New Indian English Poetry - An Alternative Voice - Book Review
New Indian English Poetry - An Alternative Voice - Book Review
Book Review:
New
Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice: R.K.Singh edited by I.K.
Sharma. Published by Book Enclave, Jaipur. 2004. pp. 370, Price
Rs.850/-, ISBN 81-8152-085-8.
New
Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice is a significant
publication in light of the fact that the larger Indian English literary
space has been occupied by a few flourishing academic and bureaucratic
authors, including the Diaspora or expatriate authors, and most of the
India-based authors and poets, despite their quality, have remained
virtually beyond the pale. Both the important print and visual media and
influential academic and critics have been less than lukewarm about
exploring or examining 'new' poets who feel marginalized because no
renowned person talks about them at national or international forums.
Aware
of the reality that the "subaltern voices that have burst upon the
scene of poetry cannot be shooed away" (preface), poet-professor-critic
I. K. Sharma chooses to present a comprehensive book on one of the noted
new poets, R. K. Singh, who has already published ten collections of
poems and has been active as critic, reviewer and ELT practitioner for
more than 25 years.
In
fact, I. K. Sharma seeks to challenge all those critics who see nothing
but 'chaos' in the world of poetry by collecting 22 critical articles,
14 review essays/comments and six interviews published in India and
abroad. Over 25 scholars, venerable, middle aged, and young, examine
from diverse angles the mystique of Singh's poetry and prove "creative
efflorescence" that scores of new, marginalized, poets epitomize.
In
his learned Introductory, I. K. Sharma takes a broader long-term view
of Indian English poetry as a genre, criticizing discourses of
discrimination and exclusion, and advocating alternative and creative
discourse of the new generation of poets. It's appreciation requires
"tough minds, cooperative, collaborative and critical" and not the 'snob
net' that has vested interest in indifference, hostility and obscurity
(pp.203), he cautions.
Sharma
examines R. K. Singh as a test case and discovers that the poet brings
in "novelty and freshness in his way of communicating his ideas and
feelings...with skill and insight" (p.8). As the critic points out:
certain key aspects of R. K. Singh's poetry - manipulation of language
to a special effect, lack of punctuation marks, practice of giving no
titles, use of erotic metaphors, and depiction of the painful realities
of the Indian society -- have already drawn readers' attention, but he
is "essentially a poet of dark imagination" (p.10) and "self-conscious
artist" who knows "the value of concealment in art" (p11).
No
doubt, as a poet, R. K. Singh is remarkable for his vitality, variety
and quality. He is not esoteric, negative or westernized, yet he appeals
nationally and internationally, with his vision and impulses, depth of
feelings, sense of self, and richness of language. He explores and
reinvigorates traditional forms and styles with eclectic understanding
of creativity.
Those
already familiar with his work, as the essays in this volume, too,
testify, acknowledge R. K. Singh's competence as a poet and accord him a
high position, even if he is not a 'metro' poet and/or he has not yet
been viewed as a poet in the center. I. K. Sharma recognizes him as a
poet with great potential and future promise and puts together some
selected articles, review essays, comments, and interviews published in
various journals since the late 1980s not only to motivate scholars and
researchers' further studies on R. K. Singh as an Indian English poet,
but also "to beat the ghost of 'chaos' that has become an all-time alibi
for inaction."
All
the contributors -- practicing poets academics and professionals - look
at R. K. Singh the poet with a sense of discovery, openness to artistic
innovation, and appreciation for recent Indian English poetry. They
reflect on his work with empathy, recognition and equality. With faith
in the poet's discourse, they negotiate differences and communicate
poetry's human dimension; their criticism strengthens Indian English
creativity.
R.
S. Tiwary's three essays analyse R. K. Singh's poetry - imagery,
diction, style, and erotic contents - a la Sanskrit poetics and view the
poet's relevance in a wider perspective of literary communication.
Mitali De Sarkar's two essays complement Tiwary's approach, though she
concentrates on the poet's social consciousness. The two essays by G. D.
Barche look more closely, presenting a stylistic assessment and
comments on Singh's use of sex imagery. While the articles by Satish
Kumar, R. A. Singh and Ravi Nandan Sinha seek to provide a general view
on the contents of the poet's collections published till then, Krishna
Srinivas's 'Foreword' to My Silence, R. K. Singh's maiden collection,
has a historical value.
Different
from them, Michael Paul Hogan's article seeks or relate to the poet's
actual life and living in Dhanbad while Chhote Lal Khatri's article is
an attempt to project R. K. Singh as the best known Indian English poet
from Bihar/Jharkhand. P. C. K. Perm's article seeks to highlight the
recurring themes of Nature, Beauty and Woman in R. K. Singh's creative
discourse vis-à-vis the poet's concern about man's existence and
identity in a multilingual, multicultural and multireligious society
today.
I.
K. Sharma's essay deals with the poet's Music Must Sound as a
"carefully crafted" epic. Tejinder Kaur's essay highlights the "seven
major strands sounding like the seven notes of music" in the collection.
While
the insightful essays by D. S. Maini, Stephen Gill, and I.H. Rizvi deal
with various aspects of My Silence and Other Selected Poems, the essays
by Patricia Prime, D. C. Chambial, and Asha Viswas review Above the
Earth's Green. The essays by S. L. Peeran and Abdul Rashid Bijapure take
into account all the volumes published so far and concentrate on the
poet's evolution in terms of his thematic preferences and pursuit of
higher reality.
R.
K. Singh is best in his lyric poems and haiku and tanka are the
shortest of lyric poems. The articles and comments on his haiku and
tanka by Patrticia Prime, Urmila Kaul, D. C. Chambial, I. H. Rizvi, Ann
Davis, Ruth Wildes Schuler, Ben Torbieu-Newland and Lyle Glazier point
to the changes in R. K. Singh's literary growth. His haiku and tanka
poems are important in that here he enlarges himself to the universal
sameness of human feelings and experiences in an international form. The
reviews of R. K. Singh's haiku and tanka poems point to the critic's
strengths and weaknesses in intercultural and intercultural mediation.
Patricia
Prime also effectively responds to Joseph John's much labored comments
on R. K. Singh's poetry in World Literature Today besides presenting,
along side Tejinder Kaur, a comparative picture of R. K. Singh and U. S.
Bahri's poetry.
The
second section of the volume comprises six interviews R. K. Singh gave
to Patricia Prime, Jaswinder Singh, Kanwar Dinesh Singh, Sonja Van
Kerkhoff, Atma Ram, and a group of students. This reveals the poet's own
background, biographical details, his opinion, mind, and attitude. It
is rounded up with Uncle River's reflection, pointing to the "tension
inherent in the synthesis of cultural traditions" in R. K. Singh's
poetry.
Thus,
the variety of critical articles, reviews essays and comments, though
not as perfect as one would like them to be, proves that R. K. Singh is a
poet to reckon with, deserving wider critical and academic attention at
home and abroad. It is I. K. Sharma's large-heartedness that he chose
to make a book on a fellow-poet. The book should encourage new
researches and deeper studies on recent Indian English poetry in general
and R. K. Singh's poetry in particular. M/s Book Enclave deserves kudos
for publishing New Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice : R. K.
Singh which strengthens the cause of Indian poetry in English in the
21st century.
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