SSDDSD
SSDDSD
SSDDSD
JAYAKUMAR.M
(Reg. No: 10520U04068)
Under the Supervision of
MRS.K.GURULAKSHMI
sexual in her literary oeuvre, Everyone wants to express one’s self identity, emotions, feelings,
thoughts, perceptions, artistic sense, profound and trivial ideas through some means including
various art forms such as novel, short story, painting, plays, poetry, autobiography, short stories,
sculpture etc as the modern life of human beings, is becoming more and more complex in every
sense the word, the 20th century, ever in the history of the human civilization, especially after
the two great world wars and after various revolutions which are both industrial and political
in nature, is becoming quirky, zappy and funnier in one sense and more philosophical and
psychological in other ways. Through the various vicissitudes of life, every stage of man is full
The existentialist problem is gripping every man and woman and the advancement of
science is making it more intricate. The psychological and social aspects of human life is facing
ever more challenges and bottlenecks. In this context, a woman’s position is not an unenviable
one given the oppressive forces working against them. Their marginalized position at home and
social ladder make them more vulnerable to all sorts assaults in every direction. And the
suppressed and shackled mind wants to release from the prison of oppression. Across the world,
many women began to break the shackles and began to express their suppressed feelings and
emotions and wanted to express their identity. In India too, there were many women who
attempted to boldly express their identity and one among them is Kamala Das. What did Kamala
Das make to come out brazenly and break the social taboo? What were the obstacles and
difficulties she faced? How was the writer ostracized in the Nair society which is matriarchal
basically? And how was she received in the feudal-like society with her new writings which
some termed sexual, obscene, and sometimes pornographically explicitly and graphically
portrayed in her works of poetry, autobiographical novels and short works of art? Some of these
issues have already been dealt with but a relook has become essential and a revaluation has
become critical as new books have been published about her after her death. And as any
canonized literary work needs to be re-evaluated in a new context to ferret out the inner and
hidden meanings as the author intended. Now and then articles and news items appear in news
papers about the creativity of the author. As a scholar, I became interested in Kamala Das and
Now, even after 10 years, exactly after a decade, her life story is currently being paid
homage to in two rival biopics that will showcase different aspects of her life – one by Tamil
filmmaker Leena Manimekalai and the other by Malayalam director Kamal which will star
Manju Warrier as Kamala Das. This is really a great way of paying to the homage to one of the
greatest Indian woman author. After reading “The Love Queen of Malabar – Memoir of a
Friendship with Kamala Das” written by Merrily Weisbord, a Canadian writer who befriended
Kamala Das and had a friendship for more than a decade, it could be understood that the ideas
and perceptions Kamala Das had on her life and her literary works have changed to a level
which could be said that mellowness has set in her later life. She is talking to Ms. Weisborad in
freewheeling mode for nearly 10 years after they started a friendship. Published in 2011 in
India, the book reveals the changes from inside out and how she perceives after the publication
of “My Story- An Autobiography” which shook the Indian literary world with groundbreaking
openness. Her frank and no-hold-bar confession in the autobiography stunned the readers for
its openness. Merrily Weisbord shrewdly enters into the heart and mind of Kamala Das, broker
a deal for a long term friendship and share their experiences in which Kamala Das relooks at
her life, love and her literary oeuvre. This seminal work has thrown in more lights on Kamala
Das who impulsively and innocently wrote many things in her autobiography and poetry and
other works. After reading the book , my interest in her increased and the dormant feeling i had
for many years came out and i decided to explore her works of art again in tandem with new
In this context, it must be admitted that she was one of the writers whose artistic output such
as poetry and novels helped to put Indian writing in English in the world arena.
The seed of Indian Writing in English was sown during the period of the British rule in India.
