Friday, 25 May 2018

Theodore Baskaran on Film and Literature at MLS


Theodore Baskaran தியோடோர் பாஸ்கரன், renowned film critic, and author of a history of Tamil cinema, Em Tamizhar Seytha Padam (The Films Made by our Tamils) எம் தமிழர் செய்த படம் lectured on the topic “From Print to Screen : Literature and Tamil Cinema” at the Madras Literary Society, on 21 April, 2018.

The lecture was preceded by the opening of a Tamil Books section, at the MLS, thanks to a generous contribution of Rs.25000/- from Smt Padmapriya and her husband Sri Baskaran (no relation to the speaker). via their foundation Aalayam Kanden Trust. They donated the full receipts of Padmapriya’s book “The Gods of the Holy Koovam”, which was released in Feb 2017 at the MLS. On that occasion, I had the privilege of lecturing on the History of the MLS, based on the then recently rediscovered book by N Ramaswami. Several books have also been donated by various people and patrons. The library is eager to expand both its collection and its membership.

Padmapriya and Baskaran and friends
Tamil Books Section MLS

Nivedita Louis, who compered the program, invited me to say a few words about the Tamil section. I said that it was an extraordinary and generous contribution by Padmapriya. I added that such a section was long overdue, given the historical association of the MLS with the Tamil language, its discovery of the Dravidian and Munda families of languages by Francis Whyte Ellis and his collaborators, and the significance of their contributions to several aspects of Tamil society in general.

Theodore Baskaran lecture at MLS

These are my notes from Theodore Baskaran’s lecture.

He had prepared a PowerPoint presentation in Tamil, but he said that, based on a quick glance at the audience, he felt it best that he speak in English.

Tamil film had a long association with books and notable authors. The film Malai Kallan மலை கள்ளன், starring MGR, was written by Namakkal Kavingar, a famous Tamil poet. Classical Tamil literature like Silappadikaaram சிலப்பதிகாரம் and Kundalakesi குண்டலகேசி had inspired such films as Kannagi கண்ணகி and Manthiri Kumari மந்திரிக்குமாரி, adapted as screenplays by M Karunanidhi. Both MGR எம்.ஜி.ஆர் and Karunanidhi கருணாநிதி later became Chief Minsters of Tamilnadu as did their mentor, CN Annadurai அண்ணாதுரை, a popular playwright, novelist and screenwriter.

But these famous names came later. Anaathai Penn (Orphan Girl) அனாதை பெண், a book by Vai.Mu. Kothainayagi, வை.மு.கோதைநாயகி a path-breaking feminist, freedom fighter and author of the early twentieth century was filmed by Raja Sandow. It was the first Tamil book to be made into a movie. Serialized novels in magazines were popularized by SS Vasan, the founder and head of Gemini Studio. He published stories like the famous Thyaga Bhoomi தியாக பூமி, written by Kalki கல்கி and Thillana Mohanambal தில்லானா மோகனாம்பாள் by Kothamangalam Subbu கொத்தமங்கலம் சுப்பு. Such novels were the source for several of his movies.

Unfortunately, most Tamil films are merely photographed drama, the speaker lamented. Most film directors, even the popular ones, like AP Nagarajan and K Balachandar came from the stage. Cinema has its own grammar, different from print and the stage. Few filmmakers understood this. Also, Tamil country had a very popular era of stage plays before the advent of film, full of songs and dance, and narrations of mythological stories. When the era of silent movies ended, and talkies came along, the first generation of actors were all from the stage, far better at singing than acting. The tradition of songs in the film, often utterly unrelated to the story, is till date a major flaw of Tamil cinema, the speaker said. They only retard the narrative.

The era of mythologicals gave way to social themes during the 1950s, primarily fueled by the politics of the Dravidian movement. This merely replaced innumerable songs with interminable monologues. Even Dravidian film makers who brought on social themes like caste discrimination and social justice, had actors talking like they were on  political podium rather than exploiting the grammar film.

