Friday, 30 June 2023
Thursday, 29 June 2023
1.1 A Patch of Land - Subramania Bharati
A patch of land I want, Parashakthi –
Give me a patch of land.
On that patch of land, Parashakthi,
I want a house built for me.
Its pillars decorated, Parashakthi,
And balconies painted white.
Palm tress beside the well, Parashakthi,
With long fronds and tender nuts
Ten or Twelve. Those palms, Parashakthi,
The coconut trees, I want nearby.
Moonlight should descend gently, Parashakthi,
Casting a gleaming veil of white.
The soft cooing of the cuckoo, Parashakthi,
Should fall light on my ears.
A gentle breeze should blow, Parashakthi.
And bring pleasure to my soul.
A young wife I want, Parashakthi,
To share all these with me.
Our joyful togetherness, Parashakthi,
Bless with poetry.
Living in that open land, Parashakthi,
Be there to guard us.
With my power of my songs, Parashakthi,
Enable me to defend this earth.
Monday, 26 June 2023
Sunday, 25 June 2023
Saturday, 24 June 2023
Friday, 23 June 2023
ams - commemoration - The People's Poet - Anna Akhmatova
Anna Akhmatova begins Rekviem with these lines: “No, not under a foreign sky/ Nor in the shelter of a foreign wing,/ With my people, there stood I / With them, in their suffering.” Akhmatova spent 17 months waiting in long queues outside a jail in Leningrad to find out what had happened to her son, picked up during a purge. The lines above are based on that experience. Her son’s arrest may have led Akhmatova to write Rekviem, but by doing so she was also giving voice to countless mothers whose irreparable losses must be remembered forever. It is said that Akhmatova composed Rekviem, in her mind. The ideas are based on the thousands of people rounded up and sent to the Gulag, it survived only in the memory of a few close friends she narrated it to. It was first published in 1963 by the Society of Russian Émigré Writers. It never saw the light of day in the Soviet Union till it's dissolution. Anna Akhmatova is one of the best known and most loved Russian poets. In addition to poetry, she wrote prose including memoirs, autobiographical pieces, and literary scholarship on Russian writers such as Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin. She also translated Italian, French, Armenian, and Korean poetry.
Thursday, 22 June 2023
22623 - ams - commemoration - Feel inspired by Octavia E Butler's life
Butler was raised by her mother who worked as a maid and her grandmother. Butler remembered accompanying her mother to work at wealthy homes in Pasadena and having to enter through the back door. Her mother, who only had three years of formal schooling, worked incredibly hard to make sure Butler had more opportunities and a better education than she had. At school, she was a shy and lonely student who struggled with dyslexia. The school library was her second home. She had an endless hunger for stories and frequently made up her own while sitting on her grandmother’s porch. By the age of ten she could be found carrying around a large notebook, writing down stories whenever she got a free moment. When she was 13 years, she submitted her first story for publication. She used to get up at two A.M. every morning to write and went on to do a series of odd jobs for livelihood. She once told PBS that her life motto was, “Do the thing that you love, and do it as well as you possibly can and be persistent about it.” Since 2008, Butler’s annotations, notes, research materials, and drafts of novels have been housed at the Huntington Library in California. You may visit this link explore the world of Octavia Estelle Butler
Wednesday, 21 June 2023
21623 - ams - Creativity and Anne Carson
Anne Carson is a lover of classical literature and her translations of classical writers such as Sappho and Euripides are popular. A high-school encounter with a Latin instructor, who agreed to teach her ancient Greek over the lunch hour, led to her passionate embrace of classical and Hellenic literature. Carson is a private person. She prefers to be alone. When her husband is traveling, Carson will call and tell him, “I miss you, but I’m having a great time.” Carson’s most popular book is the “Autobiography of Red,” which takes its cue from the legend of Hercules. The story is retold as a modern times and Carson makes some significant choices. In 2001, Carson published 'The Beauty of the Husband: A Fictional Essay in 29 Tangos' , a verse novel which was awarded the T.S. Eliot Prize. Carson continues to be an important and exciting translator of classical writers. Carson considers herself as a visual, not a verbal, artist. It is interesting to note that a new comic-book version of Euripides’s classic 'The Trojan Women', is published which us collaboration between the visual artist Rosanna Bruno and Anne Carson. It is a genuine representation of how human beings are affected by warfare.