Now the seed has blossomed into an ever green tree, fragrant flowers and ripe fruits. The fruits
are being tasted not only by the native people, but they are also being 'chewed and digested' by
the foreigners. It happened only after the constant caring, pruning and feeding. Gardeners' like
Tagore, Sri Aurobindo, R.K.Narayan, Raja Rao - to name only a few, looked after the tender
plant night and day. In modern time, it is guarded by a number of writers who are getting awards
Indian Writing in English, from being a singular and exceptional, rather gradual native
flare - up of geniuses, it has turned out to be a new form of Indian culture and voice in which
India converses regularly. Indian Writers - poets, novelists, essayists, and dramatists have been
making momentous and considerable contributions to world literature since pre - Independence
era, the past few years have witnessed a gigantic prospering and thriving of Indian English
in the realm of world Literature. Wide ranges of themes are dealt with in Indian Writing in
English. While this literature continues to reflect Indian culture, tradition, social values and
even Indian history through the depiction of life in India and Indians living elsewhere, recent
Indian English fiction has been trying to give expression to the Indian experience of the modern
predicaments. There are critics and commentators in England and America who appreciate
Indian English novels. Prof. M. K. Naik remarks "one of the most notable gifts of English
education to India is prose fiction for though India was probably a fountain head of story-
telling, the novel as we know today was an importation from the west".
In the long line literary luminaries in Indian Writing in English, Rabindranath Tagore is
a celebrated name in the sphere of English literature. He was born in 1861 and died in the year
1941 spanning long years of creativity. His creative genius is so much accounting and his
literary output is so much rich and varied that the phrase 'myriad - minded', which
Mathew Arnold had used for Shakespeare, can aptly be used for him also. He won Nobel Prize
for literature in 1913, for his immortal poetic work Gitanjali (1913). Besides being a great
universal poet, the genius Tagore is also a novelist, dramatist, Short - Story writer, musician,
philosopher, painter, educationalist, reformer and critic in every field and had earned a niche
for himself. The setting of his novel is representative and reflective, their characters are natural,
realistic, full - blooded and life - like. The socio - religious culture of Bengal is brilliantly
portrayed in his novels. Through his novels he brings out some of the problems of the woman
of his age. Different kinds of human relations are portrayed and analyzed through the different
social settings. Some of his novels deal with the modern problems of our society and the interest
in them centers round the psychological development of characters under the compelling stress
of circumstances. To his credit, there is a long list of poems and plays, both in Bengali and
English which had made his place among the world's greatest writers.
modernism and feminist statements. The last two decades have witnessed phenomenal success
in feminist writings of Indian English literature. Today is the generation of those women writers
who have money and are mostly western education. Their novels consist of the latest burning
issues related with women as well as those issues that exist in the society since long. The
publishers feel that the literature actually survives because of these types of bold topics and
commercials used by the women novelists. They describe the whole world of women with
simply stunning frankness. Their write - ups give a glimpse of the unexplored female psyche,
which has no accessibility. The majority of these novels depict the psychological suffering of
Critiquing about Kamala Das’ poetry is most moving and tortured. There is a sexual
‘brazenness to her persona’, which barely hides her inmost ferment. Credited as the most
outspoken - and even controversial writer, Kamala Das now earned fame as the ‘voice of
women’s sexuality’. Apart from writing in English, Das also wrote under the pen name
Madhavikutty in Malayalam before her conversion to Islam ten years ago . She had not only
established herself as an English writer. Her popularity in Kerala was credited mostly to her
short stories and the autobiographical My Story, which was translated into 15 languages, a book
where she openly discussed her unsatisfactory sexual life with her husband Madhava Das.
While her autobiography My Story gives several descriptions of her own marriage as
unsatisfying and unfulfilling, her poems presented an image of a marriage with lifeless, empty
and dull. Born into a literary family, Kamala Das’ mother, Balamani Amma and Uncle Nalapat
Narayana Menon, were both leading poets. Das began writing only after her early marriage –
only to cope up with – the emotional strain she was undergoing. She was born on March 31,
get it within your home, you stray a little". Though some might label Das as "a feminist" for
her candour in dealing with women's needs and desires, Das, according to many others has
never tried to identify herself with any particular version of feminist activism. Poet Eunice de
Souza claims that Das has "mapped out the terrain for post-colonial women in social and
linguistic terms". Kamala Suraiyya Das had ventured into areas unclaimed by society and
provided a point of reference for her colleagues. She had transcended the role of a poet and
simply embraced the role of a very honest woman. Kamala Das has published many novels and
short stories in English, as well as in Malayalam. Some of her work in English includes the
The Harlot and Other Stories (1992), in addition to five books of poetry: Summer in Calcutta
(1965), The Descendants(1967), The Old Playhouse and Other Poems (1973), The Anamalai
Poems (1985), and Only the Soul Knows How to Sing (1996) - a collection of poetry with
Pritish Nandy (1990) and her autobiography, My Story (1976). Some of her novels in
Dayarikkurippukal (1992). Kamala Das lived alone in her world with feelings of loneliness
and yet she maintained her tradition, the security of her home. She always felt that poetry meant
studying life and its objectivity in a very realistic way. Kamala Das died at the age of 75.