Not many of us know Rajaji
ராஜாஜி was an excellent writer in Tamil, Mr Baskaran continued. His novel Thikkarra Parvathi திக்கற்ற பார்வதி was filmed by Singeetham Narasinga Rao. The major flaw in the story is that the protagonist gets addicted by drinking toddy. You can't get addicted to toddy, only arrack. I have drunk toddy, nothing happens, he quipped. Rajaji didn't know the difference because he was not a drinker.
Literary writers also contributed their mite to the screen. Ucchi Veyil (High Noon) உச்சி வெயில் a novel by Indira Parthasarathy இந்திரா பார்த்தசாரதி was turned into a film called மறுபக்கம் which won a National Best Film award, but was totally ignored by Tamil population, because it was not a commercial hit. Tamil audiences and even the film world had a mental division of films as either commercial or art, and the latter label was an omen of commercial failure.

In this dark world of Tamil cinema, there were  a few flashes of lightning like Jayakanthan
ஜெயகாந்தன் who filmed two of his own novels. Yarukkaaka Azhuthaan (For whom did he cry) யாருக்காக அழுதான் one of Jayakanthan’s films is one of my favorite films, he said. Nimoy Ghosh, who settled in Madras, and was a contemporary of the legendary Bengali film maker Satyajit Ray, shot this film and used very imaginative lighting.

Great films like Mullum Malarum (The Thorn and the Flower) முள்ளும் மலரும் were made from mediocre novels. This is often true of Hollywood films like Godfather and Psycho. Anuradha Ramanan’s அனுராதா ரமணன் novel Chirai(Prison) சிறை was made into a film – a rare example of a female author’s book, after VaiMuKo.

Sila Nerangalil Sila Manithargal (Some People in Some Moments) சில நேரங்களில் சில மனிதர்கள் was another classic Jayakanthan novel, filmed by a director who showed people talking all the time - it wasn’t very visual. Most authors feel unhappy that directors have misunderstood their novel and made a mess of the movie, but often the authors themselves had a very poor sense of filmmaking. They also indulged in long dialogs and poor pacing.

Alfred Hitchcock said, “Never use words to describe what you can simply show.”A filmmaker should think visually first, but most Tamil filmmakers think verbally. This led to absurd scenes. For example, there are scenes where a character walks into a room and  says things like, “There is nobody here” or “Ah, there is a glass of water.” The audience can see this, why this superfluous dialogue?

A brilliant example of visual filmmaking is from the Hollywood film Gandhi. In a scene, Gandhi washes his face in the river, when he notices a desperately poor woman, washing half her saree. She is so poor she has only one saree and she can only wash one half of it while wearing the other. Not even looking at her, and not wantingto overtly walk over and give her a shawl, Gandhi lets slip his shawl into the river, and it gently floats to the lady. She gratefully grabs it. Without one word being spoken, the filmmaker Richard Attenborough shows the compassion of Gandhi...

Often a film can be inspired by a short story, not a novel. Such was Baskar Shakti’s short story, made into a wonderful film Azhagar Saamiyin Kuthirai (Azhagar Saami’s horse) அழகர் சாமியின் குதிரை.

The Malayalam film Madhilukkal (Walls) மதிலுக்கள் has a scene of the line where the protagonist in the novel, a prisoner, says, “I could smell women, on the other side of the wall”. Because a womens prison was on the other side. Adoor Gopalakrishnan the director, could not show the character smelling the walls. So he introduces a peal of a woman's laughter. This is creative interpretation, and evokes the same emotion the author intended.

Overall, Tamil unfortunately doesn't have a good relationship between literature and film. Several novelists' books have not been made into films.

Cinema is not for entertainment, he concluded.

Gopu’s Comments

While I whole heartedly agree with Theodore Baskaran in his criticism of Tamil cinema as being too verbal, photographed drama, and not often visual, I think he is totally off the mark on two issues.

1. Songs – Indian audiences love them. In fact cinema music is the most succesful and popular music industry and genre in India. The bulk of the audience simply doesn’t care that the narrative is broken or retarded, or irrelevant to the film. Often the songs are far more popular than the movies.
2. “Cinema is not for entertainment.” I think what Theodore Baskaran means, is that cinema is a powerful medium that can be used to educate and mould public opinion, improve society etc.  Personally I prefer entertaining cinema to any advice and propaganda.
3. Literature versus Cinema. I think good literature (itself a very subjective estimation, usually by a segment of the population that reads a lot of books, and has an innate sense of superiority) rarely makes for good cinema (another subjective estimation). In contrast, often so called mediocre novels, make for excellent and successful cinema, because they appeal to more than snobs and nabobs. John Grisham and Chetan Bhagat’s novels are the most popular proof. Often the “mediocrity” of one generation is the classic of its succeeding generations.

