Books

A Confluence Between Imagination and Reality

Award-winning writer Vinod Kumar Shukla talks about why his writings deal with class and wealth issues.

His Greatest Inspiration: Shukla with his mother and wife. He says his mother would read extensively
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Hindi writer Vinod Kumar Shukla was conferred with the PEN/Nabokov Award for Achievement in International Literature-2023 on March 2. The annual award founded in collaboration with Vladimir Nobakov Literary Foundation is given to a living author whose work, written or translated into English, is of 바카라œenduring originality and consummate craftsmanship바카라. Well-known in the realm of Hindi literature, Shukla바카라™s writings deal with class and wealth issues. They are about the poor who struggle to survive in a capitalist world. 바카라œWhatever I have written is reality. I cannot separate my imagination from reality,바카라 says Shukla.

바카라œI was unaware of such a prize for writers. I am still trying to process the fact that I have received it,바카라 says 87-year-old Hindi writer and poet Vinod Kumar Shukla, recipient of the PEN/Nabokov Award for Achievement in International Literature-2023. Described as the 바카라œOscars for Books바카라, it is among the most coveted literary award and carries a purse of $50,000.

Back home, Shukla has won nearly every significant laurel that can come a writer바카라™s way. Sahitya Akademi Award, the Atta Galatta-Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize, and the Mathrubhumi Book of the Year award for Blue Is Like Blue (2019), a collection of stories translated into English by Arvind Krishna Mehrotra and Sara Rai.

Born in Rajnandgaon in 1937, and now a resident of Raipur 바카라”both in Chhattisgarh바카라” Shukla studied and taught Agriculture Sciences at a college in Jabalpur. The explosion of literary creativity seen in his novels, poems, essays and short stories can thus be best termed as preordained.

바카라œThere was an environment of reading and writing in my home. My mother grew up in Jamalpur and later lived in Dhaka in Bengal, where my grandfather had a flourishing business. My mother would read extensively and she brought that culture to her new home after her marriage,바카라 says the writer. 바카라œShe would read the works of Rabindranath Tagore, Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, and other Bengali greats.바카라

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Some of Shukla바카라™s book jackets

There were budding writers among his cousins and siblings too. 바카라œIn my father바카라™s home, my uncles subscribed to monthly magazines like Madhuri and Saraswati. Padmalal Punnalal Baxi, a popular writer of those times, lived in Rajnandgaon, a small village then. He used to teach one of my uncles,바카라 the writer reminisces about his early childhood.

바카라œMy cousin, Bhagwati Prasad, was also a writer. He had written a book of poems. He pawned his wife바카라™s jewellery to get it published. A bundle of that book was lying in our house for many days. My elder brother, Santosh Kumar, used to write too. But that didn바카라™t last long. I was the only one who continued to write. My mother had the biggest influence on me,바카라 Shukla narrates in a voice that has become frail with age.

Speaking about his work, the jury for the PEN/Nabokov award, comprising Amit Chaudhuri, Roya Hakakian and Maaza Mengiste, observed, 바카라œShukla바카라™s prose and poetry are marked by acute, often defamiliarising observation. The voice that emerges is that of a deeply intelligent onlooker; a daydreamer struck occasionally by wonder. Writing for decades without the recognition he deserves, Shukla has created literature that changes how we understand the modern.바카라

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The Joy and Silence: Shukla with his friends Photo: Shashwat Gopal

As a poet and writer, Shukla is best known for his ability to turn ordinary and mundane into extraordinary and amazing. There is a sense of wonder in his creativity. A delightful confluence of imagination and reality, where tangible and abstract pushes the reader to take imaginative leaps.

바카라œWhatever I have written is reality. I cannot separate my imagination from reality. While writing, I don바카라™t know when something real transpires in my fiction and when a dream takes over. I believe in the truth of the imagination,바카라 he says, and adds, 바카라œMy childhood became the foundation of my writings. Most of my writings are autobiographical. All characters in my work are people with whom I have come in contact over the course of my life. Wherever I needed to add something in characterising them, the parts which I had forgotten, I would use my imagination. Right from the beginning, I have always considered imagination to be my reality.바카라

The Poet in Shukla

In the world of literature, Vinod Kumar Shukla is better known as a poet. His first published work was in his college바카라™s magazine.

바카라œLater, it was poet Muktibodh who sent a collection of eight of my poems to Shrikant Verma. So actually, they are the first of my poems to get published. What publishes first becomes your first work of creativity,바카라 he says. 바카라œMy first poetry recitation was in the presence of Harishankar Parsai at a small event organised in a school in Jabalpur with other local poets.바카라

바카라œOften, a thought itself compels me to write. It gently taps on the mind and plays a game of hide and seek. It is a testimony for readers to connect with my work.바카라

Shukla describes poetry as a medium to express his thoughts: 바카라œThere is no particular reason for writing poetry or prose. Often, a thought itself compels me to write. It gently taps on the mind and plays a game of hide and seek. It is like a testimony for the readers who come in contact with my work.바카라

The poet continues, 바카라œI don바카라™t remember exactly when I started writing and what exactly I wrote first. When a writer begins with a line, it is not necessary that it will be a part of the end product,바카라 he says, explaining his unrestrained style of writing. His first book of poetry titled Lagbhag Jaihind was a collection of 21 poems. It appeared in 1971 in Pehchan, a series launched by Ashok Vajpeyi, a bureaucrat and a poet.