One of the important components of research action is preparing, collecting and storing the
review of related literature about the topic the scholar has chosen for pursing research in that
particular area in order to find out what other scholars have done on the particular topics and
how they had already dealt with it. This component of research would be a guiding force to the
scholar as their ideas would be a sort of guiding force as pointed earlier. Therefore, the scholar
is supposed to give much importance and prepare the ground before jumping into the other
components. In order to prepare and study and review the related literature, the scholar has go
far and wide and attempt to collect as much literatures as possible leaving no stone unturned
otherwise the attempts by the scholar would a repetition of the research work. Therefore, this
has taken particular interests and paid serious attention to the collection of primary and
secondary data about the related literature. One must the question what is the definition of a
review of related literature. It means a relentless search and evaluation of the available literature
in the given subject or chosen topic area. It documents the state of the art with respect to the
My Story: An Autobiography
This is what Sheryl Sebastian paints about Kamala Das autobiographical story in “My
Story: An Autobiography” which was published in 1973, her autobiography ‘Ente Kadha’ (My
Malayalanadu that had already become a sensation across the state. Fifteen years later, it was
translated into English with more text added, many parts rewritten and published with the title
‘My Story’. Among the major critics on Kamala Das, K.Sachithananthan, is a very important
one with his bold views on her literary works. In the beginning of her career itself, it was he
This is how she continues to explore about Kamala Das’ autobiography. The book is
about her personal and professional experiences as a woman in a patriarchal society and her
quest for love in its truest form. Her writing consisted of vivid descriptions of menstruation,
puberty, love, lust, lesbian encounters, child marriage, infidelity and physical intimacy. She
introduced her readers to the concept of female sexuality, a notion that was nonexistent until
then. She talked of her ‘brush with love’ with an eighteen year old girl, right before Das was
about to be married off. She talked of having to look for love ‘outside its legal orbit’ because
she was unhappy in her loveless marriage. She talked with an audacity never seen before as she
wrote unapologetically about everything the conservative Kerala society had managed to box
in for very long. It managed to evoke such a widespread reaction which was equal parts shock
and equal parts adoration that it has become a cult classic in the genre of Indian autobiographies
ever since. On being asked why her book shocked the Malayali audience, she felt that it never
actually did, that they were pretending to be shocked to prove their ‘innocence’. She believed
she was merely being vocal about things that had been happening for years.
In her critical review of Kamala Das, Ms. Sebastian opines that Das went on to produce
what is considered some of the best work in modern Indian literature. Some of her notable
works in English are the novel Alphabet of Lust (1977), the collection of short stories
Padmavati the Harlot and other stories (1992) and a compilation of her poetry Summer in
Childhood), Chandanamarangal (Sandalwood Trees) and many more. Her literary work earned
her a lot of recognition and won her numerous accolades. She won the P.E.N.’s Asian Poetry
Prize in 1963, the Kerala Sahitya Academy Award in 1969 for the short story Thanuppu (Cold)
and the National Sahitya Academy Award in 1985. She was also shortlisted for the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 1984. So wide was her reach that much of her work has been translated into
Devindra kholi , one of the early critics who assessed the literary of oeuvre of Kamala
Das at the beginning of her writing career, has come out with excellent and incisive critical
analysis all these years. His critical assessment about Kamala Das’ works is being considered
the touchstone for measuring the literary values. In 2011, in a freewheeling recollections, in the
Hindu, Kohli summed up succinctly about Kamala Das and her works
as :
In 1968, 10 years before I first met her, in response to my rather harsh criticism of some
of the poems in The Descendants in comparison with what I considered the more
unattainable love and happiness? The question, “Does the imagination dwell the most/
Upon a woman won or woman lost?” haunted W. B. Yeats throughout his poetic career;
and Maud Gonne, his unrequited Muse, applauded him for making “beautiful poetry
out of what you call your unhappiness and you are happy in that”.
