Subramania Bharati (1882 1921) stands as one of the rare Renaissance spirits of modern Indian literature at once a poet, lifelong journalist, polemicist and rebel. Writing in Tamil yet thinking beyond all linguistic and provincial boundaries, he forged a voice that exceeded both geography and the limits of the historical moment. When the colonial state sought to silence him, Bharati chose exile, spending nearly a decade in Pondicherry, then under the French. He also wrote several of his magnum opuses there. Upon his return to British India, he was briefly imprisoned. Bharati died at the age of thirty-eight, earning a rare distinction as the first Indian writer whose works were nationalized considering their importance in 1949.
In this biography, Va. Ra., refuses to embalm Bharati as a relic. Instead, he speaks to him, argues with him, remembers him. Va. Ra. traces his turbulent years, his meetings and ideological exchanges with figures such as Sister Nivedita, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Sri Aurobindo and Mahatma Gandhi personalities who, like him, stood at the crossroads of spiritual enquiry and political upheaval.
More than the chronicle of an extraordinary career, this biography becomes a meditation on how a poet who lived by both lyric intensity and public argument came to embody the conscience of his times.
VA. RA., born Varadarajan Ramaswamy in 1889 in Thingalur, Tamil Nadu, was a writer and social activist who opposed British rule from a young age and was imprisoned in 1930 for joining the Salt March. His novels Sundari and Vijayam were ahead of their time in advocating women's rights, and his vivid portrayals of ordinary people influenced later writers to focus on marginalized communities. As editor of Manikodi, he helped shape modern Tamil literature, and his biography of Subramania Bharati is considered a classic. He married Bhuvaneswari in 1936 while working in Colombo, lived with a progressive, rebellious spirit, and died in 1951 at the age of sixty-two.
AMSHAN KUMAR is a filmmaker and a writer. He has made several documentaries on art, theatre, music, literature and environment. His documentary on Yazhpanam Thedchanamoorthy, a legendary Thavil player, won him a National Award. His two feature films in Tamil, Oruthi and Manusangada, participated in many film festivals and won awards. He has written many books on films and literature. He has also translated books from Tamil to English and English to Tamil. He was given Bharati Pasarai Award for the year 2023. He conducts workshops on filmmaking and film appreciation. His writings appear in Tamil and English regularly in magazines. He lives in Chennai.
Subramania Bharati (1882 1921) stands as one of the rare Renaissance spirits of modern Indian literature at once a poet, lifelong journalist, polemicist and rebel. Writing in Tamil yet thinking beyond all linguistic and provincial boundaries, he forged a voice that exceeded both geography and the limits of the historical moment. When the colonial state sought to silence him, Bharati chose exile, spending nearly a decade in Pondicherry, then under the French. He also wrote several of his magnum opuses there. Upon his return to British India, he was briefly imprisoned. Bharati died at the age of thirty-eight, earning a rare distinction as the first Indian writer whose works were nationalized considering their importance in 1949.
In this biography, Va. Ra., refuses to embalm Bharati as a relic. Instead, he speaks to him, argues with him, remembers him. Va. Ra. traces his turbulent years, his meetings and ideological exchanges with figures such as Sister Nivedita, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Sri Aurobindo and Mahatma Gandhi personalities who, like him, stood at the crossroads of spiritual enquiry and political upheaval.
More than the chronicle of an extraordinary career, this biography becomes a meditation on how a poet who lived by both lyric intensity and public argument came to embody the conscience of his times.
VA. RA., born Varadarajan Ramaswamy in 1889 in Thingalur, Tamil Nadu, was a writer and social activist who opposed British rule from a young age and was imprisoned in 1930 for joining the Salt March. His novels Sundari and Vijayam were ahead of their time in advocating women's rights, and his vivid portrayals of ordinary people influenced later writers to focus on marginalized communities. As editor of Manikodi, he helped shape modern Tamil literature, and his biography of Subramania Bharati is considered a classic. He married Bhuvaneswari in 1936 while working in Colombo, lived with a progressive, rebellious spirit, and died in 1951 at the age of sixty-two.
AMSHAN KUMAR is a filmmaker and a writer. He has made several documentaries on art, theatre, music, literature and environment. His documentary on Yazhpanam Thedchanamoorthy, a legendary Thavil player, won him a National Award. His two feature films in Tamil, Oruthi and Manusangada, participated in many film festivals and won awards. He has written many books on films and literature. He has also translated books from Tamil to English and English to Tamil. He was given Bharati Pasarai Award for the year 2023. He conducts workshops on filmmaking and film appreciation. His writings appear in Tamil and English regularly in magazines. He lives in Chennai.
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