Related Links
Theodore Baskaran’s essay in Madras Musings How Old is Tamil Cinema
Pradeep Chakravarthy essay in Madras Musings on Gods of the Holy Koovam 

Indian Literature – Four hundred Shakespeares, zero Jules Vernes
Rajaji –A Biographical Lecture by Dr Va Ve Subramaniam
Francis Whyte Ellis - by Thomas Trautmann
தமிழ் இலக்கியம் – ஒரு கால அட்டவணை


Books
Gods of the Holy Koovam by Padmapriya Baskaran

Friday, 4 May 2018

Indian Mathematics and Astronomy - A summer course

Have you heard of the Ujjain Meridian? It was used for 1500 years, but why is it unknown to Indians, unlike the Greenwich Meridian?
How did Aryabhata Brahmagupta Bhaskara and Varahamihira do mathematics without knowing English or Greek? Was Sanskrit only the language of rituals and literature, or also of mathematics and science? Can you calculate long divisions in very narrow palm leaves?

How did Indians tell time, predict eclipses, make calendars and mark dates for religious festivals like Kumbha Mela or Mahamagham before the mechanical clock was invented in the seventeenth century? And what mathematics or astronomy did the Egyptians Chinese Sumerians Persians and Mayans understand or discover?

Learn the answers to these questions.

Learn the history of Indian mathematics and astronomy and its various texts, including Siddhantas, bhashyas, karanas, and panchangams. Discover Baudhayana’s geometry and Brahmagupta’s algebra. Discover the long history of Indian Astronomy before the telescope, Indian mathematics before Aryabhata, the connections from Brahmagupta to Baghdad to Fibonacci and other surprising and interesting facts that pervade your everyday life even today.
You can send me a Whatsapp message on +91 9841724641 or email to writergopu@gmail.com to register or ask questions on the course
My blogs on this theme

Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Is India Secular - Michel Danino lecture


Michel Danino, at CLT, IIT Madras

Michel Danino, a professor at IIT Gandhinagar delivered the second Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay Memorial lecture for the Vande Mataram group, at Central Lecture Theater, IIT Madras, on April 23, 2018. The topic of the lecture was “Is India a secular nation?”

He first showed a picture of Rani-Ka-Vav, a magnificently sculpted 11th century stepwell built by a queen of the Solanki dynasty at Patan, Gujarat. He asked if any student could recognize it. One did.
 
Circular segments, Rani-ki-Vav
This is my photo when I visited it
This is not the photo Danino showed
These are my notes from Michel Danino’s lecture.

A well is a secular structure, but this one is replete with Hindu sculptures. It has a central sculpture of Vishnu as Anantasayana, reclining in the ocean. Is it Secular?

The slabs of the well are segments of large circle, ten metres in diameter, sculpted on the ground, then lowered, and assembled. No craftsman in India can do this today.

Jawaharlal Nehru, the darling of the secularists today, said this in the Constituent Assembly: “I would advise those gentleman who throw about the word Secularism to consult a dictionary, before using it.”

Socialism and Secularism were not in the Constitution of India in 1950 but added in the Forty second Amendment by PM Indira Gandhi in 1976 during the Emergency

Secularism is the principle of separation of state from religion, according to the Oxford English dictionary.

It was introduced as a principle of government Established by Europeans like French philosopher Voltaire, who wanted to free  their governments from the influence of Catholic church.

In the Muslim world, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk brought about the Turkish revolution  to establish a secular republic.

Before 1947, there was no word of Secularism in any Indian language. Words coined in Indian languages like “dharma nirapeksha” in hindi and “madha chaarparra
” மதச் சார்பற்ற in Tamil express indifference to religion, not so much separation of religion and government.