21623 - ams - Ian McEwan and Lessons
'The Cockroach' by Ian McEwan borrows heavily from Kafka's 'Metamorphosis'. The opening lines of the novel is a testimony to this - “That morning, Jim Sams, clever but by no means profound, woke from uneasy dreams to find himself transformed into a gigantic creature.” Ian McEwan is also inspired by the satirical tradition of Jonathan Swift when he compares politicians to cockroaches. It is a 'toxic metaphor' used to describe the British politics during the Brexit-era. Ian McEwan has been nominated for the prestigious Booker Prize six times, winning it in 1998 for 'Amsterdam'. McEwan’s new novel, 'Lessons' was published on September 13, 2022. The story is told through the experiences of a single man, and it covers a lengthy human timeline from post-WWII to the pandemic. The book explores memories of love and scars of childhood trauma. The publisher Jonathan Cape describes 'Lessons' as "a powerful meditation on history and humanity through the prism of one man's lifetime". Ian McEwan denies that the book is autobiographical but says that he had 'raided bits of his own life'. He wrote it during the three lockdowns and the politics of the lockdown finds a place in the novel.
Tuesday, 20 June 2023
20623 – ams – commemoration – Vikram Seth’s Chinese Connections
20623 - ams - commemoration - Lillian Hellman - The Socially Conscious Dramatist
Lillian Hellman was the first woman to be admitted to the club of American dramatists, writing a hit play when she was 29. She was a playwright, a screenwriter and a memoirist and a political activist. Her popularity is based on the two enormously successful plays from the 1930s: 'The Children's Hour' (1934) and 'The Little Foxes' (1939). 'The Children's Hour', was Hellman's first play. It is the story of two women running a school for girls whose lives are ruined by a malicious student spreading the lie that they are lovers. The play was banned in London, Chicago, and Boston. 'The Children's Hour' was considered too scandalous for the Pulitzer prize. It was an immense hit in Paris and New York running on Broadway for almost two years. Like many writers of her generation, Hellman was an outspoken leftist in the 1930s whose political convictions often landed her in trouble. Towards the end of the career, she began writing the four volumes of legendarily unreliable memoirs, 'An Unfinished Woman', 'Pentimento', 'Scoundrel Time' and 'Maybe'. All four were critical and commercial successes, 'An Unfinished Woman' winning the National Book award in 1969. Hellman's plays are still frequently staged around the world.
Monday, 19 June 2023
19623 - ams - commemoration # 2
"This Boy's Life" explores Wolff's experiences growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, primarily focusing on his time with his mother and his relationship with a volatile and abusive stepfather. The memoir offers a candid and introspective account of Wolff's troubled childhood and adolescence. The memoir has resonated with readers around the world, earning critical acclaim and establishing Wolff as a masterful memoirist. Tobias Wolff also wrote other works that incorporate autobiographical elements, blurring the line between fiction and memoir. For instance, his short story collections, such as "In the Garden of the North American Martyrs" and "The Night in Question," draw from his personal experiences and offer glimpses into the author's own life.
19623 - ams - commemoration # 1 - The World of Salman Rushdie
Just nine days after the publication of his novel 'Satanic Verses', a fatwa was issued against Salman Rushdie. The Japanese translator of the work, Hitoshi Igarashi, was stabbed to death in 1991. Italian translator Ettore Capriolo and Norwegian publisher William Nygard were also targeted, surviving the attacks with severe injuries. Rushdie's father was a successful business man and the family could afford to send their son to a British boarding school at the age of 14. In 1964, Rushdie became a British citizen and took up English as his preferred language to write in. He studied history at King’s College in Cambridge and took courses in theatre before graduating in 1968. He has written 12 novels and many collection of essays and non-fiction. His second book, 'Midnight’s Children' won him a Man Booker Prize and became a bestseller in the US. Rushdie, in 2021 said that he will set his next novel in India. He is planning to return to India after many years. The author last came to India for the promotion of Deepa Mehta's 2013 film "Midnight's Children". Rushdie has worked with artist Ai Weiwei and writers Margaret Atwood and Isabel Allende on a worldwide campaign by the PEN International writers association to support writers in exile. In 2007, Queen Elizabeth II knighted the award-winning author and freedom of expression warrior. Recently, Rushdie was honoured on the Queen’s Birthday Honours List. Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II awarded the Order of the Companions for his services in the field of literature.
Saturday, 17 June 2023
17623 - ams - commemoration - Sara Lidman - The True Voice of Swedish Literature
17623 - ams - commemorations - The life and times of Dorothy M Richardson
Almost a hundred a years ago, a publishing company brought out a little book about a student teacher in Germany. The name of the book was 'Pointed Roofs' and the author's name was Dorothy M Richardson. The story was narrated through the consciousness of the heroine. This new style made the readers perplexed. Critics found it difficult to convey the charm of the book. It was the first book to be labelled stream of consciousness, even though Richardson hated that phrase. But the stream of consciousness became a literary genre which was later found in the novels of Virginia Woolf especially Mrs Dalloway. Today, four authors are interlinked because of this literary genre - James Joyce, Woolf, Marcel Proust, and Dorothy M. Richardson. 'Pointed Roofs' was the first of a series called Pilgrimage, a gigantic 13- volume semi-autobiographical narrative. Her novels can also be treated as a slice of history. She always portrayed the struggles and the joys of a lonely female worker in London. H.G Wells was her friend, and it is presumed that they had an affair. Today we can witness a blue plaque at Woburn Walk in Bloomsbury, where she lived, opposite Yeats, in 1905 and 1906. She has mentioned that across the alley from her flat, she could see W. B. Yeats writing by the light of "two immensely tall, thick white candles." She died on June 17, 1957, alone, greatly forgotten and in poverty.
