Monday, January 20, 2020
Social Concerns in the poems of Kamala Das Essay -- essays research pa
                " He ( the  poet)  is  responsible  for  humanity,  even  for  the  animals,  he   must  see  to  it  that  his  invention  can  be  smelt,  felt,  heard."                                                                                                                                                ( Arthur  Rimbaud)                            From  the  queen  of  erotica  to  a  poetic  pilgrim,  the  critical  nexus  on  Kamala  Das?s  poetry  has  oscillated  between  opposite  poles.  These  varied  critical  stances  reflect  that  the  genius  of  the  poet  refuses  to  be  strait-jacketed  into  a  uniform  notion.  In  this  paper,  I  will  attempt  to  reveal  the  social  issues  that  imbue  the  oeuvre  of  her  poetry.               Kamala  Das  in  her  much  discussed  autobiography,  My  Story ,  pointed  out:  ?  A  poet?s  raw  material  is  not  stone  or  clay,  it  is  her  personality.?1  In  direct  contradiction  to  Eliot?s  theory  of  poetic  creation,  Mrs.  Das  asserts  that  her  poetry  is  subjective  and  through  it  she  voices  forth  her  strains  and  stresses.  This,  however,  does  not  imply  a  selfish  preoccupation  with  the  self  but  a  melioristic  vision  that  is  shocked  and  disgusted  at  the  plight  of  fellow  mortals.  Her  sensitive  soul  is  deeply  affected  by  the  maladies  that  lie  deeply  ingrained  in  the  social  matrix.               In  the  poem  Afterwards  --  no  intertextuality  with  Hardy?s   poem --  written  when  the  poet  was  in  her  teens,  she  questions  the  notions  of  scientific  progress  that  has  ushered  the  nuclear  holocaust:                            ?  Son  of  my  womb,                              Ugly  ...              ...                                                                                         Works  cited      1.  Kamala Das--  My  Story, DC  Books, Kottayam, Aug. 2004.  2.  Kamala Das--  Summer in Calcutta, DC Books, Kottayam, Nov.2004.  3.  Kamala Das--  The Descendants, Writers? Workshop, Calcutta, 1991.  4.  Kamala Das--  The Descendants, Writers? Workshop, Calcutta, 1991.  5.  Kamala Das--  Collected Poems, Vol. I, Navkerala Printers, Trivandrum, 1984.  6.  Al Harmony Vol.6,  July-Sept,2005.  7.  Anthony Perera--  ?Love India, love Sri Lanka?,  Sunday Observer, April 29, 1984.  8.  Kamala Das--  The Old Playhouse and Other Poems, Orient Longman, 1973.  9.  Kamala Das--  Only the Soul Knows How to Sing, DC Books, Kottayam, 1999.  10.Kamala Das--  Only the Soul Knows How to Sing, DC Books, Kottayam, 1999.  11. Presented to the  author by  the poet as a manuscript.                        
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