Kamala
Das, also known as Kamala Suraiya, the sophisticated Indian poetess was born on
March 31, 1934. She is a distinguished Indian writer who composes in English as
well as Malayalam, her native language. Kamala Das is looked at as one of the
exceptional Indian poets writing in English, even though her reputation and
esteem in Kerala is based primarily on her short stories and autobiography.
Much of Kamala Das`s writing in Malayalam is published in the pen name
`Madhavikkutty`. Kamala Das was born in Malabar in the maritime state of
Kerala. She was born to V. M. Nair, an ex- managing editor of the
widely-distributed Malayalam daily Mathrubhumi and Nalappatt Balamani Amma, a
renowned Malayali poetess
. A notable feature included in Kamala Das`s character analysis is that she is perhaps the first Hindu woman ever to blatantly and candidly talk about sexual desires of Indian women, making her an iconoclast of her generation.
. A notable feature included in Kamala Das`s character analysis is that she is perhaps the first Hindu woman ever to blatantly and candidly talk about sexual desires of Indian women, making her an iconoclast of her generation.
Born
into a conservative Hindu Nair (Nallappattu) household possessing royal
ancestry, Kamala Das had embraced Islam in 1999 at the age of 65 and assumed
the name Kamala Suraiya. Just like the subjects of her stories, conversion in
religious faith too had provoked much heat and storm in the social and literary
circuits. Kamala Das also took active participation in politics in India and
had launched a national political party, called the Lok Seva Party. The
foremost aim of the party is to focus wholly on humanitarian work, as well as
provide refuge to orphaned mothers and promote secularism. In 1984, Das had
contested the general elections to enter parliament, but lost.
Kamala
Das`s journey from being an elegiac child to turn into a respected Indian
poetess is pretty long one. Her love of poetry began since early childhood
under the influence of her great uncle, Nalapat Narayan Menon, a well-known
writer. Das had spent most of her early days in Calcutta, where her father was
employed. Das reminiscences watching her great uncle "work from morning
till night" and thinking that he led "a blissful life". Kamala
Das was also profoundly impressed by the poetry of her mother, Nalapat Balamani
Amma and the sanctified writings preserved by the matriarchal community of
Nayars. She received private education until the age of 15, when she was
married to K. Madhava Das. She was barely 16 when her first son was born, to
which she states that she "was mature enough to be a mother only when my
third child was born". It is also known from the poetess`s autobiography
that Das`s husband used to often assay a fatherly role for both Das and her
sons. Due to the huge age difference between Kamala and her husband, Madhava
Das often encouraged his wife to stay associated with people of her own age.
Kamala Das corroborates this information and says that he was always "very
understanding". When Kamala Das wished that she should begin writing, her
husband supported her decision to expand the family`s earnings. Since Das
belonged to the group of the `fair sex`, she could not utilise the `morning-till-night`
agenda enjoyed by her great uncle. Hence, she had to wait until nightfall after
her family had gone off to sleep, after which she would write until morning.
There was the availability of only the kitchen table, where she would cut
vegetables and after all the plates and things were washed up, Das would sit
there and start typing. This scrupulous schedule weighed upon heavily upon the
poetess`s health, but she viewed her illness from the optimistic side. Her
illness gave her more time at home and hence, more time to write. Such was
Kamala Das`s dedication, only after which did she attain the elevated Indian
poetess status. As her career escaladed towards the high, her husband always
remained her greatest supporter. Though he was sick for three years before he
passed away, his presence brought Das remarkable joy and comfort. She avowed
that there "shall not be another person so proud of me and my
achievements".
Kamala
Das`s achievements do broaden well beyond her verses of poetry. According to
Kamala Das, "I wanted to fill my life with as many experiences as I can
manage to garner because I do not believe that one can get born again".
True to her word, Das has made herself successfully involved in painting,
fiction and even politics. Though she had failed to win a place in Parliament
in 1984, yet, she had witnessed much more success as a syndicated columnist.
She has moved farther from poetry because she claimed that "poetry does
not sell in this country (India),". However, opportunely, her forthright
columns did and still do. Kamala Das`s columns were based upon everything from
women`s issues and child care to politics.