in 2010 in Canada and in 2011 in India after the author’s death. The book came to be necessitated
after Merrily Weisbord brokered a friendship deal with Das to share their experiences each other
and have good literary career. Therefore, Merrily Weisbord came to Kerala and live with the
author and Das went to Canada to live with Merrily Weisbord. It was a wonderful friendship
while both of them were widows, writers and had lots of time to share their experiences as
feminists too. The Love Queen of Malabar: Memoir of a Friendship with Kamala Das
presumably the last of the critical analysis in full book length. Earlier there have been critical
essays being done on Kamala Das. There have been re-interpretations, relooks, reinventions and
a kind of rewriting on her literary oeuvre. This particular book The Love Queen of Malabar:
Memoir of a Friendship with Kamala Das raised literary storm by bringing in new ideas and
perceptions which Das shared with Merrily Weisbord especially at the fag end of her life. Das’
conversion to Islam and her subsequent marriage were surprises to Merrily Weisbord as she was
in dark even though both of them had close relationships for more than 10 years viz., 1995 -
2005. Weisbord’s account and assessment of Kamala Das’ life and literary works throw new
lights which are attention seeking and demand a new look at her ideas and perceptions. At one
point, Das informs Weisbord that she was happy with her married life, for she enjoyed the safety
and security and love and care given by her husband even though she accused of marital rape
during her first night after marriage at a tender age 16. When asked if she changed her view, she
informs her that she had per se safety and security and love from her husband (The Love Queen
T.S. Eliot wrote that he wrote poetry which is complex and abstract because modern life is
complex and abstract. Kamala Das, even though her style is minimalist, took upon herself and
began to redefine about the human relationship between husband and wife, between friends,
between man vs. Woman in general. The significance of this research work is that Kamala Das
chose many media to express herself through poetry, prose, stories and even autobiography
which she was compelled to write on her deathbed. With various aliases, Kamala Das has
chosen to primarily write poetry to express her feelings, emotions, ideas, thoughts and passions.
She took this mode to express herself identity and thereby free herself from the shackles of
social oppressions and suppressions. In each and every poem or work of art, Kamala Das
attempts to articulate the inner meaning of relationship on various plane i.e., between man and
woman husband and wife, father and mother, father and sons, mother and sons and vice versa.
Between friends and between man and animals and plants, man vs nature - all kinds of
relationship is investigated at various layers. Both on the surface and subtext level, the authors
attempt to uncover the inner feelings and hidden human thoughts. The psyche of woman with
various personas is being expressed in her poetry and other works of art. The significance of
this study is that the interpretations being already advanced need to be relooked and
reinterpretated taking into account the new studies coming out recently. As the studies have
close relationship with the writer, there is much significance in this study to the effect that new
ideas about Kamala Das and Her literary works would come out.
It is true that the works of Kamala Das been researched in a substantial level. To prove the fact
that she is a still great writer to reckon with, her has been in news and in the academic circle all
these years even after her death. However, there has been a new set of articles, research studies
and full length books and biopic Kamala Das which have helped to stoke the embers of literary
values of Kamala Das. Every literature which has undergone various investigations and
measured on various benchmarks, the works of Kamala Das need to be re-evaluated critically
Everything has a second opinion. Therefore, the scholar felt that the literary oeuvre of Kamala
Das , especially after her death, need to have a relook and her literary works must be made to
be put on the literary anatomical table and dissected to have new ideas and interpretations
about her poetry and autobiography. Of course, Das has been condemned, praised, ridiculed,
reviled, denounced and criticized unfairly and unfairly. Without her, there is no Indian Writing
in English which has come a long way after the British left India leaving a great legacy which
University Press in 1993, she was touted as an indispensable poet in the arena of Indian literary
scene.
One of the main objectives of this dissertation is to look into the odyssey of Kamala Das to
find out herself and self identity. She pours out from her heart her passions, emotions, feelings,
intense thoughts and ideas the raison d’ etre of human life. There is a sort of existential problem
in her inner self and she seeks answers for all. Through her literary works, she seeks to show
who she is, what the constitution of her mind and body and her purpose of life in this planet.
