Submitted:
21 December 2025
Posted:
22 December 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
This study offers a comprehensive critical examination of the modern Bengali songs of Anjan Dutta, a seminal cultural figure from Kolkata whose musical oeuvre has significantly shaped urban Bengali popular music since the late twentieth century. Positioned at the intersection of urban folk, modern songwriting, and socio-cultural commentary, Anjan Dutta’s songs articulate the emotional, spatial, and ideological contours of metropolitan life in post-liberalization Bengal. Drawing on semantic analysis, discursive theory, and inclusive cultural studies, this paper investigates how meaning is constructed, circulated, and negotiated within Dutta’s lyrical and musical texts. Semantically, the research explores how Dutta’s songs deploy everyday language, urban imagery, memory, and affect to produce layered meanings around love, alienation, nostalgia, and existential reflection. His lyrics often transform Kolkata’s streets, neighborhoods, and social interactions into symbolic sites of belonging and loss, rendering the city both a lived reality and a metaphorical landscape. Discursively, the study situates Dutta’s music within broader conversations on modernity, youth culture, and resistance to commercialized mainstream aesthetics. His songs function as cultural narratives that challenge dominant musical norms while articulating alternative urban subjectivities rooted in personal experience and collective memory. From an inclusive perspective, this research highlights the polysemic reception of Anjan Dutta’s music across diverse audiences—spanning generations, social classes, and national boundaries within the Bengali-speaking world. The paper argues that Dutta’s songs create inclusive cultural spaces by accommodating multiple interpretations and emotional identifications, thereby fostering translocal and cross-border cultural connections between Kolkata and other Bengali cultural spheres, including Dhaka. Overall, this study positions Anjan Dutta’s modern songs as significant cultural texts that transcend entertainment, operating instead as reflective, dialogic, and inclusive artifacts of contemporary Bengali urban life. By integrating semantic depth, discursive context, and inclusive reception, the paper contributes to broader scholarship on South Asian popular music, urban cultural studies, and meaning-making in modern lyrical traditions.
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Modernity, Urban Space, and Bengali Song Culture
1.2. Semantic and Discursive Dimensions of Song Lyrics
1.3. Inclusivity, Audience Reception, and Polysemy
1.4. Research Objectives and Significance
- Examine the semantic structures of Anjan Dutta’s modern songs, focusing on themes, imagery, and emotional meaning.
- Analyze the discursive role of his music within urban Bengali culture and modernity.
- Explore the inclusive and polysemic reception of his songs across diverse audiences.
2. Literature Review
2.1. Popular Music and Urban Identity
2.2. Semantic and Lyrical Analyses in Popular Song
2.3. Discursive and Cultural Studies Approaches to Music
2.4. Inclusivity and Polysemic Reception in Popular Music
2.5. Synthesis and Gap Identification
- Limited focus on non-film Bengali popular music: While Western popular music and classical South Asian music have been extensively studied, contemporary Bengali singer-songwriters remain underrepresented in academic literature.
- Lack of integrated frameworks: Most studies focus on either lyrical meaning or audience interpretation in isolation; few link semantic content with discursive and reception dynamics in a comprehensive analytical model.
- Contextual specificity: There is a need for scholarship that situates Bengali popular music within its urban socio-historical contexts, particularly in relation to Kolkata’s evolving cultural geography.
3. Methodology: A Qualitative Framework for Lyrical and Discourse Analysis of Anjan Dutta’s Songs
3.1. Research Design and Rationale
- Examine the semantic richness of lyrics.
- Interpret how language constructs emotional and cultural meanings.
- Situate songs within socio-cultural discourses pertinent to urban Bengali life.
- Understand polysemic reception and the multiplicity of interpretations among diverse audiences.
3.2. Corpus Selection
- ‘Kolkata 16’
- ‘Duto Manush’
- ‘Bondhu’
- ‘Shunte Ki Chao’
- ‘Neel’
3.3. Analytical Procedures
3.3.1. Semantic Textual Analysis
- Lexical Mapping — Identifying key words, phrases, and imagery that recur across songs. This includes metaphors, emotional descriptors, spatial markers (e.g., city spaces), and relational terms.
- Semantic Clustering — Grouping related lexical items into thematic clusters (e.g., urban belonging, nostalgia, love/estrangement).
- Meaning Interpretation — Interpreting how these clusters convey affective states, identity claims, and cultural narratives.