In ancient India there was no state religion. Medieval Europe though, suffered from religious rule. No ancient Indian ruler ever imposed his religion on his subjects. Not even Samrat Asoka the most powerful king imposed his religion. In fact, his edict declares these principles:
  • All should be well learned in good doctrines of other religions
  • No condemnation of any religion
  • No excessive devotion or praise for one's religion


Kharavela, the Jain emperor of Kalinga around 150 BC has inscribed his own edict in Prakrit in the Udayagiri Khondagiri hills near Bhubhaneshvar, Orissa. He says, he fought to bring back Jain images, which were taken away by invaders. But he portrays himself as "worshipper of all religious orders,  the restorer of shrines of all gods."

People call this tolerance, but this is much more than mere tolerance. Tolerance is such a condescending word.

If there is no state religion, why talk of Secularism? It has no relevance in Indian context.

The only thing Indian kings were under a theoretical compulsion to follow were a code of ethics.

“India has been a nation of pilgrimage from South to North to places like Amarnath Badrinath etc and North to South to places like Kanyakumari.” This was said by Jawaharlal Nehru, at Madurai Congress session, in 1961.

Let us look at Vande Maatharam, a song composed by Bankim Chandra Chatterjee. It is now controversial because he says let's worship our nation as a mother (maatharam), a Goddess. It became a popular song against Partition of Bengal in 1905, among both Muslims and 
Hindus. But later on Muslim politicians said they cannot sing any song that portrays a nation as a Goddess.

The Preamble of India’s Constitution guarantees equality of status irrespective of religion caste or gender. But Articles 28, 29, 30 give religious and linguistic minorities special rights to manage their


  • Places of worship
  • Educational institutions
But Hindus are not given  right to administer their own temples with the argument that they are too divided. Only Muslims and Christians are discussed as minorities. Not Sikhs Jains Buddhists Parsis etc.

Muslims are 190 million in number in India. This is three times the population of Britain. Can this huge a community be considered a minority? Are they oppressed minority in any way? 

I used to live in the Nilgiris in Tamilnadu for twenty years. In Nilgiris, Christians own almost all the big bungalows, the estates, educational institutions. Is this an oppressed minority?

Is the Hindu majority monolithic? Being Bengali is very important for Bengalis, being Tamil is very important for Tamils etc. Sometimes, more so even than being Hindu.

Tajamul Hussain, a Member of the Constituent Assembly  said: “Sir I don't believe there is any minority community in this country. I don't believe I'm from a minority. We all have equal status.”

Damodar Swarup Seth, another Member of the Constituent Assembly, said: “Minorities based on religion or community should Not be recognized in a Secular Nation. If done that would be negation of Secularism.”

How Secularism sometimes became allergic to Hinduism became apparent in the episodes relating to reconstruction of Somnath temple.

By the prevailing standards, Hindu community should be declared a minority in Kashmir. But the Supreme Court asks Parliament whether it should be so declared and Parliament asks the Supreme Court to decide on this. It's just a political football with no conclusion.

Even teaching Sanskrit was considered against Secularism, until the Supreme Court declared that you could teach Sanskrit without violating the Constitution.

I teach at IIT Gandhinagar and I'm afraid most Indians are terribly unaware of their own civilization and culture. Unlike say Egypt whose modern citizens have no continuity with their past civilization  of pyramids and pharaohs, India has a continuous living tradition.

Not everything about India was the best, there were dark spots, but the best of India is amazing. 

My words are not a final answer, but just a contribution.

Danino concluded with this statement made by Aurobindo Ghosh in 1908-09.

“In India we have been cut off by a mercenary and soulless education from all our ancient roots of culture and tradition… National education… [is] the education which starting with the pastandmaking full use of the present builds up a great nation. Whoever wishes to cut off the nation from its past is no friend of national growth. Whoever fails to take advantage of the present is losing the battle of life. We must therefore save for India all that she has stored up of knowledge, character and noble thought in her immemorial past. We must acquire for her the best knowledge that Europe can give her and assimilate it to her own peculiar type of national temperament. We must introduce the best methods of teaching humanity has developed, whether modern or ancient. And all these mwe must harmonize into a system which will be impregnated with the spirit of self reliance so as to build up men and not machines”

In response to a student’s question where “dharma nirapeksha” is a suitable Hindi word for secularism, and wouldn’t madham rather dharma be the word for religion, Danino replied, “Dharma is a Sanskrit word that is quite different from religion. But it is used to mean religion in Hindi. It's a great injustice to the word and concept.

