Gopalakrishna Adiga

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Gopalakrishna Adiga
© Kamat's Potpourri
© Kamat's Potpourri
Born1918
Mogeri, South Canara, Madras Presidency, British India
(present-day Kundapura taluk, Udupi district, Karnataka, India)
Died1992
Bangalore, Karnataka
OccupationPoet, writer, professor
NationalityIndia
GenreFiction
Literary movementNavya

Mogeri Gopalakrishna Adiga (1918–1992) was one of the major figures in modern Kannada poetry. He is known as the "pioneer of New style" poetry.[1]

Biography

Adiga was born in the coastal village of Mogeri, Udupi district, in state of Karnataka. After completing his primary education in Mogeri and Baindooru, he attended high school in Kundapur, 14 miles away from his village. His education would have ended after high school, but for the foresight of his aunt, who, against the will of other family members, gave moral and monetary support for his college studies. Thus, Adiga went to Mysore and earned his BA (Hons) in English from Maharaja's College, Mysore, University of Mysore.[citation needed]

After several minor jobs in Karnataka, Adiga worked at Sarada Vilas College in Mysore as lecturer in English from 1948 to 1952, during which time he completed a master's degree from Nagpur University. He also served at St. Philomena College in Mysore for ten years. In the mid 1960s, he became Principal at the newly created Lal Bahadur Shashtri College in Sagara, and later at Poorna Prajna College in Udupi.[citation needed]

As editor of Saakshi magazine he helped bring Kannada literature to the masses.[2]

Adiga's wife, Lalita, currently [when?] lives in Bangalore. He is survived by five children and nine grandchildren.[citation needed]

Adiga's grandson is Manu Raju, Senior Political reporter for CNN. [3]

Work

In the 1950s and 1960s Adiga was a teacher in Mysore.[4] From 1964 until 1968 he was the principal of Lal Bahadur College in Sagara, and from 1968 until 1971 he was Principal of Poorna Prajna College in Udupi.[5] He later worked as the Deputy Director for the National Book Trust of India.

Through his essays, translations and poems, Adiga’s influence on the modern Indian literature has been felt for over five decades. He has been called [by whom?] the doyen of the "naveena saahitya chaluvali" (the “modernist literary movement”). Although Adiga taught English literature, he wrote almost exclusively in Kannada, except for a single poem in English on Rabindranath Tagore in 1961. It seems that he wrote this at the request of M.N.Roy for the Radical Humanist magazine.

His style has been described [by whom?] as a response to the independence of India from British rule in 1947. The style called Navya was generally about the new times. Inspired by modern Western literature and Indian tradition, he set out to portray the "disillusionment and angst of the times".[5]

Recently[when?], Nadig brought out Selected Poems, Gopalakrishna Adiga (2007), a work commissioned by Bharatiya Sahitya Parishat (the Indian Academy of Literature.)

His poetic style is revealed in his 1957 poem "Prarthane" (Prayer).

Prayer
Lord,
plying the well-known pumps of heraldic praise
your hirelings bend double; others, gouty wagtails,
lick the land for crumbs; one snuffs his candle out
and seeks like a eunuch leech
the warm marshes in the cracks of light;
another sissy gives his back to the time-fed rumps
and sheathes his dagger deep.
Lord,
I am not of these.

Works

  • Bhavataranga - 1946
  • Ananthe - 1954 (novel)
  • Bhoomi Geetha - 1959
  • Mannina Vasane (book of essays) - 1966
  • Vardhamana - 1972
  • Idanna Bayasiralilla (poems) - 1975
  • Samagra Kavya (collection of poems) - 1976
  • [1] Sakshi (Magazine) - 1962

Quotes

  • "ಇರುವುದೆಲ್ಲವ ಬಿಟ್ಟು ಇರದುದರೆಡೆಗೆ ತುಡಿವುದೆ ಜೀವನ" (Iruvudellava bittu iradudaredege tudivude jeevana)

Life is leaving everything we have and craving for things which we do not have..

  • ಮೌನ ತಬ್ಬಿತು ನೆಲವ" (mouna tabbitu nelava)[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/mp/2002/09/26/stories/2002092600660200.htm The Hindu - September 26, 2002
  2. ^ Gopalakrishna Adiga remembered The Hindu - Oct 04, 2004
  3. ^ http://www.cnn.com/profiles/manu-raju
  4. ^ The Mysore generation The Hindu - Apr 25, 2004.
  5. ^ a b Indian Poets Writing In Kannada at the Wayback Machine (archived October 26, 2009) - Indian Poets
  6. ^ QUOTES about Aswath - C. Aswath