- Kamala Das
Kamala Suraiya (born Kamala Das on
March 31 ,1934 ), is a well-knownIndia n writer who writes in English as well asMalayalam , her native language. She is considered to be one of the outstanding Indian poets writing in English, although her popularity in Kerala is based chiefly on her short stories and autobiography. Much of her writing in Malayalam came under the pen name Madhavikkutty. She was born inMalabar inKerala , India. She is the daughter of V. M. Nair, a former managing editor of the widely-circulated Malayalam daily "Mathrubhumi ", and Nalappatt Balamani Amma, a renownedMalayali poetess. Kamala Das is probably the firstHindu woman to openly and honestly talk about sexual desires of Indian woman, which made her an iconoclast of her generation. [ [http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/jul/19inter.htm rediff.com: The Rediff Interview/Kamala Suraiya ] ]Biography
Kamala Das spent her childhood between
Calcutta , where her father was employed as a senior officer in the Walford Transport Company that soldBentley s and Rolls Royce, and the Nalappatt ancestral home at "Ponnayoorkulam" in south Malabar region. Her husband often played a fatherly role for both Kamala and her sons. Because of the great age difference between Kamala and her husband, he often encouraged her to associate with people of her own age. [ [http://www.kerala.com/keralacelebritySuraiya.htm K e r a l a . c o m - God's own country Keralam India-Celebrities ] ]Like her mother, Kamala Das also excelled in writing. Her love of poetry began at an early age through the influence of her great uncle,
Nalappatt Narayana Menon , a prominent writer. However, she did not start writing professionally till she was married and became a mother. When Kamala wished to begin writing, her husband supported her decision to augment the family's income. Being the housewife, she could not use the morning-till-night schedule enjoyed by her great uncle. She would wait until nightfall after her family had gone to sleep and would write until morning: "There was only the kitchen table where I would cut vegetables, and after all the plates and things were cleared, I would sit there and start typing" ("Warrior" interview). This rigorous schedule took its toll upon her health, but she views her illness optimistically. It gave her more time at home, and thus, more time to write. [http://magnamags.com/magna_savvy/node/521]She is famous for her many Malayalam short stories as well as many poems written in English. This Keralite is recognized as one of the foremost poetesses of India. She is also a
syndicated columnist . She has moved away from poetry because she claims that "poetry does not sell in this country (India)", but fortunately her forthright columns do. Her columns sound off on everything from women's issues and child care to politics.Her eldest son
M D Nalapat is married to a princess from theTravancore Royal House. He holds theUNESCO Peace Chair and Professor ofgeopolitics at theManipal Academy of Higher Education . He was the former resident editor of "Times of India ". Her second son Chinem is placed in Bangalore and she presently lives with her youngest son Jayasuriya and his family in Pune.Writings
English
Her first book, "Summer In Calcutta" was a promising start. She wrote chiefly of love, its betrayal, and the consequent anguish, and Indian readers in 1965 responded sympathetically to her guileless, guiltless frankness with regard to sexual matters. Ms. Das abandoned the certainties offered by an archaic, and somewhat sterile, aestheticism for an independence of mind and body at a time when Indian women poets were still expected to write about teenage girlie fantasies of eternal, bloodless, unrequited love.
Musing of a lonely heart is a common theme in her poems. It seeks love with never ending passion. Lust, greed and hunger never satiate and finally the mind becomes an old playhouse with all its lights put out. For Das, poetry (or love?) is “The April sun squeezed like an orange juice”, the heat permeates into the reader’s mind. When she is moving to a new city, “Sadness becomes a silent stone in the river’s unmoving core”. She bid farewell to “the shadows behind the windowpane, the rain, the yellow moon, the crowd and the sea”. This sensitivity is the strength of her poetry.
At 42, she published her autobiography, "My Story", baring the secrets of her heart. It creates a lot of interest and controversies though not for any literary value.She herself later made it clear that it WAS after all a work of fiction and should not be read that literally.She alleges that many translators have not done justice to the original and it is one of the reason that complicated the whole matter. The book was translated into many foreign languages—about 15.
Malayalam
Kamala Das, better known as Madhavikutty is one of the foremost short story writers in Malayalam. In any listing, she figures among the top 5 writers, even after considering the personal choices and socio-cultural background of the readers. She writes, with dexterity, the story of poor old servant in "Punnayoorkulam" or the sexual disposition of upper middle class women living near a metropolitan city or in the middle of the ghetto.
Her writing style is economical and the use of language is very precise. Her widely acclaimed stories include "Pakshiyude Manam", "Neypayasam", "Thanuppu", and "Chandana Marangal". She wrote a few novels, among which "Neermathalam Pootha Kalam" stands out, which was received favourably by the reading public as well as the critics. It recreates the nostalgia of an old ancestral home with it adjacent snake shrine. It is often said that even her casual talks falls in the genre of short stories. Such is her creative genius that even after succumbing to several unwanted controversies, she remains a widely popular figure.
