C. V. Raman Pillai Explained
C. V. Raman Pillai |
Birth Name: | Cannankara Velayudhan Raman Pillai |
Birth Date: | 1858 5, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Arayoor, Travancore (present-day Trivandrum, Kerala) |
Death Place: | Trivandrum, Travancore |
Occupation: | Novelist, playwright, journalist, social activist, sheristadar |
Nationality: | Indian |
Parents: | Panavilakath Neelakanta Pillai (father) Parvathy Pillai (mother) |
Relatives: | E. V. Krishna Pillai (son-in-law) Adoor Bhasi (grandson) |
Alma Mater: | His Highness Maharaja's College, Travancore University of Madras |
Period: | 1880s −1920s |
Genre: | Fiction, theatre |
Subject: | Literary, socio-cultural |
Cannankara Velayudhan Raman Pillai (19 May 1858 – 21 March 1922), also known as C. V., was one of the major Indian novelists and playwrights and a pioneering playwright and novelist of Malayalam literature. He was known for his historical novels such as Marthandavarma, Dharmaraja and Ramaraja Bahadur; the last mentioned considered by many as one of the greatest novels written in Malayalam.
Biography
Born in Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), capital city of the erstwhile native State of Travancore, on 19 May 1858 to Panavilakath Neelakanta Pillai, a Sanskrit scholar and Parvathy Pillai, a scion of an ancient matrilineal family; both his parents were from middle-class families and employees at the Palace of the Maharaja of Travancore.[1] Pillai got his family name, Cannankara, through matrilineal succession. Fondly called Ramu, he had a traditional Sanskritized education, early in life, under his father's tutelage which included lessons in Ayurveda and even magic and Tantra. He continued education at the first English school in Thiruvananthapuram. Subsequently, he graduated from His Highness Maharaja's College (the present-day University College Thiruvananthapuram), the first-ever College in Travancore,[2] where he reportedly had a brilliant academic career under John Ross, the principal of the institution and Robert Harvey. and obtained his BA degree from the Madras University in 1881, securing the 7th rank in the Madras Presidency. It was during this period, he started his first periodical named The Kerala Patriot.[3]
After graduation, Pillai studied law but dropped out and went to Madras to study for the government pleader examination which was also abandoned in due course. Later, he joined the High Court as a clerk and where he rose to the position of a shirasthadar. Later, joined the Government Press and held the position of a superintendent when he retired from service. In between, he founded three publications, Malayali in 1886, Vanchiraj in 1901 and Mitabhashi in 1920.
Pillai's first marriage did not last long. He married again in 1887 at the age of 30, and his wife, Bhageerathi Amma, was only 16 at the time of the wedding. The marriage lasted till his wife's untimely death in 1904 and his third marriage was to Janaki Amma, the elder sister of Bhageerathi Amma and the widow of C. Raja Raja Varma, the younger brother of Raja Ravi Varma. He died on 21 March 1922, at the age of 63, survived by Janaki Amma.
Writing career
Raman Pillai is compared by many with Bankim Chandra Chatterjee in Bengali and Hari Narayan Apte in Marathi, two other greats of India literature. His first published book was Chandramukhivilasam, a satire. He wrote his first novel, Marthandavarma, in 1885 but it was published in 1891.[4] This followed sch historical novels as Dharmaraja and Ramarajabahadur, the social novel, Premamritam[5] as well as several farces. Modern Malayalam drama traces its origins to his works. He is credited with the first original play in Malayalam, Chandramukheevilasam, written in 1884 and was staged for four days successively in 1887 at His Highness Maharaja's College, Trivandrum.
Exegetic dictionary
C. V. Vyaakhyaana Kosham[6] is a 400-plus page lexicographic work in four volumes, based on Pillai's books. The work includes the explanations, elucidations and interpretations of over 700,000 Malayalam, Sanskrit, Tamil, Hindustani and English words used by him in his writings.[7] [8]
Works
Novels
Historical novels
Social novels
Uncategorized
- Dishtadamshtram (1922) (unfinished)
- Premarishtam (1922) (unfinished)
Plays
- Chandramukheevilāsam (1884) (not published)
- Mattavilāsam (1885) (not published)
- Kurupillakalari (1909)
- Tentanāmkōţţu Harischandran (1914)
- Kaimalassanţe Kadassikkai (1915)
- Docţarku Kiţţiya Micham (1916)
- Cherutēn Columbus (1917)
- Pandathē Pāchan (1918)
- Pãpi Chelluņadam Pāthālam (1919)
- Kuruppinţe Thirippu (1920)
- Butler Pappan (1922)
Other works
- Videsiyamedhavitvam (1922) (a collection of editorials)
As editor in newspapers
- The Kerala Patriot (1882)
- Malayali (1886)
- Vanchiraj (1901)
- Mitabhashi (1920)
Translations
- Marthandavarma (1936, 1979)[13]
- Dharmaraja (2009)
- Ramaraja Bahadur (2003)[14]
Honours
The India Post issued a commemorative postage stamp on Pillai on 19 May 2010.[15] [16] A road in Vazhuthacaud, Thiruvananthapuram has been neamed after him as C. V. Raman Pillai Road.[17] Chenkal, a panchayat in Thiruvananthapuram which includes his native village of Arayoor, was renamed as C.V.R. Puram in 1970.[18] [19]
Writings on Raman Pillai
- Book: S. Guptan Nair. C.V. Raman Pillai. 1992. Sahitya Akademi. 978-81-7201-273-1.