Dharma doesn't even require a belief in God or belief in particular Gods, which religions do.

Another questioner asked if secularism is not important given the "current government which is inspired by Nazism". Danino retorted that this is the kind of uncivil language used by most advocates of secularism, that discourages honest debate. If this government is inspired by Nazism, where are the concentration camps, he asked.

Danino has written a book about the lost Sarasvati river and delivered a lecture about it for Tamil Heritage Trust. He was bestowed the Padma Shri by the government of India in 2017.


Links to related topics

Video - An explanation of the Kharavela inscription


My other lecture notes

Politics

Gurumurthy on Demonetization
Political Situation in Nepal - Kanakmani Dixit

Science

1493 – The Columbian Exchange - Charles Mann
Art and the Brain - Vilayanur S Ramachandran
Sanskritam and Mathematics - Manjul Bharagava 
Faraday and GN Lewis - CNR Rao 
Clouds - Rama Govindarajan

Economics

Renminbi as international currency - Jacob Kurien

Literature

Subramanya Bharathi’s Essays - KRA Narasiah
Rajaji the writer - Va Ve Subramaniam
Vai Mu Kothainayaki - Va Ve Subramaniam
Siddharthan book on Samrat Asoka

Sociology

Law



Experiences of a lawyer and judge

Saturday, 14 April 2018

Tamil New Year Vilambi - An astronomical note


சென்ற ஹேவிளம்பி ஆண்டு புத்தாண்டு வான்நிலையும் வரைபடத்தையும் நான் விளக்கிய தமிழ் கட்டுரை இங்கே

The period from one sunrise to another, is called a dina दिनः or aha अहः in Sanskrit. Since the Sun causes the day, he is called Dina kara (दिनकरः the maker of the Day). The English astronomical term for this is Solar Day.

The period from one moonrise to another, is called a thithi तिथि in Sanskrit. The English astronomical term is Lunar Day.

There are thirty thithi-s, fifteen from new moon to full moon (called waxing fortnight in English and shukla paksha in Sanskrit), and fifteen from full moon to new moon (called waning fortnight inEnglish and krishna paksha in Sanskrit). This thirty thithi period is called a month in English and maasa in Sanskrit. Note that each thithi or lunar day is slightly shorter than each solar day. The period between two full moons is only 29 1/2 days, not thirty, though, so twelve full moons will come upto 354 rather than 365 days.

Each night the moon changes its position in the sky against the background stars (because it is orbiting the earth). In the Vedic period, the name of the brightest star next to the moon on each night was observed to fall in a certain cylce…. Ashwini, Bharani, Kriththika, Rohini….with series ending in Revathy on the twenty seventh night. So each night or day was called by that star… or नक्षत्रम् nakshatram; the English astronomoical term for this is Stellar Day. They also noted that moon became  a full moon, only when it was next to some stars of this list of twenty seven; hence the months were named after those stars. 

So the month where the full moon was next to Chitra was called Chaitra; when next to Visaka was called Vaisaaki, when next to Kritthikaa was called Kaarthika, when next to Mrigasirsha the month was called Maargasirsha….and so on. You can see local adaptations of these names in various languages. So Vaisakhaa is called Baisaaki in some languages, Sravishtam is called Avittam in Tamil, etc.

In Sumeria, China, Egypt, and later in Rome, the local people saw patterns made by stars in they sky, reminding them of things like a bull or fish or crab and they named these collection of stars (con=collection; stellation=of star). Hence we have constellations like Taurus(bull), Cancer (crab), Pisces(fish). This idea of constellations was not used by early Indian astronomers, but adopted later, though it is not clear when this happened. Perhaps between the fifth century BC and fifth century AD, before Aryabhata, Varahamihira and others heralded a new epoch of Indian astronomy and mathematics.

This is a star chart of picture of tonight’s night sky, around 8 pm, towards the east. It wont change significantly for the next few days. On the full moon night, the moon will be seen near Chitra (Spica), hence the name for this month. The moon can be seen near corresponding stars (nakshatras) on those nights. None of the planets can be seen in the eastern sky now, until around 11pm when Jupiter will quite visible and bright. Venus, bright in the western sky, can be seen for about an hour or so after sunset.

