Status of Indian English Poetry After Independence: Abstract
Status of Indian English Poetry After Independence: Abstract
Status of Indian English Poetry After Independence: Abstract
ISSN 2286-4822
www.euacademic.org
Introduction:
Poetry is the oldest form of literature. It is a creative and aesthetic activity
having three major components- experience, beauty and emotion. Poetry is an
art of communication experience. As such, the communication must be in a
language that is close to the poet and the experience must be genuine.
India is a vast subcontinent. Many languages found in India has its
own literature, some very rich. Each writer wishes his creation to be reached
all the corners of the globe. That is why, a writer writing in his mother tongue
wants his creation to be translated into English as English is nationally
understood and appreciated. Lotaika Basu rightly remarks: English, after the
days of Macaulay formed the main subject of the curriculum of Indian
universities. English was not only the language of the ruling class but a
language understood by half the world. Every ambitious verifier, therefore,
hoping to acquire world fame, wrote in English.(Basu, 1933) Though English
was introduced by the Britishers mainly for administrative purpose, many
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Three major characteristics can be found in it. Firstly, a past-oriented vision--associated with a sense of loss and hopelessness, a sort of cultural pessimism.
Secondly, a future-oriented vision---associated with a desire to remake the
world, and thirdly, a present-oriented attitude---ahistorical, amoral, neutral,
stoic, ironic, ambivalent, absurdist.
The post-independence poets have freed themselves from the clutches
of Englishness and have started writing in a very Indian manner. They have
evolved an idiom of their own---a kind of poetic language in which the Indian
mind can be best expressed. Bruce King rightly says:
English is no longer the language of colonial rulers, it is a language of
modern India in which words and expressions have recognized
national rather than imported significances, alluding to local
realities, traditions and ways of feeling. Such Indianisation has been
proceeding for several generations. ( King, 1987 ).
Writers Workshop, founded by Purushottam Lal in Calcutta in 1958, has
played a vital and creative role in popularizing post-independence Indian
English poetry by giving preference to experimental works by young and
unpublished writers. Poets like Shiv K Kumar (1921), Nissim Ezekiel (1924),
Jayant Mahapatra (1928), A K Ramanujan (1929), Purushottam Lal (1929),
Arun Kolatkar (1932), R Parthasarathy (1934), Kamala Das (1934), K N
Daruwala (1937), Dom Moraes (1938), Adil Jussawalla (1940), Gieve Patel
(1940), Arvind Krishna Mehrotra (1947), Pritish Nandy (1947) and others
emerged on the scene.
Nissim Ezekiel, one of the most notable among the new postindependence Indian English poets, is the first to publish a collection. His A
Time to Change appeared in 1952. Hailing from a Bene-Israel family migrated
to India generations ago, the theme of alienation is central to Ezekiels work
and colours his entire poetic universe. His poetry reveals a gradual evolution
of his art and genius and describes love, loneliness, lust, creativity and
political pomposity, human foibles and the kindred clamour of urban
dissonance. Some of his collections are Sixty Poems (1952), The Third (1959),
The Unfinished Man (1960), The Exact Name (1965) and Hymns in Darkness
(1976).
Dominic Francis Moraes, popularly known as Dom Moraes, a Goan
Christian, is the first of the new poets to win recognition in England. His
poetry is persistently confessional in tone and obsessed with loneliness and
insecurity. His verse has the strong imaginary quality as well as easy, refined
and controlled flow of language. A Beginning (1957), Poems (1960) and John
Nobody (1968) are some of his noted collections.
In nineteen sixties, several new poets emerged. Purushottam Lal is the
earliest of them. His successful translation of Mahabharata has given him a
new idiom, the charm of a sloka or a mantra. Economy of language, depth of
symbolism, awareness of social realities and lifes sorrows make Lal
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remarkable in this field. They said (19660, Draupadi and Jayadratha and
Other Poems (1967) etc. are some of his noted collections.
Adil Jussavala, one of the leading Parsi poets, views the
contemporary Indian scene through the compassionate eyes of exile returning
to India after a sojourn of more than dozens years in England, His Lands End
(1962) contains poems written in England and some parts of Europe. His
foreign experience, his reaction to his native scene and his continued quest for
self-knowledge are the major themes of Missing persons (1974).
The most outstanding of the sixties is A.K Ramanujan. Some of his
remarkable collections are The Striders(1966), The Interior Landscape(1967),
No Lotus in the Navel(1972), Relations(1971), Speaking of Siva(1972) etc. are
some of his praiseworthy collections. The poetry of Ramanujan draws its
sustenance from his intense awareness of his social burden---his Hindu
heritage. At the same time, the poet is equally aware to both the strength and
the deficiencies of his racial ethos. He tries to juxtapose ironically the ancient
Hindu ethos with the situation of the modern Hindu and contrasts the Hindu
and the western world-views. The surest touch of romantic clich, quiet but
deep emotion, fineness of perception and sense of rhythm make him
indisputable among all his contemporaries M.K Naik says:
His unfailing sense of rhythm gives a fitting answer to those who hold that
complete inwardness with language is possible only to a poet writing in his
mother-tongue. Though he writes in open forms, his verse is extremely tightly
constructed. (Naik, 2002)
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see man and his world as they really are without veils and pretenses.
(Aurobindo, 1953) Their poetry reveals, as P K J Kurup remarks, a tension
resulting from their acute self-awareness and the restraint imposed upon them
by the hostile environment and becomes a private quest for values and an effort
to peer into the dark abysmal contents of the poets own mind.(Tilak, 2011)
Nissim Ezekiels Night of the Scorpion, Jayant Mahapatras
Relationship, A K Ramanujans The Striders, Kamala Dass The Invitation, R
Parthasarathys Rough Passage, K N Daruwallas Boat-Ride along the Ganga
etc. are some of the well-received pieces of quality of post-independence era. It
is not surprising if defending the authenticity of the poetry of this era, Bruce
King writes :
The only answer to those who claimed that Indians could not write authentic
poetry in the English in which they had been educated, was to write poetry as
good as that of British, American and Irish poets but to write it about Indian
lives and conditions.(King, 1987)
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