SRIKANTAIAH B.M., 1884-1946
B.M. Srikantaiah
(bi.em. shrIkanTaiah) (ಬಿ.ಎಂ.
ಶ್ರೀಕಂಠಯ್ಯ)
or ‘Bi.em.shrI.’, as he was fondly called by his disciples and admirers is foremost
among the scholars who laid a strong foundation for a study of Kannada language,
literature and culture during the first few decades of the twentieth century. His
contribution is significant not merely because of his personal writings, but due
to the sense of direction and commitment that he gave to a generation of scholars.
He was responsible for building a dedicated band of creative writers and scholars
who thrived hard to realize his dreams and added many new dimensions to his ideas.
This is particularly true with respect to the princely state of
B.M.S. hailed from a small village named Belluru
in Tumkur district. He studied at the
This is not the
place to discuss the role played his seminal publications such as “English GitagaLu’
or ‘AshvatthAman’ in the genesis and rise Modern Kannada Literature. However it
is appropriate to mention that he converted, ‘sAhasa BImavijaya’ the famous tenth
century epic by Ranna in to a play and published it under the title ‘gadAyuddha
nATakam’. His erudition in Greek Tragedy must have prompted him to recognize tragic
elements in the Kannada classic.
B.M.S. wanted
to create a modern and secular context for Kannada literature by severing its connections
with religious dogmatism. He wanted a unified approach to Kannada literature including
the oral tradition as much as he was spurred by a desire to unify Karnataka in a
geographical sense. His ideas and plans for Kannada were motivated by this desire.
“Kannada KaipiDi’, a text created by B.M.S. and his students is virtually a coordinated
study of literature, language, prosody and poetics from the same platform as it
were. One gets an idea of the togetherness of these disciplines by pursuing this
volume. The second volume of this venture, ‘Kannada sAhitya caritre’ written by
B.M.S. himself is an impassioned study of ancient Kannada poetry. ‘KannaDigarige
oLLeya sAhitya’ is virtually a blueprint for the development of Modern Kannada literature.
The idea of publishing abridged editions of acclaimed Kannada classics with abundant
supplementary material explicating the text
was spurred by a desire to make them ‘secular’, ‘humane’ and easily accessible.
He was also behind the project of publishing the history of Karnataka in three volumes.
(Kannada Sahitya Parishat) Some of these ideas, even though some of them are debatable
in an altered context, guided the pedagogy of Kannada from the school level to Post
doctoral research for more than six decades.
Another important
contribution of Srikantaiah was his abiding interest in the Dravidian culture and
its impact on Kannada literature. His pioneering effort to trace the origin of Kannada
prosodic forms to Tamil is very relevant even to this day. He was one of the few
scholars who initiated a comparative study of Dravidian languages in the disciplines
of prosody and grammar. Some of his important publications are listed below.
1.
‘A Hand-Book
of Rhetoric’, 1919
2.
The
Improvement of Kanarese’, 1915
3.
‘kannaDa
BASeya vicAragaLu’ 1913
4.
‘gadAyuddha
nATaka’, 1926
5.
‘kannaDa
Candassina caritre’, 1936
6.
‘kannaDigarige
oLLeya sAhitya’, 1948
7.
‘kannaDa
sAhityada caritre’, 1947
8.
‘English
gItagaLu ‘, 1921
9.
‘ashvatthAman’,
1929
10.
‘Sri sahitya’, 1983, Complete Works
B.M. Srikantaiah was in the chair of the 14th
Kannada Literary Conference held in
B.M.Srikantaiah is one of the handful of persons in
Karnataka who was responsible for a cultural renaissance and he ushered an era of
modernism in Kannada literature.
Further
1.
en.wikipedia.org/
2.
‘B.M.
Srikantaiah’ by A.N. Murthy Rao, 1991(Reprint) (