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O. V. Vijayan was born in Palakkad in the southern
Indian state of Kerala in 1930. His father was a senior police officer
in the Malabar special forces and he grew up in several barracks.
Because of his weak health, he did not start school until the age of
12. In 1954 Vijayan graduated with a degree in English and began
teaching at various colleges in Kerala until 1958 he moved to Delhi.
There he began to earn a living as a journalist and as a political
cartoonist, publishing his cartoons on a freelance basis in numerous
papers including »The Hindu« and »The Statesman«.
In 1969 O. V. Vijayan published his literary debut, »Khasakkinte
Ithihasam« (»The Legends of Kasak«, 1994), which was written in
Malayalam, the national language of Kerala. The touching portrayal of
the village schoolteacher Ravi in the imaginary setting of Khasak was a
significant departure from the realistic narrative style that
characterizes his country’s writing. Critics were moved to pronounce
the beginnings of a new era. Henceforth, the history of modern
literature in Kerala was to be divided into the pre- and the
post-Khasak eras. Vijayan has continued to write novels, novellas,
short stories and political essays, among them the novel
»Dharmapuranam« (1985; »The Saga of Dharmapuri«, 1988), which he
translated into English himself, and »Gurusagaram« (1987; »The Infinity
of Grace«, 1996), which has received many awards and which he helped to
translate.
With »The Saga of Dharmapuri«, Vijayan succesfully came to the
attention of the English-language public and press. The novel, which
focuses on the suffering of the people of Dharmapuri under their
tyrannical president, recounts how Siddharta – not the historic Buddha,
but a messianic figure – ends their suffering. Using crude language and
black humour, Vijayan described the symbolic fight between the two
antagonists. While some Indian critics reproached the novel for its
»obscenity« and an »imperialist tendency«, others saw his style as a
well-chosen vehicle for protest against the country’s political
situation.
The cartonist Vijayan can also be heard in some of his novels. In
his memoirs »A Cartoonist Remembers« (2002), he wrote: »An
indescribable sadness permeates the reality that I am supposed to
describe, but nonetheless the prevealing superstition about my
profession requires that I make people laugh.« O. V. Vijayan died after
long illness in 2005.
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