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Throughout the decades, In dians
authors have contin ued to gain reputation, prestige, and
accolades for their literary works. As a result of the
quality and popularity of the Indian authors, they have
earned several international awards and honors, the greatest
among them dating back to 1913, when Rabindranath Tagore won
the Nobel Prize in Literature for his collection of poems,
Geetanjali.
Another literary recognition
of international repute is the Man Booker Prize for Fiction,
which is awarded each year for the best original full-length
novel, written in the English, by a citizen of either the
Commonwealth of Nations or the Republic of Ireland. First
awarded in 1968, and originally known as the Booker-
McConnell Prize, the winner of the Booker Prize is generally
assured of international renown and success in addition to a
cash award of 50,000 pounds.
One of the early winners of
the Booker Prize was Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul,
better known as V. S. Naipaul, a Trinidadian-born writer of
Indo-Trinidadian descent. Naipaul became the first person of
Indian origin to win a Booker Prize for his book In a Free
State. Naipaul is also the winner of Nobel Prize for
Literature in 2001. Critics laud Naipaul for the
extraordinary vision that marks his writing. Perhaps due to
his status as rootless wanderer, as a man without a heritage
to hold sway over him, Naipaul consistently knocks down
idealized views of the places he journeys to, be they
England, Trinidad, or Africa, in favor of a more complex,
bitter, sometimes even contradictory truth. His
award-winning book, In a Free State, is a short story, set
in a fictional African state which recently acquired
independence, where the King, although liked by the
Colonials, is weak, and the President is poised to take
power. The story revolves around the journey undertaken by
the protagonist Bobby and his colleague’s wife Linda and
their mutual relationship, in the backdrop of the unstable
political environment of the state and how they handle that
to reach their destination. Another book of Naipaul, A Bend
in the River was shortlisted for the Booker in 1979, though
it did not win the award.
Amother globally appreciated
yet highly controversial author of Indian origin, who won
the Booker Prize is Salman Rushdie. More known to the world
for the infamous fatwa imposed on his head by Ayatolla
Khomeini of Iran for Rushdie’s alleged anti-Islam remarks
in his book, The Satanic Verses, Rushdie was born in Mumbai
and had his early schooling there, before moving to to
England. Married and divorced four times, Rushdie has
mentored, though quietly, younger Indian writers, influenced
an entire generation of Indo-Anglian writers, and is an
influential writer in postcolonial literature in general.
Among his major works, Modnight’s Children won him the
Booker in 1981, while his novels, The Moor’s Last Sigh
(1985), The Satanic Verses (1988), and Shame (1983) were
also shortlisted for the coveted award. The Booker winning
Midnight’s Children is a loose parable for events in India
both before and, primarily, after the independence and
partition of India, which took place at midnight on August
15, 1947. The protagonist and narrator of the story is
Saleem Sinai, a telepath with a nasal defect, whois born at
the exact moment that India becomes independent. Saleem
Sinai’s life then parallels the changing fortunes of the
country after independence. The book was later awarded the
‘Booker of Bookers’ Prize in 1993 as the best novel to
be awarded the Booker Prize in its first 25 years. Midnight’s
Children is also the only Indian novel to make Time magazine’s
list of the 100 best English-language novels since its
founding in 1923. Rushdie was awarded a knighthood for
services to literature in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in
mid-2007, however the honors were met with severe criticism
from the Islamic countries.
After a gap of 16 years, it
was Arundhati Roy who brought back the Booker back to India.
Born in 1961 at Shillong, to a Keralite Syrian Christian
mother and a Bengali Hindu father, she spent her childhood
in Kerala, attended school in Nilgiris, and pursued higher
education in Delhi. It was indeed a great achievement for
Arundhati to receive the prestigious Booker award for her
debut novel, The God of Small Things. She has since devoted
herself solely to nonfiction and politics, publishing two
more collections of essays. In addition, she now works for
social causes. She is a figurehead of the anti-globalization
movement and a vehement critic of neo-imperialism and of the
global policies of the United States. She also criticizes
India’s nuclear weapons policies and the approach to
industrialization and rapid development as currently being
practiced in India, including the Narmada Dam project. Her
award winning book The God of Small Things (1997) is a
semi-autobiographical, politically charged novel. It is a
story about the childhood experiences of a pair of fraternal
twins who become victims of circumstance. The book is a
description of how the small things in life build up,
translate into people’s behavior, and susbsequently affect
their lives. The book received the 1997 Man Booker Prize for
Fiction, was listed as one of the New York Times Notable
Books of the Year for 1997, and reached fourth position in
the New York Times Bestsellers list for Independent
Fiction.
The only Booker that was won
by an author having distinct Indian connection in the new
millenium was by Kiran Desai, daughter of renowned author
Anita Desai. Thirty-six year old Kiran is a citizen of India
and a Permanent Resident of the United States. A promising
and contemporary writer, Kiran’s first novel, Hullabaloo
in the Guava Orchard, was published in 1998 and received
accolades from such notable figures as Salman Rushdie.
However, it was her second book, The Inheritance of Loss,
which won the 2006 Booker Prize. Set in the 1980s, the book
tells the story of Jemubhai Popatlal Patel, a judge living
out a disenchanted retirement in Kalimpong, a hill station
in the Himalayan foothills, and his relationship with his
granddaughter Sai. The theme of the novel concerns migration
and living in between two worlds as well as in the past and
present. Apart from the Booker Prize, the novel also
received the prestigious National Book Critics Circle
Fiction Award in the same year (2006).
Quite interestingly, Kiran’s
mother, Anita Mazumdar Desai, could not achieve what her
daughter did with her second novel. Anita, born to a German
mother and a Bengali father, is an Indian novelist and
presently the Emeritus John E. Burchard Professor of
Humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Anita was short listed for the Booker prize three times for
her novels, Clear Light of Day (1980), In Custody (1984) and
Fasting, Feasting (1999).
The pursuits of novelist,
short story writer, and two-time Academy Award-winning
screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala should also be mentioned.
Born in Germany to a Polish and German Jewish couple, Ruth
Prawer married an Indian Parsi architect Cyrus Jhabvala and
lived in in India from 1951 to 1975. In fact, during her
stay in India, Jhabvala began writing novels about her new
life there. In 1975, she won the Booker Prize for her novel
Heat and Dust, which was set in India. Extending between
1920 and 1970, the novel plots the story of the protagonist,
a young English woman who searches for the truth about
Olivia, the first wife of her grandfather.
Though the number of Booker
prize winners having Indian connection may not be large in
number, the number of individuals winning the prize in the
last 40 years is significant. Given the awards for Indian
authors, it gives us a fair idea about the acceptability of
the Indian authors and their literary works. Appreciation
for the prowess of Indian novelists is adequately reflected
in their winning of the prestigious Man Booker Prize.
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