That is why she goes on in many plume de noms including Madhavikutty, Kamala Das, and
Kamala Surayya. And one must remember that she was earlier eulogizing Lord Krishna in her
poems and later she converted to Islam dumping Hinduism. How such a metamorphosis was
possible is big question for any serious reader of Kamala Das. What went on her mind and what
inner thoughts drove her to drastically change her ? As is bound by a sort of witchcraft , how
Research Methodology
The original text books of Kamala Das were are to be taken up for a close reading to reassess
critically textually and contextually. How she has transformed herself would be assessed to
have relook and rereading of her literary works. All the major secondary sources would be
encyclopedia, yearbook, online sources, audio and video sources available in the web and
1. That Kamala Das needs to be relooked in the context of new articles and books
2. Kamala Das is an author who has been negatively riled for wrong reasons and that
3. That Kamala Das was a victim and the victimhood made her to go through various
4. All through the poems of Kamala Das, she endeavored to express herself identity
and seek a sort of fulfillment through her works of art especially her poetry.
5. There is an urgent need to put her in proper perspective by investigating her works
In this age of digital era, women’s rights group are voicing their concern over the safety
of women and girl children. That many accuse and confess that harassment of women and
children start at home is true in many cases. Women , in spite of their progress economically
and socially, still feel they are being oppressed and suppressed and are not given equal
opportunity like the male children. There are lots of partialities even at home. Even in highly
educated families, women complain of harassment. Now many women are attempting to come
out of their chained self and seek freedom of thought and equal opportunity. The study of
Kamala Das who was a pioneer as feminist and fighter for women rights through words and
deeds would help the womenfolk to have relook at their own lives and the awareness would
increasing incessantly. Therefore, the research scholar is confident that the outcome of the study
of Kamala Das about how she struggled against male dominated society and how she could
In Chapter One the scholar has earmarked for a comprehensive survey of Indian
Writing in English and the role of Kamala Das and her contribution to it. The chapter also
discusses how every human being wants to express emotions, feelings, thoughts, perceptions,
artistic sense, profound and trivial ideas in some ways. There are a slew of ways to express their
identity such as art, photography, dramatic arts, poetry, prose, stories etc., as the modern life
of human beings, is becoming more and more complex in every sense the word, the 20th
century, ever in the history of the human civilization, especially after the two great world wars
and after various revolutions which are both industrial and political in nature, is becoming
quirky, zappy and funnier in one sense and more philosophical and psychological in other ways.
Through the various vicissitudes of life, every stage of man is full of a strange feeling having a
touch of esoteric, exotic, a sense of déjà vu. In the Chapter Two, the review of related literature
is discussed in detail. Furthermore, the significance of the study, the need for the study, the
hypotheses of the dissertation, the social significance, the objectives of the study are being
given. In the Chapter Three, the works of Kamala Das have been taken up for detailed
discussion and the scholar has attempted to have second look at the critical knowledge about
the literary oeuvre of Kamala Das. In the Chapter Four the scholar has evaluated in the context
of new ideas generated after and before the death of Kamala Das. After the publication of My
Story- An Autobiography, lots of new ideas and perspectives regarding her life and literary
oeuvre have come out. The literary works have been taken up and investigated textually. How
she herself has self-contradicted in her persona and literary works and her perspectives on
various issues including religion and culture have been put forth to the readers. All her major
literary work has been taken up for investigation individually and discussed critically.
Kamala Das, to her credits, had touched almost all genre viz., poetry, prose, short stories,
novels, autobiography and was bilingual - Malayalam and English. The following literary
works to be taken up for discussion and for reinvestigation are given here in under. The genre
has been taken for revaluation in the order of autobiography, poetry, novel, short stories and
travel writings.
Before Kamala Das, some other Indian women writers have been lauded for their
psychological approach to their characters in their novels and works of art. Among them, Toru
Dutt stands first with her two literary outputs. Even though young, she was able to create two
important novels which were published posthumously. One was written in English language
and another one was written in French language. In both the novels, Dutt had attempted to
explore the inner recesses of feminine characteristics. Her psychological description even in
those olden days was critically acclaimed but unfortunately, she died very young. Even her own
father came to know of her literary value only after her death. Therefore, in the history of
modern India, Toru Dutt could be counted as the first woman writer to explore female
characters’ psychological working of the minds. Meena T. Pillai, renowned writer and critic,
of literature where the umbilical cord between the story and the reality, the writer and the text,
the signifier and the signified is yet intact. Kamala Das is one of the few writers in India who
could snip this cord with élan, explicating in the process that all writings are constructed and
all realities staged in language. Further, she notes that James Olney speaks of how it is
impossible for an autobiographer to write the image double of her life instead having to create
herself afresh at every moment within the text. This might be the reason why Das chose not to
go for a literal translation of Ente Katha into English but a creative retelling aiming towards
asserts that the entire account written in the format of a novel is captivating with all the intimate
details of her childhood followed by her youth and middle age. Born with skin not so fair–a
dusky complexion to be precise, Kamala portrays herself as an inquisitive child who faced the
triggers of race especially when India was gripped by the British imperialists.
