Gnanakoothan Explained

Gnanakoothan
Pseudonym:Gnanakoothan
Birth Name:R. Ranganathan
Birth Date:1938 10, df=yes
Occupation:Poet
Nationality:Indian
Period:1957–2016
Notableworks:Anru veru kizhamai
Suriyanukku Pinpakkam
Kadarkaraiyil Sila Marankal
Meendum Avarkal
Pencil Padangal

R. Ranganathan (7 October 1938 – 27 July 2016), known professionally as Gnanakoothan, was an Indian poet. Writing in Tamil, he was the author of Anru veru kizhamai ("That was another day"), Suriyanukku Pinpakkam ("The rear side of Sun"), Kadarkaraiyil Sila Marankal ("Few trees in the seashore"), Meendum Avarkal ("Them again"), and Pencil Padangal ("Pencil pictures"). He was one of the modern Tamil poets in Tamil literature, and a regular contributor to topical columns in Tamil periodicals such as Kalki, Kalachuvadu and Uyirmai. He was one of the founder-editors of the little magazine Kacatathapara along with N. Krishnamurthy, Sa. Kandasamy, and N. Muthusamy. He started and ran Gavanam for a brief period. He was also one of the editors of Zha, along with Atmanam and R. Rajagopalan. He contributed to several little magazines including Maiyam, Vrutcham (now Naveena Vrutcham), and Kanaiyazhi. His works also appeared in little magazines like Illakkiya Vattam of Ka. Na. Subramaniam and C. Mani's Nadai, in which his poems appeared first. His works are known for their social satire.[1] [2] [3] He died on 27 July 2016 at the age of 78.[4]

Career

He entered the field of poetry through the poem Prachanai (The problem). He has been writing poems since 1968. Antru Veru Kilamai, Sooriyanukku pinpakkam, Kadarkariyil Sila Marangal and Meendum Avargal are his famous works. In 1998 a collection of poems Gnanakoothan kavithaigal was published.[5]

Works

Awards

Contribution to films

He was one of the Tamil writers involved in the making of the film Marudhanayagam alongside Tamil writers Puviarasu and Sujatha.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Five decades of Tamil Poetry by Rajaram Brammarajan. museindia.com. 5 July 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140104205342/http://www.museindia.com/viewarticle.asp?myr=2006&issid=9&id=399. 4 January 2014. dead.
  2. Web site: Indian Poets Writing in Tamil. oocities.org. 5 July 2013.
  3. Web site: A slice of the sixties brought to life by T. Ramakrishnan. thehindu.com. 5 July 2013.
  4. Web site: Tamil poet Gnanakoothan passes away. 28 July 2016. 24 August 2016. The Hindu.
  5. http://www.lisindia.net/Tamil/Tamil_lite.html LIS India Tamil Literature
  6. http://jdjery.com/trust.php SARAL award list
  7. Web site: Vishnupuram Award 2014 event video. Youtube.com. Vishnupuram Ilakkiya Vattam. 9 June 2016.