Kamala
Das`s mysterious honesty is wholly extended to her exploration of womanhood and
love. According to her, womanhood calls for a specific set of collective
experiences. Again, Kamala Das`s attention towards eroticism is magnificently
coupled with her exploration of women`s needs. According to her, love should be
determined by a fanatical kind of unconditional honesty. An encumbered love seems
to be no love at all; only a total raptness in love can do justice such varied
experiences. Much like the makers of ancient Tantric art, Das made no effort to
conceal the sensuality of the human form; her work appears to commemorate its
cheerful potential, while acknowledging its co-occurring perils.
Kamala
Das`s poems when focussed upon love treat it within more panoptic ranges of
themes, more realised settings and with deeper feeling, bringing to it an
intensity of emotion and speech. The rich, full complexity if life is wholly
grasped in Das`s writings. Her themes travel beyond stereotyped yearnings and
complaints. Even her feelings of lonesomeness and distress are part of a
larger-than-life personality, obsessive in its consciousness of its self, yet,
weaving a drama of selfhood.
Significantly,
many of her poems in English are about the warmth of her childhood and the
family home in Kerala. Similar to other South Indian writers, this Indian
poetess was also fond of writing about memories of childhood, family relations,
and the family`s great house. In Kamala Das`s poetry there lies an idealised
time of childhood in My Grandmother`s House, when she felt the sanctuary of
love within familiar surroundings innocent of sexual fears and frustrations.
Despite the fickle alterations of mood, attitude and self-respect in her
poetry, there is an inner nucleus of identity to which Das refers: her name and
aristocratic blood, her mother`s family, life in the South and her youth in
contrast to her marriage.
There
lies a dualism in Kamala Das`s writings in English, in which soul is contrasted
to body. She seemed to imagine overwhelming this dualism only through death;
Das`s poems are filled with yearnings for death, especially to drown in the
sea, water being connected in her mind with an all-encompassing universal
calmness, formlessness in contrast to the conscious mind and body of the
anxious individual. The dualism results from the fall from childhood innocence
into the adult realm of sexuality, marriage and life amongst strangers. Rather
than a poet of free love, Kamala Das elucidates the disenchantment of
sexuality.
The
uniqueness of Kamala Das`s English poetry is not the story of sex outside
marriage, but the volatility of her feelings, the way they rapidly shift and
assume new postures, fresh attitudes of defence, attack, explanation or
celebration. Kamala Das`s poems are placed neither in the act of sex nor in
feelings of love; they are instead entangled with the self and it`s
wide-ranging, often conflicting emotions. They often range from the yearning
for security and intimacy to the assertion of the ego, self-dramatisation and
feelings of humiliation and depression. Writing is a means of etching a place
in the world; the use of the personal voice and self-revelation are means of
self-assertion. Das had opened domains in which previously outlawed or ignored
emotions could be elucidated in ways which reflected the true voice of feeling;
she showed how an Indian poetess could establish a space for herself in the
public world. Kamala Das brought a sense of locality to her poems.
Surpassing
every sphere in Indian English literature, Kamala Das`s most remarkable
achievement is her own sense of writing in Indian English. Often her
vocabulary, idioms, choice of verbs and some syntactical constructions are part
of what has been termed the `Indianisation of English`. This is indeed a feat
of accomplishment for Das. It has served as an important phase in the
development of a national literature.
Kamala
Das is also popularly known as Madhavikutty in her mother-tongue, Malayalam.
She is counted as one of the principal short story writers in Malayalam. In any
given listing, Das numbers amongst the top five writers, even after bearing in
mind personal choices and socio-cultural background of her readers. Kamala
Das`s writing technique is indeed economical and the utilisation of language is
pretty precise. Her vastly applauded stories in Malayalam include Pakshiyude
Manam, Neypayasam, Thanuppu, and Chandana Marangal. Das also wrote a few
novels, among which Neermathalam Pootha Kalam excels every other, which was
received positively by the readers as well as the critics. It reanimates the
nostalgia of an old ancestral home with it adjoining snake shrine. It is often
stated that even Kamala Das`s casual talks falls in the genre of short stories.
Such is the Indian poetess` creative genius that even after buckling under
several unwanted controversies, she remains a widely admired figure.
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