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The author on a swing in his home in Raipur, where he wrote most of his award-winning books Photo: Shashwat Gopal

Shukla바카라™s poetic expressions are distinctive in their uniqueness and range. He gives his words new shades and layers of meaning and the flow has an enchanting cadence.

바카라œI never give a title to my work. Mostly, it is the publishers who select one and I think they just pick up the first line of what I have written,바카라 he says about the long titles of his books like Veh Aadmi Chala Gaya Naya Garam Coat Pehn Kar Vichar Ki Tarah, Sab Kuch Hona Bacha Rahega, Akash Dharti Ko Khatkhatah hai, Khilega Toh Dekhenge, Deewar Main Ek Khidki Raheti Thi.

What makes Shukla바카라™s work so unique is that it cannot be captured or described through some precursors 바카라” whether in form or content. The extent of his originality is such that he sounds like nobody and nobody sounds like him. At first, his writings can appear weird and even bizarre, but it slowly grows on the reader delighting him/her for its simplicity and sweetness when read carefully. He is often compared with the Marxist poet Gajanan Madhav Muktibodh whom he met in the late 1950s.

바카라œMuktibodh, Ashok Vajpeyi and Harishankar Parsai encouraged me to write,바카라 he says. 바카라œMuktibodh was considered a Marxist, Parsai ji was also a leftist. In Raipur, progressive writers had a growing influence in those years, so people find all these influences in my writings. But I feel that it바카라™s the critics who create these classifications. I don바카라™t mind as critics encourage people to read and compel the writers to return to their writings and study them again. I think the biggest presence in writing is that of a critic.바카라

Soviet Influence

The only influence, if any, in his works has been that of international writers, particularly the Soviets.

바카라œI would read Soviet publications as they were available at very cheap rates and had very rich well written content,바카라 he says. 바카라œMy granddaughter is reading a collection of Anton Chekov바카라™s plays. I have asked her to lend them to me as I wish to read them again,바카라 he adds.

He is at his poignant best when he writes about tribal life and issues that trouble them, importantly, their displacement from their natural habitat.

Shukla has also travelled abroad riding on the crest of his writings. These experiences, he says, were like a fairy-tale.

바카라œBBC invited me to England for an interview. I visited Germany to attend a book fair as the theme was India.바카라

He went to Poland with Ashok Vajpayei, Manohar Shyam Joshi and Shrilal Shukla.

바카라œI knew nothing about that country and was so ill-equipped for the winter. I had no option but to remain indoors,바카라 says Shukla, who travelled to Poland wearing canvas shoes. 바카라œManohar Shyam Joshi was very tall and he had a long coat. He lent me his short coat which became my long coat,바카라 he recalls.

Though better known for his poems, Shukla stunned the world of Hindi literature with his first novel Naukar Ki Kameez, which appeared in 1979. A Kafkaesque story written in a very humane way, it was considered in the league of Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. The deceptive ordinariness of his language and storytelling broke the stereotypical moulds of fictional form prevalent then. Director Mani Kaul adapted the novel for an eponymous film in 1999.

Shukla바카라™s oeuvre mostly veers around life in small towns on the thresholds of turning into cities, but which have remained a kasba. He is at his poignant best when he writes about tribal life and issues that beleaguered them, most importantly, their displacement from their natural habitat.

바카라œAn Adivasi lives in a one-home village. The forests, the animals, birds, flora and fauna of a jungle make his neighbourhood and he depends on the moon, sun and stars for light. There is a single hut surrounded by trees and then 15 km away there is another hut,바카라 he says about the bond that a tribal has with nature.

His famous poem, Raipur-Bilaspur Sambhag, bemoans the plight of tribals who are crowding the station waiting to catch a train, which will take them to some place in their search for employment. It broods over what this displacement will do to them and once had Shukla choke over the lines while he was reciting the poem.

바카라œI have realised that by getting close to humanness and humanity, I have, by default, gone against exploitation. It happened very unknowingly. I would see tribal women collect mahua, chironji and other products from the jungles and bring it to the village market to trade them for salt. The sheer exploitation of exchanging salt with chironji shook me.바카라

The extraordinary poet of the ordinary is equanimous as he speaks of the award. 바카라œThe award is for a lifetime of work, but I still write every day. It is like a diary. I sometimes get a significant line which I pick up and connect with. This award has made me a bit hesitant while writing, as I think my reader might grimace while reading my work, 바카라˜Oh! He is the one who got the PEN/Nobovak award for writing this!,바카라™바카라 he voices an imaginary thought and then quietly chuckles.

Barkha Mathur is a senior journalist

This appeared in print as "I cannot separate my imagination from reality"

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