Managing Editor, Editor and Chief Editor since June 2014. The newspaper, known for its high-quality investigative reporting and provocative opinion section, has won the Excellence in Journalism Award from the India chapter of the Vienna-based International Press Institute four times.

1988

Jha was born in Bhagalpur, Bihar, and was raised in Calcutta, West Bengal, where he went to school at St. Joseph's College. He then attended the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, where he got his Bachelor of Technology with Honours in Mechanical Engineering. He was the editor of the campus magazine Alankar in his third (junior) and fourth (senior) years at IIT. After graduating from IIT in June 1988, he went to the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Southern California to pursue a Master's program in Print Journalism; he received his M.A. in 1990. Raj Kamal Jha is married to IIT 1990 (Chemical Engineering) alumnus Sujata Bose.

1966

Raj Kamal Jha (born 1966) is Chief Editor of the daily newspaper The Indian Express and an internationally acclaimed author of five novels. He lives in Gurgaon.

1921

Reviewing "The City And The Sea," noted Malayalam writer K R Meera wrote: "It is the story of children within us, whose only defence against the unexplained horrors of the dark is darkness itself." Actor and activist Shabana Azmi said reading the book is "to dive into the darkness and spot a piercing ray of light." That as India stumbles its way into the 21st century, its "absolute priority has to be the safety of girls in public and private places and this will need courage and compassion." Taking off from a horrific rape in New Delhi, the novel sets out in search of a story that could have been, listening to voices that "can, perhaps, find utterance only in fiction."