Categories
Arts & Culture Lite Blogs

Arundhathi Subramaniam’s Ode to ‘Wild Women’ in Indian Poetry

In the book, the poet brings together haunting voices of, by, and for women across the Indian subcontinent poetry of ancient Buddhist nuns, Bhakti and Sufi mystics, tantrikas, and Vedantins. There are women here, and men singing as women, and both raising their voices in praise of the sacred feminine…writes Sukant Deepak

She says it has been exciting to smell the danger in their voice. That it has been an infuriating journey too– for whenever she thought she had a hold on the content, someone would parachute in. There would then be chaos, albeit a grateful one.

There seems to be an initial relief when poet Arundhathi Subramaniam says that the book ‘Wild Women, Seekers, Protagonists and Goddesses in Sacred Indian Poetry’ is finally complete after five years, and will be released soon by Penguin. But then immediately after that, there is a pause —  as if she is mourning a loss.

“It was something that never got over. And this is something I have been wanting to do for really long. I also did a book in between, and I wrote one on Bhakti too. ‘Eating God’ was an important book in that aspect — it touched people. But I already believe the seeds of ‘Wild Women’ were sown. Of course, it is lovely to read about Kabir but where are the women? Have the women’s voices been muted? Maybe we have tamed and domesticated them… it did not seem they were women on journeys. I wanted to go back and rediscover the rawest realms and smells. It has been such an endless process but so satisfying to listen to their feral sensuality, and their searing questions about custodians of gender and faith. It was time to tune into their brazenness, their heartbreaking longing. Not just for their sake but for ours too.” she tells.

In the book, the poet brings together haunting voices of, by, and for women across the Indian subcontinent poetry of ancient Buddhist nuns, Bhakti and Sufi mystics, tantrikas, and Vedantins. There are women here, and men singing as women, and both raising their voices in praise of the sacred feminine.

Even as we start talking about gender in spirituality, she feels that given the goddesses part of it, they represent the many different aspects of creation and it is in this space that people are comfortable. with the duality. But as soon as it is time to arrive at a definite truth, the goddesses vanish,” smiles this Sahitya Akademi Award and  International Piero Bigongiari Prize (Italy) winning poet.

She insists it is the magically messy plurality of the subcontinent that never fails to fascinate her and she wanted to express this sense of wonder and how many living spiritual parts exist in the country — and there are so many women on such different paths — casting off clothes, house makers, mystics, Sufis and devotees…

“And to my mind what makes them my sisterhood is the fact that they are women who ask inconvenient questions and do not settle for easy answers. Frankly, it is about reclaiming what has always existed and reminding us of a messy and unruly existence. Subramaniam, who was Head of Dance and ‘Chauraha’ at the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Mumbai, and has been Editor of the India domain of the Poetry International Web was drawn to the Bhakti poets when her spiritual journey took on a certain urgency. “They took my breath away with their irreverence, their hoarse longing, their full-throated vulnerability. I loved the gumption with which they addressed their gods – complaining to them, quarrelling with them, making love to them, threatening to devour and even demolish
them!”

In her formative years, living in Mumbai had an impact — she had living poets around her who became a living legacy. “I was aware. I had living poets around me. They became a living legacy and you could aspire to be that but at the same time it was not easy, you could not easily become a part of this club, and it was not inviting. But yes, there were conversations around craft and not just people asking questions about how to get published.  there was something heady about the license to spend hours discussing line lengths, commas, and the nature of the cliché with others who shared this passion for verbal precision,” says the author of 13 books of poetry and prose who
was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize in 2015.

But even when she is ready to give up the badge of ‘Bombay poet’, the badge doesn’t leave her. “That suggests a deeper sense of kinship than I am probably aware of,” she smiles. The poet, who was recently at the Jaipur Literature Festival (JLF) 2024  for the session  ’Invoking the Muse: Poetry Hour’ stresses that such festivals do help in making the poet visible and also boost book sales. “Also, let me add, poetry does sell.”

And her process? Well, she does admit to having ‘twitchy fingers’ but says that sometimes too much importance is given to sitting down and writing. Stressing that it is important to be in touch with one’s silences, she recalls, “The upcoming book would lurch and halt — and both are important. Just because one writes every day does not mean
you are creating something profound or significant, it just means you’re exercising every day.”

While she is still “recovering” from Wild Women, there are poems that she wants to go back to, “But as I said, it is important to stay still too.”

ALSO READ-Vishal Bhardwaj’s Cinematic Poetry

Categories
Lite Blogs

Less fragmented life and reflections on poetry

For someone who started out in the 80s and 90s when the poetry scene in the country was quite bleak, things are surely looking up now…writes Sukant Deepak

She says she is recovering from her last book. Laughs, and confesses that it is not entirely true. And then adds, almost as an afterthought that what she is working on will probably take a very long time to complete.

