A chance encounter leads a poet to an epiphany. Arundhathi Subramaniam on how she rediscovered Bharatanatyam, a lost childhood love
MY LOVE OF CLASSICAL DANCE started early. As did, I confess, my impatience. At first, poetry and dance seemed equally magical, sharing much in common. Prose (or at least my perception of grown-up speech) seemed to be rudimentary locomotive language—pedestrian and unsurprising. But poetry was language that danced. It was language with turbines. Kinetic language. It could leap, resist gravity. Like dance, it could fly.
I remember first watching Bharatanatyam as an enthralled four-year-old, dazzled by the beauty of its costume and ornamentation, its sensuous iconography. There was also an inarticulate excitement about the throbbing geometry of the form, its pulsating lines, its vigour, its exactitude.
It was in my adolescence that the discomfort began. That the dominant preoccupation was love didn’t bother me. Indeed, I relished the stylisation, the grandeur and heightened intensity of emotion. I could see that unreliable male lovers were not exactly a dated preoccupation. I even empathised. It was the servility of love that troubled me: the fact that so much poetry seemed to feature women whose lives were entirely predicated on the presence (and often, absence) of their lovers. And was this preening and pouting, this farcical spectacle of self-decoration and mock-rebuke a real resolution? Surely, as viewers, we deserved something more psychologically credible, less stereotypic, more true? Besides, if growing up meant becoming a puppet of a male consort’s whimsical behaviour, it seemed like adulthood was emphatically not a state to which to aspire.
Denne historien er fra October - December 2017-utgaven av The Indian Quarterly.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra October - December 2017-utgaven av The Indian Quarterly.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
The Image-Maker
Sukumar Ray’s most vivid images were saved for his classics of nonsense verse, but his singular eye, writes Nabarupa Bhattacharjee, found its earliest expression in photography
The Nawab's Last Sigh
Rudely awakened by the fact of independent India, an aristocrat in Meerut clung to his past. Now, he tells Sunaina Kumar, all he has left are his memories of a glorious age.
The Guest
Vaiyavan is the nom de plume of MSP Murugesan. Born in 1936, he did sundry jobs before obtaining postgraduate degrees by correspondence and then served as an English and Tamil teacher till his retirement in 1996. His writing career began in 1956. Multifaceted and prolific, he has to his credit a long list of short story collections, novels, plays, literary essays, poems and children’s stories. He has won several awards including Tamil Nadu government awards for best book on culture (1982) and best science book (1992) and the Malcolm Adiseshiah award for active participation in neo-literacy activities (1996). In his short stories and novels, Vaiyavan revels in a zest for life. Humaneness is the hallmark of his work, as the pain and pleasure, trials and tribulations of people in different rungs of society are described in minute detail. —CGR
The Birth of an Anthem
From right-wing slogan to moving patriotic song and now back to Hindu nationalistic war cry. Rimli Sengupta on the evolution of Vande Mataram
The Birth of a Parent
The beginning of a new life can create other strange new lives, reflects Manidipa Mandal
The Unknown Soldier
One man wondered and worried about his disappeared brother all his life.His granddaughter continued the search. Preksha Sharma resurrects a man and his story
The Art Scene
For the new kid on the block, it certainly has pedigree. The Centre for Con-temporary Art, housed within Delhi’s Bikaner House complex, finally opened its portals to welcome art aficionados during this year’s edition of the India Art Fair. Nature Morte was invited to stage the centre’s much-awaited inaugural show, an opportunity the gallery found too irresistible to pass up. The ambitious exhibition it mounted, The Idea of the Acrobat, occupied both floors of the recently renovated building and brought together the works of a dozen well known artists in a multitude of media. The line-up included Bharti Kher, Atul Dodiya, Dayanita Singh, Shilpa Gupta, Ayesha Singh, Khyentse Norbu and LN Tallur to name but a few.
Long, Long Ago
Arundhuti Dasgupta and Utkarsh Patel recount obscure creation myths from around the world, many echoing each other
Family Business
AT THE DINDUKKAL BUS DEPOT, the abortionist pushed her way through the crowd thronging the bus and finally managed to board it. She placed her travel bag beside her on the seat, calling out to her niece to hurry up. The young woman renewed her efforts to break free of the tangle of limbs and claim the seat reserved for her.
A Goan Childhood
Fragments of memory of a time long gone, from a life lived far away. By Selma Carvalho