- . 2004 . C. V. Raman Pillai . Indian Literature . 48 . 1 . 125–136. 23341432 .
- Meena T. Pillai . July 2012 . Modernity and the Fetishizing of Female Chastity: C.V. Raman Pillai and the Anxieties of the Early Malayalam Novel . South Asian Review . 33 . 53–75 . 10.1080/02759527.2012.11932863. 191905321 .
- Kurup. C. Sreekanta. July 2003. Ākhyānasankētaṅṅaḷ: Si.Vi.yuṭe Caritranōvalukaḷil. Narrative techniques in the historical novels of C V Raman Pillai. ml:ആഖ്യാനസങ്കേതങ്ങൾ: സി.വി.യുടെ ചരിത്രനോവലുകളിൽ. ml. Ph.D.. University of Kerala. Shodhganga. 10603/147674 .
- Book: Vātsalyarasaṃ C. V. Yude Akhyāyikakaḷil . Vēṇugōpan Nāir . S. V. . C.V. Raman Pillai National Foundation . 1995 . C.V. Raman Pillai National Foundation ; Distributors, Kar̲an̲t Buks . 36315647. S. V. Venugopan Nair .
- K. Ayyappa Paniker, History of Malayalam Literature (C. V. Raman Pillai - Chapter 34)[20]
- N. Balakrishnan Nair, Saakshaal C. V.
See also
Other social reformers of Kerala
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Biography on Kerala Sahitya Akademi portal . 2019-01-29 . Kerala Sahitya Akademi.
- Web site: History - UCT . 2019-01-29 . www.universitycollege.ac.in . 2019-01-29 . 30 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190130053214/http://www.universitycollege.ac.in/index.php/thecollege/history . dead .
- Web site: C.V. Raman Pillai - a short biography . Reddiar . Mahesh . 2011-01-13 . PhilaIndia.info . en-US . 2019-01-29.
- Web site: C. V. Raman Pillai on Veethi portal . 2019-01-30 . veethi.com . 2019-01-30.
- Book: Nalini Natarajan. Emmanuel Sampath Nelson. Handbook of Twentieth-century Literatures of India. 1996. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-28778-7. 191–.
- Book: Kartik Chandra Dutt. Who's who of Indian Writers, 1999: A-M. 1999. Sahitya Akademi. 978-81-260-0873-5. 90–.
- Web site: C. V. Raman Pillai - Veethi profile . 2019-01-29 . veethi.com . 2019-01-29.
- Book: Si. Vi. vyākhyānakōśam . Bālakr̥ṣṇan . Bi. Si . C.V. Raman Pillai National Foundation . 1994 . Si. Vi. Rāman Piḷḷa Nāṣanal Paunḍēṣan . Malayalam . 500397997.
- Book: C. V. Raman Pillai . Marthandavarma . Public Domain Books . 1891 . ml . B01M5KGNAX.
- Book: C. V. Raman Pillai . Dharmaraja . Tranquebar Press . 1913 . 978-8189975500 . ml.
- Book: C. V. Raman Pillai . Ramaraja Bahadur . Public Domain Books . 1918 . ml . B01M36D33H.
- Book: K. M. George. Western Influence on Malayalam Language and Literature. 1972. Sahitya Akademi. 978-81-260-0413-3. 98–.
- Book: C.V. Raman Pillai, (B. K. Menon - translator) . Marthanda Varma (In English) . Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi . 1936 . 9788126004683 . en.
- Book: C.V. Raman Pillai, (Prema Jayakumar - translator) . Ramaraja Bahadur (In English) . Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi . 2003 . 9788126017867 . en.
- Web site: Stamps – 2010 . 2019-01-29 . India Post . Department of Posts, Government of India . 2 August 2013 . 14 August 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130814101038/http://www.indiapost.gov.in/Stamps2010.aspx . dead .
- Web site: C. V. Raman Pillai - Commemorative Stamp . 2019-01-29 . www.istampgallery.com . 2019-01-29.
- Web site: Where to Stay . 2019-01-30 . Kerala Tourism . en . 2019-01-30.
- Web site: C.V.RAMAN PILLAI - Wikimapia . 2019-01-30 . wikimapia.org . en . 2019-01-30.
- Web site: CVR PURAM ROAD . wikimapia.org . 2019-01-30.
- Web site: A SHORT HISTORY OF MALAYALAM LITERATURE . https://web.archive.org/web/20131020001312/http://www.suvarnakeralam.kerala.gov.in/book.pdf . dead . 2013-10-20 . 2013-10-20 . Suvarna Keralam - Government of Kerala . 2019-01-30.