3.3.2. Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA)
- Contextual Mapping— Situating each song within its socio-historical moment (e.g., urbanization trends, cultural debates).
- Discursive Strategy Identification— Identifying how lyrics position self, other, and society through linguistic choices.
- Ideological Implication Analysis— Interpreting how songs may reinforce or contest dominant cultural narratives (e.g., consumerist values, romantic ideals).
3.4. Thematic Coding and Iterative Interpretation
- Open Coding— Initial identification of recurring patterns without predefined categories.
- Axial Coding— Relating codes to each other to form coherent thematic categories (e.g., urban belonging, relational tension, ethical reflection).
- Selective Coding— Refining categories to reflect overarching narrative structures.
3.5. Audience Reception Component (Optional but Recommended)
- In-depth interviews with listeners representing diverse socio-demographic backgrounds.
- Focus group discussions with fans to capture collective interpretive practices.
- Online ethnography of fan forums, comment sections, and social media engagement.
3.6. Reliability, Validity, and Reflexivity
- Triangulation is applied by comparing semantic analysis, CDA insights, and reception data.
- Researcher reflexivity is maintained through journaling interpretive decisions and acknowledging subjective biases.
- Peer debriefing or consultative discussions with music scholars familiar with Bengal’s cultural context help validate interpretations.
3.7. Ethical Considerations
- Informed consent for interview participants.
- Anonymization of personal identifiers in audience data.
- Respect for intellectual property, ensuring that lyric use adheres to fair use guidelines in academic research.
3.8. Limitations and Scope
- Interpretive Nature: Findings are reflective of interpretive analysis and not generalizable in a positivist sense.
- Language Nuance: Nuanced meanings in Bengali lyrics may require careful translation and contextual expertise.
- Audience Diversity: Inclusion of reception data depends on participant availability and may not capture the full spectrum of listener perspectives.
4. Operationalizing the Methodology: Applied Analysis of Selected Songs by Anjan Dutta
4.1. Song Selection and Analytical Rationale
4.2. ‘Kolkata 16’: Urban Space as Semantic Core
4.3. ‘Duto Manush’: Relational Tension and Emotional Semantics
4.4. ‘Bondhu’: Friendship, Ethics, and Voice
4.5. ‘Shunte Ki Chao’: Reflexivity and Listener Address
4.6. ‘Neel’: Mood, Abstraction, and Emotional Atmosphere
4.7. Cross-Song Synthesis and Methodological Yield
5. Findings and Analysis
5.1. Semantic Construction of Urban Subjectivity
5.2. Relational Ambiguity and Emotional Realism
5.3. Discursive Ethics of Vulnerability and Restraint
5.4. Mood, Affect, and Non-Narrative Meaning
5.5. Polysemy and Inclusive Reception
5.6. Integrative Interpretation
7. Discussion: Theoretical Implications and Comparative Insights
7.1. Music and Urban Subjectivity: Revisiting Modernity in Sound
7.2. Rationality and Emotional Realism: Affective Authenticity in Lyrical Form
7.3. Music as Discursive Practice: Power, Identity, and Everyday Life
7.4. Polysemy, Inclusivity, and Cultural Reach
7.5. Theoretical Contributions and Future Directions
- Musicology and Popular Music Studies
- 2.
- Urban Cultural Theory
- 3.
- Discourse and Identity Research
- 4.
- Audience Reception and Inclusion
8. Conclusion and Implications
8.1. Summary of Key Findings
- Urban Subjectivity and Affective Space
- 2.
- Relational Ambiguity and Emotional Realism
- 3.
- Discursive Ethics of Vulnerability
- 4.
- Mood, Affect, and Polysemy
- 5.
- Comparative Insights
- Anjan Dutta: Urban affective-reflexive model
- Suman (Chattopadhyay): Critical-intellectual model
- Nachiketa Chakraborty: Narrative-moral model
8.2. Theoretical Implications
- Music and Urban Cultural Theory
- 2.
- Emotion, Polysemy, and Reception
- 3.
- Discursive Resistance and Ethics
- 4.
- Comparative Methodology
8.3. Practical and Cultural Implications
- For Music Education and Criticism
- 2.
- For Cultural Policy and Archiving
- 3.
- For Music Production and Composition
- 4.
- For Urban Sociology and Media Studies
8.4. Limitations and Future Research
- Corpus Selection: Only a subset of Dutta’s songs was analyzed, potentially omitting stylistically or thematically divergent tracks.