Tentatively titled ‘Wild Women’, it started out as a book of poems by women mystics all over the country and then expanded into male poets who also channelled female voices and what that is to the timber of their voices.

“And now I feel a need to incorporate praises of the goddesses. It might end up being poems about the female presence in a sacred space. So, it would include women mystics, women voices that have been channelled as men and it would include poems which have had females as a subject which would be the goddesses,” says poet Arundhathi Subramaniam, recipient of the Sahitya Akademi award and International Piero Bigongiari Prize in Italy.


For someone who started out in the 80s and 90s when the poetry scene in the country was quite bleak, things are surely looking up now.


“Well, it is not high noon but it is 9 am. With the Internet boom and the performance poetry, and festivals that have begun to recognise that poets are just not useful as panellists — they can actually work as poets, it is the kind of scene that I would not complain about. We have many more outlets for performances now and one cannot complain. Of course, the news about which I am slightly concerned is that the poetry that turns into instant poetry online has not evolved. I feel it is possible to enjoy the process, that It is possible to enjoy the magic of poetry and at the same time enjoy the long chisel involved.”

Considering poetry’s rapid inclusion in art, performance art and installation, Subramaniam says she is surprised at how so many people want to use text, and not just as a crutch.

“I think people feel the need to have to write their own scripts has been recognised. There is a need to assert one’s own truth, your own narrative — your own performance piece becomes a way to do that. It’s wonderful that poetry is morphing in a way that was unthinkable. Instant poetry five years ago would be unthinkable. I look at them in various forms and why they exist. There is a need for accessible articulation in various areas — cultural identity and conflict association etc. I am glad that contemporary times are seeing many more forums and ways through which poetry has found its way.”

The poet who regularly conducts writing workshops at major liberal arts universities across the country feels that there is room for master classes.

“I thoroughly enjoy such workshops. However, my concern sometimes with the creative writing programme is that it can produce people who sound like variations of each other and there is arisk of standardisation setting in. But the chance to interact at some depth with different poets, who have spent a fair amount of time with their craft can definitely be a good thing.”

While prose is being translated at a rapid place and also winning major awards, Subramaniam, who has also translated many poems from Tamil and Gujarati admits that when it comes to verse, it is can be a tough ask as just having an idiomatic version of a language and juggling with the two is tough. And then comes the sound and tone.

“It does not lead to people queuing up to buy it. But it leads to curiosity. The kind of responses from all over the world has been great. One can go on about what has been lost in translation. But is also an invitation to discover, and we do not talk enough about it. This is why I want Bhakti poets translated. At the very least, it is an invitation into the language, the literary landscape. A translation is like training your microscope. To find so much more than what you thought and it is worthwhile in every sense of the word.”

In her case, a poem starts with just a line or an image that for some reason stays with her, a trigger or just a visual image.

“Like, I recently met a woman whose husband had died. She said he had looked at her towards the end of his life with eyes that resembled that of a cow. Now, that image is never going to leave me. So it starts with an image that is buzzing in your head or a chance conversation. You jot that down and on a day when things feel auspicious, try and chase it. There is a creative tension. I finish it, veil it. And pretend that I never wrote it. And six months later you unveil it. If there’s something — you hold on to it else…”

Talk to her about the inclusivity in her work, while living in such polarising times, and the poet says that she has experienced what a fragmented gaze can do and the pain it causes to oneself.

“If it was not for the pain that it caused then I would not have embarked on a journey that I call spiritual. The idea of yoga is a discipline that allowed me to find connections. You live a less fragmented life. You find alignment and that is somewhere reflected in the poetry. The desperation to return to a conversation, towards a gaze that includes more than it leaves out,” she concludes.

ALSO READ-Pre-Raphaelite Art accessible at London’s Classic Week Summer edition

Categories
Arts & Culture Asia News India News

Celebration of poetry to mark India@75

Birmingham City University (UK) has joined forces with Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi to stage three events across 2021 and 2022, which will celebrate the multilingual poetry of India and its diaspora … reports Asian Lite News

India’s 75-year independence is to be marked by a special celebration of poetry from writers and performers of Indian origin.

Birmingham City University (UK) has joined forces with Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi to stage three events across 2021 and 2022, which will celebrate the multilingual poetry of India and its diaspora.

Devised to mark the 75th anniversary of India’s independence the events will explore the longstanding tradition of poetry and its historic role in Indian tradition.

The series will feature Indian poets and British poets of Indian heritage to honour the close relationship between the two countries.

The first event will take place online on Saturday 18 September 4pm to 5.30pm IST (11.30am – 1pm UK time) and will feature artists including Rati Agnihotri (English/Hindi), Sanjeev Kaushal (Hindi), Meena Kandasamy (Tamil/English), and Anwar Ali (Malayalam/English).

