Krishnaleeleyinda Ramarajyakke
A
collection of essays by S.Diwakar
pages:
120 price: Rs70
Vasantha
Prakashana, Bangalore
S.Diwakar
is a well-known editor, translator, critic, short story writer and essayist.
His interests are wide ranging. He has translated and introduced major European
and Latin American fiction writers to Kannada. His knowledge of music, painting
and photography is commendable. He has not only written on these art forms as a
critic but has creatively invested his rich experience gained in this
engagement in his own fictional narratives. He has been a
tireless experimenter and has always been extending the possibilities of the
media. “Krishnaleeleyinda Ramarajyakke” is his latest work, his second
collection of essays, which contains eighteen delightful and thought provoking
pieces on various topics as diverse as music, tigers, literary settings,
lexicography and so on. They not only draw our attention to many interesting
and less explored areas of arts and life but also throw light on the
multifaceted personality of the author.
These
essays are unconventional in nature. It is very difficult to push them into
familiar categories. Diwakar often employs several narrative modes-lyrical,
discursive, literary critical, reflective-in a single piece but fuses them into
one another and attempts to create his own narrative strategy. He draws his
material from myths, history, literature and arts but their details do not
stand apart from each other but make useful and meaningful contributions to the
intended narratives of the author. These essays are a testimony to the erudite
scholarship of the author but are never pedantic and they are miles away from
any form of exhibitionism.
His
essays stand somewhere between short story and criticism. He always attempts to
touch the chord of familiarity with his readers but is never interested in
loose talk or lighthearted gossip. That is the reason why one feels that one is
sensitized, enlightened and even provoked after reading the essays of Diwakar. Take
for example his essay “saabhinaya sangeetha”. It opens with a reference to an
interesting observation in Adiga’s autobiography where Adiga remembers one
Chikkaramarao who would never sit constantly at one place while he is singing
but would hop like a frog on the entire stage. There is also a reference to
D.V.G.’s narration of how Mysore Vasudevacharya used to sing. Diwakar says that
there is no exaggeration in these anecdotes as he is himself a witness to
various forms of ‘abhinaya by the
musicians. He recalls the ‘performances’
of Madhurai Somasundaram, M.D.Ramanathan and Bhimsen Joshi. However, Diwakar’s
essay is not just a collection of anecdotes or incidents. He is not entrapped
by the jargons of semiotics, but his essay should actually be read as a
semiotic response to music concerts. Diwakar has written on pure form of music
elsewhere. But this essay looks at music not just as ‘sung’ but as ‘enacted’
and ‘performed’ by musicians. Diwakar argues that the experience of a music
concert is not born only out of aural rendering but also out of the visuals of
the ‘abhinaya’ of the musicians. Thus in a music concert ‘aangika’ becomes as essential as the ‘vaachika’. Needless to say how
unusual, unconventional this response is to music concerts as compared to the
weekly reviews of professional music critics! This essay ends with a story
where one Tiruvengadu vaidishwaran forgets all the ragas and is no more able to
play on his violin. But he does not forget his ‘abhinaya’. Diwakar’s essay
describes how afterwards his friends would meet him to enjoy his silent music only
through his abhinaya.
The
title essay traces the history of the legal fight against Krishna by the
protestant missionaries during the colonial regime which ultimately results in
the replacement of Krishna by Rama in the Indian polity. “Huliraya” records the
changing imagery of the tiger from the pre-modern times to the present times.
As C.H.Raghunath observes in his foreword, the essay is not a conventional
writing on tigers but a collage of different interesting entries. The narrator
is completely absent in this essay. Diwakar’s essay is in the act of collaging
the details drawn from different sources. The pieces on Bhimsen Joshi and
Balamuralikrishna are illustrations of the author’s taste and eye for details. His
essay on lexicography is very short but nevertheless a mirror to the world of
lexicon and lexicographers. In “kathasahityada kriyakshetra” Diwakar
demonstrates the significance and importance of setting in the world of
fiction. One important feature of Diwakar’s essays is that they do not have a
formal closure. Therefore the essays have the potential to go beyond the
personal world of the author and enter the public space where a trained reader can
transform these essays into his own
narratives by his own readings, observations and entries.
.
*****
T.P.Ashoka
Professor
& H O D
Lal
Bahadur College
Sagar-577
401
Shimoga
Dist.
Karnataka
94482
54228
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