Alka Saraogi
Alka Saraogi (Hindi: अलका सरावगी; born 17 November 1960) is an Indian novelist and short story writer in the Hindi language. She is a recipient of the 2001 Sahitya Akademi Award for Hindi for her novel Kalikatha: Via Bypass.
Born | Kolkata, West Bengal, India | 17 November 1960
---|---|
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Hindi |
Nationality | Indian |
Biography
Alka Saraogi was born in a Marwari family of Rajasthani origin in Kolkata.[1] She studied at Calcutta University, receiving a PhD for her thesis on the poetry of Raghuvir Sahay.[2]
Following her marriage and the birth of two children, Saraogi began to write short stories.[3] Her first published work was Āp kī haṁsī (Your laughter), a story taking its title from one of Raghuvir Sahay's poems. Saraogi's mentor, Ashok Seksaria, sent it to Vartaman Sahitya, a Hindi literary journal, where it received favourable notice. She then published Kahānī kī talāś meṁ in 1996, a collection of short stories.
Her first novel, Kalikatha: Via Bypass, came out in 1998. It was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for Hindi literature in 2001. She followed this up with four further novels, the latest – Jānkidās Tejpāl mansion – published in 2015.[2]
Critical commentary
Language and culture
Marwaris and Bengalis, despite coexisting in Kolkata for many generations, have led largely disjoint lives. In Bengali literature and art, the Marwari appears typically as a stereotype, a money-making reactionary. Saraogi's writing is in Hindi, albeit neither overly Sanskritised, nor informed by the popular Hindi film industry.[4] Though she often uses Bengali expressions in her novels, especially in the speech of Bengali characters,[5] even in her oeuvre the breach between the Hindi- and Bengali-speaking communities remains unbridged.[6]
Kalikatha: Via Bypass
Saraogi's first novel, Kalikatha: Via Bypass, is a work of historical fiction. It examines the Marwari community, long established in Kolkata as a merchants yet still exploring its position among the Bengali culture. It is written from the point of view of a male protagonist, Kishore Babu, who following an operation for a head injury, begins to wander around the city, observing its economic life and histories. He compares its majoritarian society against the patriarchal mores of his Marwari community, contrasts his own memories with popular memory, and experiences the ways in which Kolkata of the 1940s melds into that of the 1990s. As Kishore Babu wanders across the city and his own memories, pondering the loves and lives of his ancestors and descendants, his ruminations enliven the entire community, and the narrative structure of the novel too flips between the ages.[7][8] Saraogi's unflinching prose does not flatter the Marwaris, though the privations of a community on the margin are described evocatively. Kolkata Marwaris have often been accused of making money at the expense of the Bengalis, but this is not addressed in the novel. Rather, it sets in stark contrast the ostensible nobility of their spirit against the parochiality of their lives.[9]
Shesh Kadambari
The protagonist of this novel, Ruby Gupta, is a Marwari woman who faces the dichotomy of two social values: the wealth and enterprise of her Marwari father versus the austere and intellectual nature of her mother's family.[6] Saraogi addresses the nuances of cultural differences through Ruby's eyes. Once again, the narrative oscillates between periods of Ruby's childhood and her old age. Having been wealthy in a city of poverty is a stigma she finds hard to atone. Discovering the source of her father's wealth - the opium trade - adds further discomfort. Meanwhile, she recognises the innate hypocrisy of her mother's relatives who disparage her father and his business, yet continue to live off him.[10]
Following the male-dominated viewpoint of her first novel, Saraogi's switch to a female perspective offers further reinforcement of the weight of cultural expectation. Despite being a patriarch, Kishore Babu in Kalikatha: Via Bypass was unable to step outside his social mores to ameliorate his widowed sister-in-law's life. In Shesh Kadambari, seeking an understanding of self for all her seventy years of life, Ruby Gupta comes to realise that her social work has not resulted in any social justice for herself.[11]
Jankidas Tejpal Mansion
The story of a US-educated engineer who returns to India and gets embroiled in the Naxalite movement, Saraogi's novel sweeps across the early optimism of India's freedom to the broken dreams of the present. Jaygovind's life follows the disappointments of the first post-Independence generation, mirrored in the social schisms of America, from the Vietnam war to Wikileaks.[12]
Works
- Kahānī kī talāś meṁ. Panchkorla: Adhar. 1996.
- Kalikatha: Via bypass. Adhar. 2002. ISBN 978-81-7675-069-1.
- Shesh Kadambari. New Delhi: Rajkamal. 2002. ISBN 978-81-267-0446-0.
- Doosrī Kahānī. New Delhi: Rajkamal. 2003. ISBN 978-81-267-0677-8.
- Koi bāt nahīn. New Delhi: Rajkamal. 2004. ISBN 978-81-267-0841-3.
- Ek break ke bād. New Delhi: Rajkamal. 2008. ISBN 978-81-267-1529-9.
- Jānkidās Tejpāl mansion. New Delhi: Rajkamal. 2015. ISBN 978-81-267-2766-7.
References
- Singh 2006.
- Parson 2012, p. 116.
- Stobinsky.
- Consolaro 2007, p. 9.
- Mukherjee 2008, p. 218.
- Mukherjee 2008, p. 216.
- Gokhale 2002.
- Parson 2012, pp. 119-121.
- Gupta 2003.
- Mukherjee 2008, p. 217.
- Pandey 2008, p. 206.
- Kumar 2015.
Bibliography
On Alka Saraogi's oeuvre
- Alessandra Consolaro (2007). "Translating contemporary Hindi literature in Italy: Academy, publishers, readers" (PDF). Selected Papers of the CETRA Research Seminar in Translation Studies 2006.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Rahul Parson (2012). The Bazaar and the Bari: Calcutta, Marwaris, and the World of Hindi Letters. Berkeley: University of California.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Catherine Pesso‐Miquel (2007). "Addressing Oppression in Literature: Strategies of resistance in Indian and Indian English contemporary fiction". Journal of Postcolonial Writing. 43 (2): 149–160. doi:10.1080/17449850701430473.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Meenakshi Mukherjee (2008). "Power and the Case of Horizontal Translation". In Saugata Bhaduri (ed.). Translating Power: Stories, Essays, Criticism. Katha. ISBN 978-81-899-3424-8.
- Indu Prakash Pandey (2008). Hindī ke prayogadharmī upanyāsa (in Hindi). Star. ISBN 9788185244976.
- Avadhesh Kumar Singh (May 2006). "Alka Saraogi in Conversation with Avadhesh Kumar Singh". Indian Literature. 50 (3): 166–170. JSTOR 23341001.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
Reviews
- Namita Gokhale (16 December 2002). "Memory's bylane". India Today.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Om Gupta (24 July 2003). "No bypassing a tale well told". The Hindu.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Suresh Kumar (8 July 2015). "Jankidas Tejpal Mansion, which has collapsed". Aaj Tak (in Hindi).
- Arunima Sehgal (2 February 2003). "Bypassing life". The Tribune.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Martina Stobinsky (16 November 2006). "Alka Saraogi: Umweg nach Kalkutta" (in German). Suedasien.info.