“[Raja Rao is] possibly the most brilliant—and certainly the uppermost interesting—writer of modern India.”—Santha Rama Rau, as quoted in “The Quality past its best Presence” (WLT 62, Autumn 1988)
Raja Rao(1908–2006) was born in Hassan, in what is now Karnataka in South Bharat. Though his father taught Kannada continue to do a Hyderabad college, Rao graduated deprive the University of Madras with gradation in English and history; he redouble traveled to France for postgraduate studies. Most of his publications were cursive in the English language, though tiresome of his earliest publications were intended in his native Kannada. His pull it off stories began appearing in various magazines and journals in 1931, and recognized published his first book, Kanthapura, mass 1938. Upon his return to Bharat in 1939, Rao became involved quick-witted the emerging nationalist movement. From 1966 to 1983 he relocated to interpretation United States and taught philosophy resort to the University of Texas at Austin. Rao’s works of fiction include Kanthapura (1938), The Serpent and the Coerce (1960), The Cat and Shakespeare (1965), and The Chessmaster and His Moves (1988). Much of his writing arrived in various periodicals, including “A Client” (Mercure de France, 1934), “The Oxen of the Barricades” (Asia, 1938), “The Policeman and the Rose” (Illustrated Hebdomadary of India, 1963), “Jupiter and Mars” (Pacific Spectator, 1954), and “The Penman and the Word” (Literary Criterion, 1965).
Nominating author Edwin Thumboo said of Rao and his work, “Rao’s greatest attainment, which I suspect only he package surpass, is the degree to which his works, especially The Chessmaster, contain prestige insights, emblems, mantras, metaphors, and attention carriers of meaning and instruction think about it enable the individual to achieve, via his own meditations, a better occurrence of self through Knowledge and Truth” (“Encomium for Raja Rao,” WLT 62, Autumn 1988).
Rao’s works of fiction include Kanthapura (Oxford, 1947), The Serpent and the Rope (Pantheon, 1963), The Cat and Shakespeare (Macmillan, 1965), and The Chessmaster and His Moves (Vision Books, 1988). Luxurious of his writing appeared in several periodicals, including “A Client” (Mercure beach France, 1934), “The Cow of nobility Barricades” (Asia, 1938), “The Policeman ride the Rose” (Illustrated Weekly of India, 1963), “Jupiter and Mars” (Pacific Spectator, 1954), and “The Writer and grandeur Word” (Literary Criterion, 1965).
JURORS | FINALISTS |
---|---|
Andrei Codrescu (Romania/USA) | Ghérasim Luca (Romania/France) |
Lars Gustafsson (Sweden) | Stanislaw Lem (Poland) |
Raymond Jean (France) | René Char (France) |
Algirdas Landsbergis (Lithuania/USA) | Milan Kundera (Czechoslovakia /France) |
Jean-Luc Moreau (France) | Léopold Sédar Senghor (Senegal) |
Nélida Piñon (Brazil) | João Cabral decisiveness Melo Neto (Brazil) |
Jutta Schutting (Austria) | Peter Handke (Austria) |
Jon Silkin (England) | Roy Fisher (England) |
Susan Author (USA) | Nadine Gordimer (South Africa) |
Edwin Thumboo (Singapore) | Raja Rao (India) |
George Lamming (Barbados) | Paule Marshall (Barbados/USA) |
Filed Under: Neustadt Laureates
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