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A History of Indian English Literature PDF

367 Pages·2009·1.43 MB·English
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A History of Indian English Literature - M.K. Naik Contents Preface CHAPTER 1. The Literary Landscape: The Nature and Scope of Indian English Literature CHAPTER 2- The Pagoda Tree: From the Beginnings to 1857 Early Prose Early Poetry CHAPTER 3: The Winds of Change: 1857 to 1920 Poetry Prose Drama Fiction CHAPTER 4 The Gandhian Whirlwind: 1920-1947 Prose Poetry Drama Fiction The Short Story CHAPTER 5 The Asoka Pillar: Independence and After Poetry Fiction The Short Story Drama Prose Preface Acknowledged ‘with civil leer’ by many and damned ‘with faint praise* by some for a long time, Indian English literature, designated variously as ‘Indo-Anglian Literature’, ‘Indo-finglish I Itcrature' and ‘Indian Writing in English' (and once even regarded unjustly as part of‘Anglo-Indian Literature’), is now more than a hundred and seventy years old. In spite of the great pioneering efforts of Professor K.R. Srinivasa Iyengar— virtually the father of the serious study of this body of writing— in his Indo-Anglian Literature (1943), The Indian Contribution to English Literature (1945) and Indian Waiting in English (1962, 1973), a systematic, comprehensive and critical history of this literature, clearly defining its nature and scope, adopting a proper period- division and relating writers and schools firmly to changing indo-political conditions .had not been attempted. Viewing Indian English literature as essentially a significant by- product of the eventful encounter between India and the Indian ethos on the one hand, and England, the English language and Western culture on the other, the present work tries to trace the course nl this literature from 1809, the year when probably the first < (imposition in English of some length by an Indian - namely, ( V. Boriah’s ‘Account of the Jains’--appeared (in Asiatic Researches, Vol. IX, 1809) to the end of 1979. While the needs o|. a systematic chronological survey have been kept in mind throughout, the responsibility of rigorous critical evaluation has not been sought to be evaded. Writers like Sri Aurobindo, Pitblndranath Tagore and Sarojini Naidu have often driven cri-n. 'i ii nd reviewers into opposite camps, generating both uncritical adulation and unthinking condemnation. The present work tries to adopt a balanced approach to these writers. ‘A work is never necessarily finished’, says Paul Valery, ‘for he who made it is never complete'. This is perhaps specially true of a history of literature, which involves one single mind's encounters with a large number of authors belonging to different periods and schools and exemplifying different kinds of sensibility. The writing of a literary history must therefore necessarily involve the education of the historian’s literary taste, and I must thank the authorities of the Sahitya Akademi for giving me this opportunity to acquire such an education. I have received much help from numerous friends in the compilation of this history. A forbiddingly large number of books published in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were not easily available—some of them not even in reputed metropolitan libraries. B.A. Olkar—an old friend and a confirmed bibliophile—went expertly hunting in antique book-shops in Bombay, and similar operations zestfully carried out by my young friends,’ S. Subrahmanya Sarma and R. Raphael in Madras, S. Krishna Bhatta in Bangalore and G.S. Balarama Gupta at Annamalainagar also yielded a sizable harvest. Dr. G.S. Dikshit, Dr. Amalendu Bose, Dr. V.M. Kulkarni, Mr. D.G. Angal, Mr. M.N. Nagaraj, Mr. N.B. Marathe, Dr. Prema Nandakumar, Dr. Shyamala Narayan, and Dr. H.S. Saksena also made much valuable material available to me. Dr. V.K. Gokak, Dr. Chaman Nahal, Dr. Sisir Kumar Ghose, Dr. K. Krishnamoorthy, Mr. Ruskin Bond, Dr. Nirmal Mukherjee, Dr. Sujit Mukherjee, Dr. M. Sivaramakrishna, Dr. K. Ayyappa Panikar, Dr. K.N. Sinha, Mr. Lakhan Deb, Dr. H. Raizada, Dr. R.B. Patankar, Mr. V.D. Trivadi, Dr. Visvanath Chatterjee, Miss Eunice D’Souza and Miss Kaushiki Sen Verma answered my numerous queries (I strongly suspect that during the last two years many of my correspondents must have dreaded the periodic arrival of a hastily w^itf^p little post-card from Dharwar asking for information). The librarians and the staff of the following libraries extended their willing co-operation to me: National Library, Calcutta,; Tagore Museum and Library, Santiniketan; University of Bombay Library and Asiatic Library, Bombay; Poona University I .ibrary, Deccan College Library and Fergusson College library, Poona; Os mania University Library, C.I.E.F.L. Library, Salar-jung Museum Library, Sir Nizamut Jung Library, State Library and Andhra Pradesh Archives, Hyderabad; Bangalore University Library, Bangalore; Mysore University Library, Mysore; Madras University Library, Adyar Library, Presidency College Library, Connemara Library and Tamil Nadu Archives, Madras; Sri Auiiobindo Ashram Library and the Romain Rolland Library, Pondicherry, and the Regional Library and Kamatak College Library, Dharwar. To Mr. K.S. Deshpande and his enthusiastic band of colleagues at the Karnatak University Library, Dharwar I owe a special debt of gratitude. The more I asked for, the more responsive they were (a couple of assistant librarians once even allowed themselves to be dragged to the Binding Section to search for the back numbers of periodicals). In writing about prose of different types—political, historical,' philosophical, etc., and criticism of Sanskrit literature and the arts, I had inevitably to depend upon the acknowledged expertise of my University friends belonging to different disciplines—Dr G.S. Dikshit, Dr K. Raghavendra Rao, Dr K. Krishnamootthy, Dr G.K. Bhat, Dr S.S. Settar, Dr R.B. Patankar, Dr L.C. Mulatti and Professor K.J. Shah. Dr Rao and Dr Dikshit also read my typescript and drew my attention to matters that called for a reconsideration. Prof. R.G. Chenni assisted in preparing the typescript for the press, Dr C.V. Venugopal read the proofs and compiled the Index with a mastery born of long practice. 