Professor Rajinder Dudrah, Interim Associate Dean for Research, Innovation and Enterprise in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Media at Birmingham City University, said: “India has a rich and diverse tradition of poetry that spans many languages, giving us insight into varied cultures and social issues.

“Partnering with our University colleagues and artist friends in India has enabled us to offer this event as taking stock of the artistic form, while helping us better understand Indian and diasporic socio-cultural life as India moves beyond its 75th milestone year of Independence.”

Poetry has been chosen as the focus for the celebration due its powers to cross borders, and the significant role language can play in connecting people.

The poetry events will also mark the lead up to Birmingham UK playing host to the 2022 Commonwealth Games, which will see India compete in an array of disciplines.

The announcement marks the latest in a series of strong links between Birmingham City University and India, including its partnership with Hero Group to create a STEAMhouse India to bring together the arts with traditional technical subjects to boost innovation.

It also includes a partnership with Ronkel Media Education Institute, which provides students with real-world experience working on motion picture productions for Bollywood features.

Tickets for the free poetry events are available by visiting Eventbrite.

Categories
Events India News

Saudha celebrates the life and music of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan

Saudha Society of Poetry and Indian Music, one of the top-notch platforms for Indian classical and global music in the West is hosting a grand celebration of the life and music of India’s one of the all time greatest maestros Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan. The session will be streaming live on Friday 2 April at 3pm (UK) through Saudha’s facebook and youtube channel.

This unique celebration will feature talk on Bade Ghulam Ali’s music and performances as tribute to his music. Many living legends of Indian subcontinental music will join this virtual celebration and this includes Ghazal king Ustad Ghulam Ali from Pakistan, Tabla Maestro and torch-bearer of Benaras Gharana of Tabla tradition Pt Kumar Bose from India, the grandson of Bade Ghulam Ali Khan Ustad Raza Ali Khan from Pakistan, Indian slide instrumentalist Pt Narasimhan Ravikiran, Violin maestro Vidushi Kala Ramnath, Tabla maestros Pt Tanmoy Bose, Pt Shubhankar Banerjee, Pt Abhijit Banerjee, Sarod maestro Dr Pt Rajeeb Chakraborty, acclaimed vocalists Pt Shantanu Bhattacharyya, Vidushi Sanhita Nandi, Pt Chiranjeeb Chakraborty, , vocalist Pt Sriram Parsuram, Sitarist Sri Ramprapanna Bhattacharya, vocalists Minakshi Majumdar, Koyel Bhattacharya, Sarodist Sri Subhasis Banerjee and co-founder of Kala Sangam Professor Dr Geetha Upadhyaya OBE .

Also Read – Saudha and Gronthee UK celebrate International Women’s Day 

Sohini Roychowdhury Dasgupta, an acclaimed bharatnatyam exponent will render a visual interpretation of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali’s music through dance.

The director of Saudha, poet T M Ahemd Kaysher said, “this celebration on 119th birthday of Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali is an opportunity for all music lovers to explore the life and the music of one of the greatest vocalists of the world of the 20th century through analytic discussion by other living maestros. Saudha will endeavour to continue with bringing life and music of other legends and pioneer of Indian classical music like Tansen, Amir Khasru, Ustad Alauddin Khan, Ustad Amir Khan, Pt Bhimsen Joshi, Pt Onkarnath Thakur, Ustad Bismilla Khan and so on.”

Kaysher continued, “Saudha will soon introduce poetry-theatre for art-loving audiences in the West, an experiential production that combines music, theatre and poetry in live venues soon after the Covid is over.”

Also Read – A refreshing Weekend of soulful music, songs, and poetry

Founded by Indian classical vocalist Srimati Chandra Chakraborty and Bengali poet as well as fiction writer T M Ahmed Kaysher, Saudha became widely-known for its experimental hypnotic presentation of Indian classical music and its seamless amalgamation with world-poetry, dance and other global music.

Saudha has been hosting Bangla Music Festival, Ghazal Thumri and Kheyal Festival, Festival of devotion, Festival of Joy and happiness every year in addition to its experimental year-long events all around the country for the last ten years. Saudha’s events were staged at Edinburgh Festival, SouthBank Centre, Queen Mary University, City University of London, Rich Mix, Carriageworks Theatre, Seven Arts Centre in Leeds, Mac theatre in Birmingham, Nehru Centre, Keats House, Poplar Union and many other art venues of London and other cities.

Facebook page that event is streaming live from: https://www.facebook.com/Saudha-Ghazal-Thumri-Kheyal-Festival-UK-241389246293753

The event page: SaudhaTalk & Tribute: Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan – The Tansen | Facebook