Brought up in convent schools Kamala faced discrimination at an early age when the word
“racism” probably did not enter her vocabulary. Struggling through her life amidst the
parochial, patriarchal society, Kamala had to submit when she had to marry an almost brutal
man against her wish, that too, at the tender age of sixteen. Almost molested and raped by this
insensitive man in the name of a husband, Kamala makes an attempt to find happiness in the
world of her own–the world inhabited by the muses of literature enabling her in poetic and
prosaic compositions. It will be wrong to say that she found bliss only in the world of creation.
This is because, frustrated and exasperated by husband’s treatment and doomed in an unhappy
marital bond, Kamala determines herself not to be tied up by the established norms of a
‘pativrata naari’ (a women devoted solely to one’s husband) and makes every attempt to
respond to the charms bestowed upon her by other men. In this manner, she is shown to have a
string of short and long term relationships, perhaps in on her way of being the rebel in a society
of the late 20th century when traditionalism was the established norm and rebellion, that too
among women, was considered a taboo. The scenario has remained almost the same in the
present day to a large extent. Such acts reflect the spirit of boldness and a complete disrespect
The novel comprising of 50 chapters, consist of self composed poems expressing the
core of meaningfulness or meaninglessness pervading her life at large. The poems occurs in the
last 13 chapters (from chapter 27 onwards) when her life becomes preoccupied with greater
responsibilities and when she starts fearing the presence of the Spiritual power controlling all
our lives, the power whom we are unable to fight with our meager human prowess. Other than
the relationship with her husband at home with whom she starts inhabiting from an early age,
her relationship with her great grandmother is given prominence. For her, the figure of the great
grandmother is portrayed as a silent listener who listened to her disturbed soul without any
interruptions as she was unable to move under the burden of perpetual paralysis that confined
her to the bed. But such a lack of response didn’t prevent her to develop an intimate relationship.
This was precisely the reason that helped in nurturing the relationship in a way she wanted. The
old lady due to her paralyzed state was the only one whom she could trust and open her heart
In this context, the research would like to throw some lights on the definition of
confessional poetry as it directly deals with psychological aspect of a character or content. This
is a style of poetry that emerged in the United States during the 1950s. It has been described as
poetry of the personal or "I", focusing on extreme moments of individual experience, the
psyche, and personal trauma, including previously and occasionally still taboo matters such as
mental illness, sexuality, and suicide, often set in relation to broader social themes. It is
sometimes also classified as Postmodernism. It also may be noted here that ‘the school of
"Confessional poetry" was associated with several poets who redefined American poetry in the
1950s and 1960s, including Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, John Berryman, Anne Sexton,
American "confessional" school of poetry include Plath's Ariel, Berryman's The Dream Songs,
and Sexton's To Bedlam and Part Way Back, though Berryman himself rejected the label "with
rage and contempt". In this genre, another significant, if transitional figure was Adrienne Rich;
while one of the most prominent, consciously "confessional" poets to emerge in the 1980s was
Sharon Olds whose focus on taboo sexual subject matter built off of the work of Ginsberg.
However, among the confessional writers, Sylvia Plath was one of the prominent women
Sylvia Plath is commonly seen as a confessional poet, although some critics dispute her
placement within this movement, arguing that her work is more universal than commonly
assumed. Nevertheless, Ariel, published posthumously in 1965, deals with the very personal
issues of suicide, sex, her children, and, most dramatically, her complicated relationship with
her deceased father. Poems like "Daddy," "Ariel," and "Lady Lazarus" are stunning in their
According to Grade saver, Anne Sexton wrote poetry that dealt with her personal life,
including her experiences with psychotherapy, sex, depression, and rage. One of her most
significant works, To Bedlam and Part Way Back (1960), dealt with such excruciating topics
as molestation by a father. The confessional poets have garnered a lot of critical interest, but
there is a tendency to conflate their art and lives too fully - the usage of a personal pronoun in
their work is not an unequivocal invitation to assume that the subject of the poem is always the
poet.