1 am deeply grateful to all these numerous friends and associates. In the final chapter, I have drawn on my essay, ‘Ini Defence of Indian Writing in English’ included in Indo- English Literature (1977) edited by Dr K.K. Sharma. The grant of a National Fellowship for three years enabled me to take time off from my normal teaching duties and also made work in the various libraries possible. My thanks are due to the authorities of the University Grants Commission and Kamatak University for this generous gesture. Before concluding, I must place on record my appreciation of the patience and consideration shown by the Secretary, the Deputy Secretary (Programme) and the other authorities of the Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi, in extending (more than once) my deadline for submitting the final typescript of this history. M.K. NAIK Dharwar, January 1980. CHAPTER 1. The Literary Landscape: The Nature and Scope of Indian English Literature Indian English literature began as an interesting by-product of an eventful encounter in the late eighteenth century between a vigorous and enterprising Britain and a stagnant and chaotic India. As a result of this encounter, as F.W. Bain puts it, India, a withered trunk ... suddenly shot out with foreign foliage.’1One form this foliage took was that of original writing in English by Indians, thus partially fulfilling Samuel Daniel’s sixteenth century prophecy concerning the English language: Who (in time) knows whither we may vent The treasures of our tongue? To what strange shores This gain of our best glory shall be sent T’enrich unknowing nations with our stores. What worlds in th’yet unformed orient May come refined with th’accents that are ours. The first probiem that confronts the historian of this literature is to define its nature and scope clearly. The question has been made rather complicated owing to two factors: first, this body of writing has, from time to time, been designated variously as IndoAnglian literature’, ‘Indian Writing in English’ and ‘Indo-English literature’; secondly, the failure to make clear-cut distinctions has also often led to a confusion between categories such as ‘Anglo-Indian literature’, literature in the Indian languages translated into English and original composition in English by Indians. Thus, in his A Sketch of Anglo-Indian Literature (1908), E.F. Oaten considers the poetry of Henry Derozio as part of ‘Anglo- Indian literature’. The same critic, in his essay on Anglo- Indian literature in The Cambridge History of English Literature(Vol. XIV, Ch. 10) includes Toru Dutt, Sarojini Naidu, Rabindranath Tagore and ‘Aravindo [sic] Ghose’ among ‘Anglo-Indian’ writers along with F.W. Bain and F.A. Steel. Similarly, Bhupal Singh’s Survey of Anglo-Indian Fiction (1934) deals with both British and Indian writers on Indian subjects. V.K. Gokak, in his book, English in India: Its Present and Future (1964), interprets the term Indo-Anglian Literature’ as comprising ‘the work of Indian writers in English and ‘Indo- English literature’ as consisting of ‘translations by Indians from Indian literature into English’. In his massive survey, Indian Writing in English (1962), K.R. Srinivasa Iyengar includes English translations of Tagore’s novels and plays done by others in his history of Indian creative writing in English, while H.M. Williams excludes these from his Indo-Anglian Literature 1800-1970: A Survey (1976). John B. Alphonso Karkala (Indo English Literature in the Nineteenth Century) (1970) uses the term ‘Indo-English literature’ to mean ‘literature produced by Indians in English.’ Strictly speaking, Indian English literature may be defined as literature written originally in English by authors Indian by birth, ancestry or nationality. It is clear that neither ‘Anglo- Indian Literature’, nor literal translations by others (as distinguished from creative translations by the authors themselves) can legitimately form part of this literature. The former comprises the writings of British or Western authors concerning India. Kipling, Forster, F.W Bain, Sir Edwin Arnold, F.A. Steel, John Masters, Paul Scott, M.M. Kaye and many others have all written about India, but their work obviously belongs to British literature. Similarly, translations from the Indian languages into English cannot also form part of Indian English literature, except when they are creative translations by the authors themselves. If Homer and Virgil, Dante and Dostoevsky translated into English do not become British authors by any stretch of the imagination, there is little reason why Tagore’s novels, most of his short stories and some of his plays translated into English by others should form part of Indian English literature. On the other hand, a work like Gitanjaliwhich is a creative translation by the author himself should qualify for inclusion. The crux of the matter is the distinctive literary phenomenon that emerges when an Indian sensibility tries to express itself originally in a medium of expression which is not primarily Indian. There is, of course, that infinitesimally small class of Indian society called the ‘Anglo- Indian’ i.e., the Eurasians, who claim English as their mother tongue; but with notable exceptions like Henry Derozio,

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