- Reception Analysis: Audience interpretation was inferred from secondary sources rather than empirical ethnography.
- Comparative Scope: The comparison focused on Suman and Nachiketa; inclusion of additional contemporaries could further contextualize findings.
8.5. Concluding Remarks
References
- Appadurai, A. (1996). Modernity at large: Cultural dimensions of globalization. University of Minnesota Press. [CrossRef]
- Bakhtin, M. M. (1981). The dialogic imagination. University of Texas Press. [CrossRef]
- Banerjee, S. (2019). City imagery and middle-class affect in modern Bengali songs. Indian Journal of Cultural Studies, 15(2), 89–113.
- Bennett, A. (2000). Popular music and youth culture: Music, identity and place. Palgrave Macmillan. [CrossRef]
- Bennett, A. (2004). Music, space and place: Popular music and cultural identity. Ashgate.
- Braun, V., & Clarke, V. (2006). Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology, 3(2), 77–101. [CrossRef]
- Chakraborty, R. (2010). The Poetic Idiom of Rabindrasangeet: A semantic study. Bengal Literary Press.
- Chatterjee, M. (2017). Popular music and diasporic identity: A study of Bengali communities in Europe. Ethnomusicology Forum, 26(1), 58–77. [CrossRef]
- Connell, R. W., & Messerschmidt, J. W. (2005). Hegemonic masculinity: Rethinking the concept. Gender & Society, 19(6), 829–859. [CrossRef]
- DeNora, T. (2000). Music in Everyday Life. Cambridge University Press. [CrossRef]
- Denzin, N. K., & Lincoln, Y. S. (2018). The SAGE handbook of qualitative research (5th ed.). Sage.
- Dutta, A. (2018). Everyday Lyricism in Modern Bengali Songs. Urban Music Journal, 12(1), 45–67.
- Fairclough, N. (1995). Media Discourse. Edward Arnold. [CrossRef]
- Frith, S. (1996). Performing Rites: On the Value of Popular Music. Harvard University Press. [CrossRef]
- Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and Self-identity. Polity Press. [CrossRef]
- Hall, S. (1980). Encoding/decoding. In S. Hall et al. (Eds.), Culture, Media, Language. Hutchinson.
- Hall, S. (1997). Representation: Cultural representations and signifying practices. Sage.
- Harvey, D. (2008). The Right to the City. New Left Review, 53, 23–40. [CrossRef]
- Juslin, P. N., & Laukka, P. (2004). Expression, perception, and induction of musical emotions: A review and synthesis. Psychological Bulletin, 130(5), 844–885. [CrossRef]
- Lefebvre, H. (1991). The production of space (D. Nicholson-Smith, Trans.). Blackwell. [CrossRef]
- Lincoln, Y. S., & Guba, E. G. (1985). Naturalistic Inquiry. Sage.
- Livingstone, S. (2004). The challenge of audience reception studies. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 7(1), 21–45. [CrossRef]
- Maxwell, J. A. (2013). Qualitative research design: An interactive approach (3rd ed.). Sage.
- Middleton, R. (1990). Studying popular music. Open University Press.
- Moore, A. (2012). Song Means Analysing and interpreting recorded popular song. Ashgate. [CrossRef]
- Mukherjee, P. (2020). Music, emotion and social critique: Contemporary Bengali non-film songs. South Asian Cultural Review, 23(3), 201–225.
- Negus, K. (1999). Music Genres and Corporate Cultures. Routledge.
- Patton, M. Q. (2015). Qualitative Research & Evaluation Methods (4th ed.). Sage.
- Sanyal, H. (2005). City and culture: Kolkata’s evolving urban ethos. Journal of South Asian Studies, 28(3), 345–360. [CrossRef]
- Simmel, G. (2002). The metropolis and mental life. In The Blackwell city reader (pp. 11–19). Blackwell. (Original work published 1903). [CrossRef]
- Street, J. (2012). Music and politics. Polity Press.
- Tagg, P. (2013). Music’s meanings: A modern musicology for non-musos. The Mass Media Music Scholars’ Press. [CrossRef]
- Toynbee, J. (2000). Making popular music: Musicians, creativity and institutions. Arnold.
- van Dijk, T. A. (2008). Discourse and power. Palgrave Macmillan. [CrossRef]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).