Earlier from the Hindu outfits, she faced death threats. And more intrigue in the life of
Kamala Das is that she, at the verge of her death, she almost disowned Islam. And she confessed
to Merrily Weisbord that it is not she wants to disown Islam but the religion as a system. But
happily, she met death and willed that she should be buried in a graveyard near a mosque. That
was how Kamala Das change from persona to persona and went through a troubled life. If one
reads Merrily Weisbord’s “The Queen of Malabar- A Memoir of Friendship”, her life and story
entirely different from what one reads her “My Story”. In the former, she repudiates many things
which she has confessed in My Story which includes her rubbishing her husband and his
loveless attitude towards her. Later she confided to Merrily that she was grateful to Mr. Das for
One of the mysterious and inexplicable things in her life her conversion to Islam. Born
in a conservative Hindu Nair (Nallappattu) family having royal ancestry, After being asked by
her lover Sadiq Ali, an Islamic scholar and a Muslim League MP, she embraced Islam in 1999
at the age of 65 and assumed the name Kamala Surayya. After converting, she wrote:
Life has changed for me since Nov. 14 when a young man named Sadiq Ali walked in to
meet me. He is 38 and has a beautiful smile. Afterwards he began to woo me on the
phone from Abu Dhabi and Dubai, reciting Urdu couplets and telling me of what he
would do to me after our marriage. I took my nurse Mini and went to his place in my
car. I stayed with him for three days. There was a sunlit river, some trees, and a lot of
laughter. He asked me to become a Muslim which I did on my return home.( TOI, 2001)
Das’ conversion was rather controversial, among social and literary circles, with The
Hindu calling it part of her "histrionics". She said she liked being behind the protective veil of
the purdah. Later, she felt it was not worth it to change one's religion and said "I fell in love
with a Muslim after my husband's death. He was kind and generous in the beginning. But I now
Muslim radicals would murder her and the entire family. Though never politically active before,
she launched a national political party, Lok Seva Party, aiming asylum to orphaned mothers and
elections. She had a sexual relationship with Sadiq Ali, an Islamic scholar who was much
younger in age. She herself describes her visit to Sadiq Ali's home as follows:
“I was almost asleep when Sadiq Ali climbed in beside me, holding me, breathing softly,
whispering endearments, kissing my face, breasts ... and when he entered me, it was the
first time I had ever experienced what it was like to feel a man from the inside."
She once claimed that "poetry does not sell in this country," but her forthright columns,
which sounded off on everything from women's issues and child care to politics, were popular.
Das' first book of poetry, Summer In Calcutta was a breath of fresh air in Indian English
poetry. She wrote chiefly of love, its betrayal, and the consequent anguish. Ms. Das abandoned
the certainties offered by an archaic, and somewhat sterile, aestheticism for an independence
of mind and body at a time when Indian poets were still governed by "19th-century diction,
works are good but her autobiography is certainly better. It is written in the form a novel, well
designed, informative, and delightful. It can be read as a confession. She has never tried to hide
anything from her readers. In other way, this is a revolutionary book. It is a story of a shameful
society where males do not properly respect women. Women writers focus on the conflicts in
man-woman relationship and the female psyche conditioning it to survive the oppressive forces.
The post-independence Indian woman is aware of her rights, virtues, and duties and of
convention. She has complete knowledge of her heritage and is proud to be part of the great
tradition. Social obligations and moral responsibilities have conditioned her .she is also aware
of her fears, weaknesses and limitations; the length of the road she can tread upon, the dangers
she has to overcome. An Apology to Cantama deals with the adultery of the woman persona.
While her husband holds her woman form, her lover holds her very soul. The Testing of the
Sirens also deals with adultery. The husband persona says to his wife :
In her poem "Love", we find the same note of religious dilemma. It ironically depicts
the mood of confession and revulsion that takes possession of the poet. Once again, she
compares the mouth of the lover to the sun which brings both the heat and the loss of love and
due to failure in achieving fulfillment of love, she longs for God's love i.e., Krishna's love: Of
what does the burning mouth Of sun, burning in today's sky Remind me oh yes his mouth and...
His limbs like pale and carnivorous Plants reaching out for me The sad lie of my unending lust.
Although Das regards the rituals and observances of Hinduism and it shows that she is a
believer of Nirguna-Brahman, the Distinctionless Reality (attributeless). God is the one unified
force the primal flood, the moving fount of Being in Hindu mythopoeia, the Brahman of the
Advait philosophy:- "The undying reality/Which doesn't dissolve though?/All beings dissolve".
