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Udaya Narayana Singh
(India, 1951)
Singh has visited and lectured in a large number of countries including Bangladesh, the Caribbean, France, Germany, Italy, Nepal, Pakistan, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, Thailand and USA. He was a member of the Indo-Italian Cultural Exchange Programme for Creative Writers (1999), a member of the Official delegation to Trinidad and Tobago (2002), Mauritius (2005) and a poet-invitee at the Frankfurt Book Fair – India Guest of Honour presentation (2006). Singh grew up in a multilingual household: his mother was a speaker of Bengali; his father a speaker and author-editor of Maithili; and both taught Hindi literature at the university. The medium of instruction in his school was Bengali and in university, English. The result: a rich polyglottal experience that was to have an enduring impact on the way Singh was to approach his engagement with literature. Singh is aware of the vibrant literary tradition in Maithili to which he is heir (he writes in his recent book of the rich reserves of lyric poetry by great poets of the past, such as Vidyapati, Lochandas and Chanda Jha). But he is also acutely aware of the fact that the language has occupied a marginal position. As he says, “The language has been suppressed (unlike the other literary giants like Bangla, Marathi or Tamil etc) for two centuries, and it has been a long struggle for the literary community to achieve the recognition that is its due (it got into the Sahitya Akademi in 1964 and into the 8th Schedule in 2003).” Singh published his first book in Maithili in 1966 when he was just fifteen. His second followed in 1971. He believes that his extensive travels and his multilingualism — his deep involvement with Bengali literature, as well as his essays in Hindi and English — have enriched the texture and widened the ambit of his Maithili poetry in various ways. The poems in this edition are from his recent book, Second Person Singular (Katha, 2006), which features English translations of his Maithili poetry. The work has been translated by the poet in collaboration with Rizio Yohannan Raj (poet, fiction writer and translator). The preoccupation with language and love – themes that emerged as early as his second book – is clearly in evidence in these seven poems. The work takes us into the shadowy terrain of uncertainty and possible menace, the fluctuating lexicon of human intimacy. This realm of unpredictable equations – with poem and paramour – is described in haunting ways: “irregular/ colourless/ threadbare/ patch-worked; subtle,/ ambivalent,/ full of cuss words,/ erotic”, and yet again, “gentle, sweet, toxic, precarious”. Anything can happen here in this penumbral, predatory, shape-shifting jungle of sensuous syntax: you could be taken captive, ensnared in “stories/ riddles/ rumours”, worse still, turned into poetry! What you find here is not the grammarian’s love of correctness, but the poet’s affirmation of the anarchic aliveness of language and human interaction – the typo, the spelling error, the idiosyncrasy, the singularity of the beloved. And for the lunatic, the lover/linguist, poet, of course, the quest for the new, the unnamed and the unnameable, remains a perennial one: I speak with restraint; Even when I do, I do not use the past tense, I move to an unknown future. I think very little now; even when I do I think in figures of speech. My philosophy aspires for a feeling neither stated nor translated as yet. (‘Old Love’)
Last updated: May 7, 2007
Also on this Site:
The Poetics of Othering: Interview with Udaya Narayana Singh by Rizio Raj Yohannan Bibliography: Poetry Maithili Poetry Kavayo Vadanti, Mithila Darshan, Calcutta, 1966 Amrtasya Putraah, Lok Sahitya Parishad, Calcutta, 1971 Anuttaran, Mithila Darshan, Calcutta, 1981 Madhyampurush Ekvachan, Vani Prakashan, New Delhi, 2005 Bengali Poetry Ashru o Parihaas, Pritoniya, Kolkata, 1997 Anukriti, Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi, 1999 Kham-kheyali,Ebang Mushayera, Kolkata, 2003 English Poetry Second Person Singular [Madhyampurush Ekvachan translated from Maithili] with Rizio Yohanan Raj, Katha, New Delhi, 2006 Links Muse India: Editorial on modern Maithili writing Muse India: Udaya Narayana Singh on 'Crises of Maithili Literatteurs'. Geocities: Bio-notes on Maithili poets. Central Institute of Indian Languages: Comprehensive bio-data on Udaya Narayana Singh. |
POEMS BY Udaya Narayana Singh |