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It
is widely agreed that prior to the 15th century the
Malayalam literature consisted of three streams: (i) the pure or Pacha
Malayalam without any admixture of Tamil or Sanskrit words (e.gs:
Bhadrakali Pattu and
Pulluvan Pattu); (ii) Malayalam with free usage of Tamil words
(e.gs: Kannassa Ramayanam and
Bharatamala) and (iii) Sanskritised Malayalam. The oldest
Malayalam text is Ramacharitam
(1300AD), which is a mixture of Malayalam and Tamil. The Sanskrit
stream of Malayalam writing is composed in Manipravalam
or the ‘high style’ of language. The themes of these texts,
commonly referred as Sandesha
Kavyas, were taken from the Sanskrit Epics and Puranas
and followed the Campu
style.
One
of the earliest prose works in Malayalam was Bhasa
Kautaliyam of the 12th century.
The other early prose works are Brahmanda
Puranam, Ambarisopakhyanam, Dutavakyam and Nalopakhyanam.
Cherusseri
Namboodiri was the first big name in Malayalam literature, whose
work Krishna Gatha (15th
century) is considered as one of the masterpieces in pure
Malayalam. He was followed the famous Malayali poet Tunchattu
Ramanuja Ezhuttachchan in the 17th century, who
popularized a verse form called Kilippattu.
His Adhyatma
Ramayanam, Uttara Ramayanam, Bharatam, Harinama Kirttanam and Bhagwatam
are among the great classics in Malayalam.
Tullal or dance drama developed as new literary type in the 18th
century, which had themes based on the Epics and the Puranas.
Kotungallur
(in North Kerala) and Trivandrum (in South Kerala) were the two
important centres of literary activity in the second half of the
19th century. Some of the leading Malayali poets of the
19th and 20th century are Venamani
Nambudiripad, Kerala Varma, Kottarattil Sankunni, K.C.Kesava
Pillai, G. Sankara Kurup, K. K. Raja, Channampuzha Krishna Pillai
and N. Balamaniyamma. Romantic poetry in Malayalam, which was initiated by
A.R.RajaRaja Varma, flourished under the three great poets,
Kumaran Ashan (Vini Puvu,
Lila, Cintavistayaya, Cintavistayaya Sita and Karuna),
Ullur S.Parameshwara Iyer (Uma
Keralam, Arunodayam and Taraharam)
and Vallathol Narayana Menon (Gangapati
and Bandhanasthanaya
Aniruddhan). The important translation works of this period
include Valiya Koyil Tampuran’s Shakuntala
(1881), Kunnikkuttan Tampuran’s Hamlet
and Mahabharata and
Vallattol Narayana Menon’s Ramayana
(1878).
The
period also witnessed the proliferation of different literary
forms like dramas, novels, poems and essays on historical and
literary topics. T. M. Appu Netunnati’s Kundalata
(1887) can be considered as the first and original novel in
Malayalam. Chantu Menon’s Indulekha
(1889) and C.V.Raman Pillai's Ramaraja
Bahadur, Marttanda Varma and Dharmaraja
are some of the best-known fictions in Malayalam. Some of other
well-known Malayali novelists include Vennayil Kunniraman Nayanar,
Appan Tampuran, Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai, V. K. Kunnan Menon,
Ambati Narayana Potuval and C. P. Achyuta Menon. Vaikkom Mohammad
Bashir is one of the most popular literary figures of Kerala. His Balyakalasakhi
(1949) is a notable example of the new type of novel in Malayalam. |