Rachakonda Viswanatha Sastry

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Rachakonda Viswanatha Sastri
రాచకొండ విశ్వనాథ శాస్త్రి
File:Rachkonda vishvanatha sastry.jpg
Born
Rachakonda Viswanatha Sastri

(1922-07-30)30 July 1922
Srikakulam, India
Died10 November 1993(1993-11-10) (aged 71)
Occupation(s)Lawyer, writer
Years active1952–1975

Rachakonda Viswanatha Sastri (Ravi Sastri) (Telugu: రావిశాస్త్రి) (1922–1993) was a Telugu writer who published several novels and more than 60 short stories in six volumes. Often praised for his unique style, Ravi Sastry supported marginalized communities.[1] Professionally, he was a lawyer.[2]

Education

Rachakonda Viswanatha Sastry graduated with honours to obtain his B.A. from Andhra University, Visakhapatnam. In 1946, he completed his B.L. degree at Madras University. Having gained professional expertise in law by working with Taatha Sriramamurthy, an established senior lawyer, he started his own law practice in 1950. He began his career as a dedicated congressional leader. In his later years (1960) he was influenced by Marxist theory.

As a writer

In 1947, he observed the lifestyle of the inhabitants of Srikakulam and Vizianagaram, as well as major changes in urban lifestyles at Visakhapatnam. The perceived inhumanity in these new ways of life caused much distress, and Sastry was the first, after Gurajada Apparao and Sripadala, to employ dialects in writing about the effect of these changes.[3]

First novel

Written in 1952, the novel Alpajeevi (అల్పజీవి)[4] was an experimental foray into the world of Telugu literature. It was very well received and went on to become one of the most successful Telugu novels. Raavi Sastry was among the first authors in the region to write novels with syntactic similarity to the novels of James Joyce. Alpajeevi was the first novel with stylistic similarities to Chaitanya Sravanthi (చైతన్య స్రవంతి).

Career

After the novel Alpajeevi, he wrote two unfinished novels, Raju MahiShi (రాజు మహిషీ) and Rattalu Rambabu (రత్తాలు-రాంబాబు). Near the end of his career, he wrote the novel Illu (ఇల్లు). Alpajeevi is considered his best work among the several novels that he wrote during his career. But "Raju Mahishi Prema Manishi"[clarification needed] delved deep into the social fabric of the then-middle class, lower class and upper class society and brought out the structural weaknesses plaguing those classes very articulately. In fact, it was compared to the beauty of the unfinished statue of Lord Visweswara at Varanasi.

Stories

He wrote six stories (ఆరుసారా కథలు) which analyze the effects of the Liquor Act in Andhra Pradesh and also about the misuse of this act. These stories are now famous in Telugu literature.[citation needed]

Novels

  • Kathasagaram (కథాసాగరం) (1955)
  • Aru sara kadhalu (ఆరుసారా కథలు) (1961)
  • Rachakonda kathalu (రాచకొండ కథలు) (1966)[5]
  • Aru saraa kathalu (ఆరుసారా కథలు) (1967)
  • Raju mahishi (రాజు మహిషి) (1968)
  • Kalakanthi (కలకంఠి) (1969)
  • Banisa kathalu (బానిస కథలు) (1972)
  • Rukkulu (ఋక్కులు) (1973)
  • Rattalu – rambabu (రత్తాలు- రాంబాబు) (1975)
  • Sommulu Ponayandi (సొమ్ములు పోనాయండి)
  • Govulostunnayi Jagratta (గోవులోస్తున్నాయి జాగ్రత్త)
  • Bangaram (బంగారం)
  • Illu (ఇల్లు)
  • Alpajeevi (అల్పజీవి)

Dramas, playlets

  • Nijam – Natakam (నిజం నాటకం)
  • Tirasktruthi – Natika (తిరస్కృతి నాటిక)
  • Vishadam – Natika (విషాదం నాటిక)

Honors

In 1983, he was honored with the Kalaprapoorna Award by Andhra University. He refused this award. He received a Sahitya Akademi Award in the 1960s. Sastry returned in 1975 as a mark of protest against emergency and his incarceration during that period, though he came out on parole.

Acting

He was not only a writer, but an actor. He played the role of an artist in the playlets Nijam and Kanyasulkam. Nijam had over 100 performances. Ravi Sastry said, "Every writer should think that my writings are neither harmful to the good nor helpful to the bad."

Death

Ravi Sastri died on 10 November 1993.

References