Awards and other recognitions
Kamala Das has received many awards for her literary contribution. Some of them are
*Asian Poetry Prize
*Kent Award for English Writing from Asian Countries
*Asan World Prize
*Ezhuthachan Award
*Sahitya Academy Award
*Vayalar Award
*Kerala Sahitya Academy Award She has traveled extensively to read poetry to Germany's Essen, Bonn and Duisburg universities, Adelaide Writer's Festival (
Adelaide , Australia),Frankfurt Book Fair ,University of Kingston ,Jamaica ,Singapore , and South Bank Festival (London),Concordia University (Montreal, Canada),Columbia University (New York),Qatar ,Dubai , Sharjah,Abu Dhabi , etc. Her works are available in French, Spanish, Russian, German and Japanese.She has also held positions as Vice chairperson in
Kerala Sahitya Academy , chairperson in Kerala forestry Board, President ofKerala Children Film Society , Orient editor of Poet magazine [ [http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/31270799.cms Love and longing] ] and Poetry editor ofIllustrated Weekly of India ISSN|0019-2430.Conversion to Islam
Born in a conservative Hindu
Nair (Nallappattu) family having Royal anscestry, she embraced Islam in 1999 at the age of 65 and assumed the name Kamala Suraiya. Like the themes of her stories, conversion too, kicked up much heat and dust in the social and literary circles. [ [http://www.hindu.com/mag/2006/08/13/stories/2006081300080500.htm The Hindu : Magazine / Personality : Still a rebel writer ] ]Her statements like "I’m converting
Krishna intoAllah and making him theProphet after naming him Mohammed. If you go toGuruvayur now Krishna will not be there he will be with me" infuriated many conservative Hindus. They cannot digest when some one who has writtencquote
Krishna, I am melting, Melting, melting Nothing remains But youStarts writing,
cquote
Ya Allah I perceive the Prophet's features, as yet unrevealed, on my beloved's mien...Her serious readers observed the same undercurrents lying beneath both lines, this time more lively.
She was also active in politics in India, and has launched a national political party known as the Lok Seva Party, to concentrate on humanitarian work as well as to provide asylum to orphaned mothers and promote secularism. In 1984, she contested election to enter parliament, but lost.
Bibliography
English
* 1964: The Sirens (Asian Poetry Prize winner)
* 1965: Summer in Calcutta (poetry; Kent's Award winner)
* 1967: The Descendants (poetry)
* 1973: The Old Playhouse and Other Poems (poetry)
* 1976: My Story (autobiography)
* 1977: Alphabet of Lust (novel)
* 1985: The Anamalai Poems (poetry)
* 1992: Padmavati the Harlot and Other Stories (collection of short stories)
* 1996: Only the Soul Knows How to Sing (poetry)
* 2001: yaa Allah (collection of poems) published by [IPH] middle age [poetry]Malayalam
* 1964: "Pakshiyude Manam" (short stories)
* 1966: "Naricheerukal Parakkumbol" (short stories)
* 1968: "Thanuppu" (short story, Sahitya Academi award)
* 1987: "Balyakala Smaranakal" (Childhood Memories)
* 1989: "Varshangalkku Mumbu" (Years Before)
* 1990: "Palayan" (novel)
* 1991: "Neypayasam" (short story)
* 1992: "Dayarikkurippukal" (novel)
* 1994: "Neermathalam Pootha Kalam" (novel, Vayalar Award winner)
* 1996: "Chekkerunna Pakshikal" (short stories)
* 1998: "Nashtapetta Neelambari" (short stories)
* 2005: "Chandana Marangal" (Novel)
* 2005: "Madhavikkuttiyude Unmakkadhakal" (short stories)2x
* 2005: "Vandikkalakal" (novel)References
External links
* [http://www.rediff.com/news/1999/dec/16varsha.htm Varsha Bhosle on Kamala Das's conversion]
* [http://globalwebpost.com/farooqm/writings/other/kamala.htm From Kamala Das to "Dashi": Doing the right thing for wrong reasons?] by Dr. Mohammad Omar Farooq
* [http://www.littlemag.com/family/kamala.html Translation of "Neypayasam" on "Little Magazine"]
* [http://www.rediff.com/style/das.htm Kamala Das' column on "Rediff"]
* [http://www.english.emory.edu/Bahri/Das.html Eroticism and feminism in Das' writings - "Emory University"]
* [http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2000/02/06/stories/1306078m.htm The histrionics of Kamala Das - "Literary Review"]
* [http://www.rediff.com/news/1996/3107adas.htm An interview on Rediff]
* [http://www.puzha.com/malayalam/bookstore/cgi-bin/author-detail.cgi?code=26 Works and Reviews]
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