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Jejuri

Author: Arun Kolatkar   Series: New York Review Books Classics

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A sequence of stunningly simple but haunting poems, Jejuri is one of the great books of modern India.

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Summary

A sequence of stunningly simple but haunting poems, Jejuri is one of the great books of modern India.

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Description

A sequence of stunningly simple but haunting poems, Jejuri is one of the great books of modern India. Jejuri is a site of pilgramage in author Arun Kolatkar's native state of Maharashtra, and Jejuri the poem is the record of a visit to the town -- a place that is as crassly commercial as it is holy, as modern and ruinous as it is ancient and enduring. Evoking the town's crowded streets, many shrines, and mythic history of sages and gods, Kolatkar's poem offers a rich description of India while at the same time performing a complex act of devotion. For the essence of the poem is a spiritual quest, the effort to find the divine trace in a degenerate world. Spare, comic, sorrowful, singing, Jejuri is the work of a writer with a unique and visionary voice.

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Critic Reviews

“"Available for the first time outside Kolatkar's native India, this sequence of poems (written in English, and first published in 1976) describes a trip to a Hindu pilgrimage site in the state of Maharashtra. Amit Chaudhuri's excellent introduction tells us that Kolatkar was both an amateur musician and a successful art director in the Bombay advertising world, which perhaps explains the acuteness of his ear and eye. Veering between the epigrammatic and the incantatory, these poems capture a place that is both ancient and modern, with crumbling temples and "stock exchange quotations." Kolatkar's pages are populated by saints, beggars, prostitutes, and priests, by rats, stray dogs, and the occasional butterfly, a creature whose transitory beauty is meticulously described: "There is no story behind it. / It is split like a second. / It hinges around itself." --The New Yorker "Kolatkar (19322004) became a leading literary light in India, writing in Marathi and in English about the contradictions of the developing subcontinent. Composed in English, this fastidious, ironic lyric cycle helped make Kolatkar a national, if not international, star when published in India in 1974. Its impressionistic and anecdotal poems describe a visit to the town of the book's title, a Hindu pilgrimage site in Maharashtra state where ancient stones and holy men coexist with modern consumer culture and media, with their "slashed editorials/ and promises of eternal youth." Some poems retell (or undermine) local legends; others simply describe, using everything from jumbled typography to songlike stanzas to depict the site's disjunctions. There are no notes to explain place-specific references. And Kolatkar's techniques, like those of many British poets, may strike American readers as understated-simultaneously casual and terse: "I killed my mother/ for her skin./ I must say/ it didn't take much/ to make this pouch/ I keep turmeric in." Kolatkar's technical assurance and variety, and his decidedly vivid townscapes, however, ought to compel new readers on their own." --Publishers Weekly "Jejuri, Arun Kolatkar's sprightly, clear-sighted, deeply felt poem cycle, is widely recognized in India as a modern classic. I am delighted that this invaluable new edition makes Kolatkar's work available to an international readership. It is one of the great treasures of mosern Indian literature." --Salman Rushdie "Arun Kolatkar was the greatest Indian poet of his generation, andJejuri, with its linguistic inventiveness and intellctual daring, was his masterwork." -- Pankaj Mishra "A personal epic like William Carlos William'sPaterson. It dramatizes a Jungian passage to contemporary Hinduism, symbolized by the shrine at Jejuri...Jejuri-- a virtuoso performance -- exemplifies a movement towards a freer form of verse, which is what is most promising in Kolatkar's poetry." -- K. Venkatachari”

"Jejuri, Arun Kolatkar's sprightly, clear-sighted, deeply felt poem cycle, is widely recognized in India as a modern classic. I am delighted that this invaluable new edition makes Kolatkar's work available to an international readership. It is one of the great treasures of modern Indian literature. - Salman Rushdie"

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About the Author

Arun Kolatkar (1932-2004) was born in the town of Kolhapur in the western Indian state of Maharashtra and attended the JJ School of Art in Bombay, the city in which he was to pursue a long and successful career as an art director in advertising. Jejuri, published by a small press in 1976, received the Commonwealth Poetry Prize. Kolatkar was also the author of four volumes of poetry in Marathi. Two long-awaited further collections in English, Kala Ghoda Poems and Sarpa Satra, appeared shortly before his death. AMIT CHAUDHURI is the author of Calcutta: Two Years in the City and five highly acclaimed novels, including A Strange and Sublime Address, Freedom Song and The Immortals. He is the recipient of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, the Betty Trask Prize, the Encore Award, the LA Times Book Prize for fiction, the Indian government's Sahitya Akademi Award and the Infosys Prize for outstanding contribution to the humanities in literary studies. Also a poet, an acclaimed musician and critic, Amit Chaudhuri lives in Calcutta and Norwich.

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More on this Book

"Jejuri" is one of the great books of modern India, a sequence of stunningly simple but haunting poems that has established itself deep in the hearts of Indian readers, including Salman Rushdie and Vikram Seth. Jejuri is a site of pilgrimage in author Arun Kolatkar's native state of Maharashtra, and Jejuri the poem is the record of a visit to the town that is as crassly commercial as it is holy, as ruinous and rapacious as it is ancient and enduring. Evoking the town's streets, crowded with beggars, cripples, street vendors, children at play, predatory priests, and pompous officials, and the barren stony landscape that surrounds it, but also its mysterious shrines, mythic history, and associated tales of sages and gods, Kolatkar's poem offers a rich description of modern India that is at the same time a complex act of devotion.

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Product Details

Publisher
New York Review Books | NYRB Classics
Published
7th November 2005
Edition
Main
Pages
96
ISBN
9781590171639

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