Eastern Sky Vilambi Year
April 14, 2018 

The red line, called Ecliptic in the chart, is the path of the Sun and the Moon across the sky. You can see that is at an angle to the Equator, because of the earth's axial tilt.

Compare the above with the night sky last year on the same day, April 14 2017 or Hevilambi New Year’s night. The moon was near Vishaka, and Jupiter was visible.

Eastern night sky Hevilambi
April 14, 2017

And I also present the night sky below on April 14, 2014, or Jaya New Year’s night. Saturn and Mars were visible in the same region. Also by coincidence, the NewYear was also night of the Full moon, Chitra Pournami, so the moon was next to Spica (Chithra)

Eastern night sky Jaya
April 14, 2014

Here is a list of star names in Sanskrit, Tamil, the corresponding month names, and English/Latin names.

If you enjoyed this piece of astronomy, perhaps these other essays may also interest you.

Nilakantha Somayyaji’s Sanskrit mathematical pun
Aryabhata’s sloka for pi
Varahamihira’s salutation to Agastya
My essay on Aryabhata in The Week magazine



Nakshatra names in Sanskrit English and Tamil

This multilingual table is listed as a separate blog post, so I (and others) can reference in it my other essays. I prepared it mainly based on printed notes handed out by Dr Devadoss, who taught a class on astronomy at the Birla Planetarium in Kotturpuram, Madras, in 2004.

Star Name in Sanskrit
Sanskrit Month
Tamil Month
Star Name in Tamil
Star name with constellation
Star name in English or Arabic

Asvini
Asvina
ஐப்பசி
அசுவினி
Beta Aries

Bharani


பரணி
35 Aries

Krittika
Karthika
கார்த்திகை
கார்த்திகை
Eta Tauri
Alcyone
Rohini


ரோகிணி
Alpha Tauri
Aldebaran
Mrigasirsa
Margarisa
மார்கழி
மிருகசீரிசம்
Lambda Orionis

Ardra


திருவாதிரை
Alpha Orionis
Betelgeuse
Punarvasu


புனர்பூசம்
Beta Geminoram
Pollux
Pushya
Pausa
தை
பூசம்
Delta Canceri

Aslesha


ஆயில்யம்
81 Canceri

Magha
Magha
மாசி
மகம்
Alpha Leonis
Regulus
Poorva Phalguni


பூரம்
Theta Leonis

Uthara Phalguni
Phalguni
பங்குனி
உத்திரம்
Beta Leonis
Denebola
Hastha


அஸ்தம்
Delta Corvi

Chithra
Chaithra
சித்திரை
சித்திரை
Alpha Virginis
Spica
Swathi


ஸ்வாதி
Alpha Bootes
Arcturus
Visaka
Vaisaka
வைகாசி
விசாகம்
Iota Libra

Anuradha


அனுஷம்
Beta Scorpii

Jyeshta
Jyaistha
ஆனி
கேட்டை
Alpha Scorpii
Antares
Moola


மூலம்
Lambda Scorpii
Shaula
Poorva Ashada
Ashada
ஆடி
பூராடம்
Delta Sagittarii

Uthara Ashada


உத்திராடம்
Phi Sagittarii

Sravana
Sravana
ஆவணி
திருவோணம்
Alpha Aquilae
Altair
Sravistha


அவிட்டம்
Alpha Delphini

Satabhishaj


சதயம்
Alpha Aquarii

Poorva Bhadrapada
Bhadrapada
புரட்டாசி
பூரட்டாதி
Alpha Pegasii
Markab
Uthara Bhadrapada


உத்திரட்டாதி
Gamma Pegasii
Algenib
Revathi


ரேவதி
Zeta Pescium


Notes November 13, 2022 Some of these star identifications are contested or disputed. 
Chidamabaram Iyer of Madurai in is the Introduction to his 1884 English  translation of Varahamihira's Brihat Samhita (1885) disagrees that Revathi is Zeta Piscium, as it is not on the ecliptic. He also writes that the star Revathi seems to have disappeared. Did it turn nova, but went unobserved by Indian astronomers. 
There are other scholars who disagree that Betelgeuse is Ardra or Tiruvaadirai for similar reasons.