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Contents

   



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1 Early life  





2 Personal life  





3 Works  





4 Death  



4.1  Legacy  







5 Awards and titles conferred  





6 References  














Gunturu Seshendra Sarma






ि
مصرى


 

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Gunturu Seshendra Sarma
Seshendra Sarma
Seshendra Sarma
Born20 October 1927
Nagarajupadu, Nellore District, Andhra Pradesh, India
Died30 May 2007
Hyderabad, India
OccupationPoet
SpouseG.Janaki, Rajkumari Indira Devi Dhanrajgir

Gunturu Seshendra Sarma B.A. B.L. (20 October 1927 – 30 May 2007), also known as Yuga Kavi, was a Telugu poet, critic and litterateur. He is well known for his works Naa Desam, Naa Prajalu and Kaala Rekha. He authored over fifty works which have been translated into English, Kannada, Urdu, Bengali, Hindi, Nepali and Greek.[1]

Early life[edit]

Gunturu Seshendra Sarma was born on 20 October 1927.[1]

Personal life[edit]

At 18 years of age, Sarma's marriage was arranged to Gunturu Janaki (née Yeddanapudi Janaki), and they had two sons and two daughters: Vasundhara (1951), Revathi (1953), Vanamaali (1956) and Satyaki (1958). Later in 1970 he married Indira Devi Dhanrajgir, an Indo Anglican poet. Till his death on 30 May 2007, he lived with her at her Gyanbagh Palace. Although Seshendra led an active extramarital life he was a family man. His love for his children was limitless - “an ocean of love” in his own words. His joy knew no bounds whenever he saw his children and grandchildren (see foto). In a literary biography “Seshendra velugu niidallo” written by his son Vanamali Gunturu, the author describes the literary genius and unparalleled scholarship of his father, his evolution from an everybody’s darling in a small village Thotapalliguduru till his complete maturity as author and intellectual, who was engaged in an incessant fight against the brute power of the state and was a victim of political persecution. At the same time the biography shows how his wife Janaki had to swallow the pangs of being married to such a historical person as Seshendra and the injustice being done to her.

poet's family
Seshendra
family and literature
Seshendra with his son and grandchildren

Works[edit]

Seshendra Sarma is the second person to have been nominated for the Nobel Literature prize for his contribution to literary field from India, the first being Rabindranath Tagore. The West Bengal Government conferred upon him the title "Rashtrendu" (Moon of the Nation) in honour of his accomplishments. Telugu University conferred an honorary D.Litt. on him in 1994. He received the "Kalidas Samman" award from the Madhya Pradhesh government. He won a Central Sahitya Akademi fellowship in 1999. The other important awards Seshendra received are ‘Subrahmanya Bharati Ekta Award’ from the Hindi Academy, Rashtriya Sanskriti Puraskar’, ‘Ugadi Puraskar’, ‘Tilak Award’ and ‘Sahitya Ratna 2001’ from Sri Ram Sahitya Mandal, Himachal Pradesh. He has been nominated as a member to the ‘Kendriya Hindi Samithi’ by Prime Minister of India. He was selected for Hamsa Award, in 2004-05, by the Govt. of AP.

Seshendra's first work in print appeared in 1952.[1] It is the translation of Matthew Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum, which is based upon the Persian Epic Shahnama. Initially he focused on poetry and occasionally worked on literary criticism. Seshendra's first collection of prose-poems was entitled Sesha Jyotsna. He composed it in strict conformation with Telugu prosody which was published in 1972 in Telugu and English. Its translations into Hindi and Urdu appeared separately.

His magnum opus Naa Desam, Naa Prajalu (My Country, My People, Meri Dharti, Mere Log) brought Seshendra prominence as one of the outstanding poets of India. It led to his nomination for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2004.

Shodasi, his tantric commentaries on the Ramayana, and Swarna Hamsa, the study of Harsha Naishadhiya Charita, are works of literary criticism. Kaala Rekha, Seshendras' 1994 book, is a collection of twenty-five essays on various subjects like ancient Sanskrit drama and ancient Greek drama, comparative literature, classical poetry and Aurobindo's Savitri.

The collection of poems Neerai Paaripoyindi (literally, "Melted away") was brought out in 1976 in bilingual editions.

Death[edit]

Sarma died on 30 May 2007.

Legacy[edit]

Sarma has been a subject of various thesis dissertations for PhD in Telugu literature.[2][3]

Dr. Vanamali Gunturu, Seshendra velugu niidallo - nannato na anubhavalu, EMESCO 2021

Awards and titles conferred[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Ambika Ananth. "Ambika Ananth - Seshendra Sharma". Muse India. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 27 April 2009.
  • ^ Rao, Prabhakar S. S. "Homage". Social Science Research Network. SSRN 1032502. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  • ^ "Gunturu Seshendra Sarma Endowment lecture" (PDF). xyz.com. Retrieved 13 May 2009.[permanent dead link]
  • Dr. Vanamali Gunturu, Seshendra velugu niidallo - nannato na anubhavalu, (a literary biography of the poet) EMESCO 2021


    Story on Seshendra by his son in Telugu


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    This page was last edited on 4 January 2024, at 14:46 (UTC).

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