Friday, 16 June 2023
Thursday, 15 June 2023
15623 - ams - commemoration # 1 - Issa and the Healing Power of Art
Kobayashi Issa reminds us that the realm of sympathy and concern is limitless. He is a Japanese haiku poet from the late 1700s. 'Issa' in Japanese means 'Cup-of-Tea’. He is regarded as one of the four haiku masters in Japan, along with Bashōō, Busonand Shiki — "the Great Four. His catalogue of poems is vast – some 20,000 haikus. Issa wrote 54 haiku on the snail, 15 on the toad, nearly 200 on frogs, about 230 on the firefly, more than 150 on the mosquito, 90 on flies, over 100 on fleas and nearly90 on the cicada, making a total of about one thousand verses on such creatures. Issa was a lay priest in the True Pure Land Buddhism school. Issa’s mother died when he was young. He was perpetually impoverished and sick, occasionally homeless. He was a widower and the father of three children who perished in infancy. Issa lost his house and was forced to live in a windowless storehouse. This building was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1933. Just before his death, his disciples asked him to give them a last verse, he opened his eyes and murmured 'A bath when you're born, a bath when you die, how stupid.
Wednesday, 14 June 2023
14623 - ams - commemoration # 2 - Borges remembered in in Buenos Aires
There is a Borges Cultural Centre (CCB) in Buenos Aires. Bearing the name of Argentina’s most famous writer it reopened its doors this March 2022 after a two-year pandemic closure. One of the objectives of the centre is to bring Borges’s work closer to readers who have not yet found the entry point. "Funes the Memorious" is a short story by Jorge Luis Borges and it is the tale of one Ireneo Funes, who, after falling off his horse and receiving a bad head injury, acquired the amazing talent—or curse— of remembering absolutely everything. Jorge Luis Borges has received universal acclaim for the depth with which he approached matters of philosophic and scientific import in his writings. His writings explores themes like eternity, pain, time, and metafiction. Jorge Luis Borges received the Miguel de Cervantes Award for his global work in 1980, the most important literary award in the Spanish language. Borges's mother translated William Saroyan, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Virginia Woolf, and Herman Melville into Spanish. Borges had an aversion to politics which is one of the reasons why he was not awarded the Nobel Prize of Literature.
14623 - ams - commemoration #1 - The book that launched a civil war - 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' remembered
Abraham Lincoln greeted Harriet Beecher Stowe with these words: "So you are the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war." ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’ touched the hearts of northerners and forced them to fight against the Southerners and slavery. Harriet Beecher Stowe is recognized as a writer who played an important role in changing history with her book. She published the book in two volumes in 1852. Within the first year of publication, ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ sold 300,000 copies. ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin’ has now been published in over 75 languages and is still an important text used in schools all over the world. This book was written at a time when women did not have a right to vote, have legal rights, or the right to speak in public meetings. One year after the publication of the book, she wrote another one titled ‘A Key to Uncle Tom’s Cabin’. This was done to defend her novel against her critics, who accused her of falsifying and exaggerating the novel’s representation of slavery. Harriet Beecher Stowe House is a project aimed at preserving the legacy of Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Beecher family home in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Tuesday, 13 June 2023
13-6-23 - ams - commemoration # 2 - Life and Times of Dorothy L Sayers
Dorothy L. Sayers is considered by many as a pre-eminent writer of mystery stories. She was quite scientific in her approach towards crime fiction. She is the inventor of the voice-activated lock featured in the 1928 short story ‘The Adventurous Exploit of the Cave of Ali Baba’. Dorothy L. Sayers is best known for her mysteries, a series of novels and short stories set between the First and Second World Wars that feature English aristocrat and amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey, which remain popular to this day. However, Sayers herself considered her translation of Dante's Divine Comedy to be her best work. Miss Sayers was one of the first women to obtain an Oxford University degree after attending its Somerville College. She is also known for her plays, literary criticism, and essays. She was also a student of classical and modern languages. Her work, carefully researched and widely varied, included poetry, the editing of collections with her erudite introductions on the genre, and the translating of the Tristan of Thomas from mediaeval French. She admired E C Bentley and G K Chesterton and numbered among her friends T S Eliot, Charles Williams, and C S Lewis. During her latter years she abandoned crime fiction to write dramas and interpretive essays on the Christian religion. In her middle years she liked to drive a motorcycle.