(150) It is obvious that Das does not look for God head in the figure of Lord Krishna, she rather
seeks for an ideal lover in the figure of Krishna. In fact, her search for an ideal lover is rooted
in her deep sense of alienation. She languished in the folds of a matrilineal society that was
Conclusion
“Allah told me that in order to be effective, you should have political power” , this is
what Kamala Das told when she was asked why she converted to Islam. Kamala Suraiya in her
pre-Islamic days) continues to shock the straight-laced Malayalees. One of India's bestknown
English poets and short story writers, Kamala Suraiya, who abandoned Hinduism to convert to
Islam last December, launched a national political party last week. Christened as the Lok Seva
Party, the new political party, she says, emerged from her conviction that social change could
be possible in India only through political power. But Suraiya, 68, and with near-blind eyes
puts forward another reason that compelled her to embrace the political vocation -- Allah.
"Allah inspired me to launch this party," she says. Before embarking on the political mission,
Suraiya says she carried out three months of meditation and prayer before Allah. In an exclusive
interview with Senior Associate Editor George Iype, Suraiya, clad in a black purdah and her
hands adorned with colourful bangles, spells out how her conversion to Islam forced her to take
the plunge into political life. When he asked her “What compelled you to launch a political
party?”, Kamala Das replied that the degeneration of the present set of political parties is the
main reason why I decided to start my own party. We have to give truth some importance in
political life. I have given truth a special status in my life. So it pains me when our political
parties continue in the most degenerated forms. But what is gladdening is that a number of
youngsters came to me with a request to start a political party. These youngsters, most of them
college boys and girls, are tired of the falsehood and avarice which politicians display in great
abundance these days. I thought it might be a good reason to start a political party. Importantly,
she was asked “So you never felt this strength and faith as a Hindu?”, to which she replied that
for me, all gods are the same, whether you are a
Hindu, a Muslim, a Christian or anyone. I believe in the concept of god. For me, god is the
guardian. When she was confronted with another intimidating question “Do you think that
these changes taking place in your life are out of your conviction?”, Das candidly replied that
“My conviction is growing. Islam has grown on me. In the beginning I was not at all religious.
Now I am really religious because of Islam.” When he asked her “Are you happy with your
new religious status? Are you happy with your new life as a Muslim?”, Das gave antithetical
“You had said you were depressed and disappointed as a Hindu all these years. What were the
Kamala Das’s literary writings reproduce external reality in its mental aspect. She
employs the presentation of this mental aspect the literary products of kamala das’s are mainly
objective on character .but there is a controlled infusion of subject vision in her representation
of life that she witnesses around her own self in her period of life. Thus literature of kamala
Das’s is helpful in guiding reader to discover their inner strength through self-definition and
self-discover. Thus the literature of kamala Das’s awakens in the hearts of all perceptive reader
a stronger sense of justice and a more Christian like humanity.Iin all these respect it has proved
itself to be educative instructive and trendsetting. Addressing the controversies surrounding her
as faults – I see them as characteristics; strengths too. Why not, if you realise that you
Other than the some limitations faced the research scholar, the whole of journey of
investigating and exploring the Das’ work is challenging and rewarding. The new writings have
put Das in higher pedestal than earlier. There are more fresh avenues to do more research and
reassess her literary works in terms of new approaches and principles such as Cultural theory
and Ecocritical theory. Since most of her works are replete with the place and she is in love
with her own place, Kerala , which is in other words known as God’s Own Country. Kamala
Das’ literary works are erotic, sexual, confessional, feministic, psychological but a voice for
the Indian women to show the world the suppressed cries and she took upon herself the task of
working as a mouthpiece for women’s freedom and the psychologically and emotionally
oppressed women not in only in India but also to the whole world.
WORKS SITED
Das, Kamala. The Best of Kamala Das. Ed. P.P. Raveendran. Calicut: Bodhi Publishing House.
1991. Print. Das, Kamala. Only The Soul Knows How TO Sing. Kottayam: DC Books. 1996.
Print. ---- My Story. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers, 1998. Print. ----.Collected Poems Volume
I. Trivandrum: The Navakerala Printers. 1984. Print. ----.Kamala Das Poems. Classic Poetry