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Alagu Subramaniam

Alagu Subramaniam (1910–1971) was a British Ceylon born writer, a prominent figure in London's Bloomsbury literary circle, a Barrister-at-Law of The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn, and an Advocate of the Supreme Court of Ceylon.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14]

Alagu Subramaniam
Alagu Subramaniam
Born1910
Died1971
Occupation(s)Writer, Barrister
Known forAuthor of The Big Girl & Other Stories

He is the author of The Big Girl & Other Stories a retro-collection of short stories; they recount scenes of life in Jaffna during the colonial era, which includes the short story "Professional Mourners" which reflects the obsolete customs and practices of professional mourning done by some Sri Lankan Tamil communities.

He also authored the book Closing Time & Other Stories which contains stories set in London during the World War 2 era.

Mulk Raj Anand and Iqbal Singh published one of his short stories in their anthology Indian Short Stories (New India Publishing Company, 1946). His short stories were published by a number of journals, such as Life, Letters Today, Left Review and Tribune.[1]

He was involved with the anti-colonial organization Swaraj House which was formed in 1942 as a break-away group from the British Committee of the Indian National Congress.[1]

He was one of the founders and editors of the literary magazine Indian Writing of which Rabindranath Tagore and Jawaharlal Nehru also contributed.[1]

Early life

Alagu Subramaniam belongs to the Sri Lankan Tamil community. His father was a judge in Ceylon and his grandfather was a literary personage.[10][14]

He had his early schooling at Jaffna Central College.[15]

Commentary by notable people

"Mr. Subramaniayam could have had a sound practice at the English Bar, but he preferred to pursue his literary work, which is of a higher order"

- Lester Hutchinson, D es L., Former MP (British House of Commons)[10][14]

"Stories told sardonically and succinctly"

- Philip Day, Sunday Times (London)[10][14]

"Among the Sri Lankan writers who belonged to the English-speaking elite of the early post-independence era, the London-based barrister Alagu Subramaniam used to be prominent. At a time we are heading for the third decade of the 21st Century, when most of what used to be commonplace has become history, it was a great pleasure to have a copy of the new impression of the 1964 imprint of The Big Girl & Other Stories by Subramaniam whose "Professional Mourners", I consider one of the best Sri Lankan short stories written in English for the sincerity and localness he maintains throughout his narration. My paper on it uploaded to the www.academia.edu in early 2018 under the topic "Servile Mourning for the Powerful: A Critical Reading of ‘Professional Mourners’ by Alagu Subramaniam" has attracted nearly 4000 views from an international readership spread across the world. I have received many commendations for uploading it as the humour it carries is both innocent, and caustic at the same time."

- E. A. Gamini Fonseka BA (Kelaniya), MA (Edinburgh), PhD (Vaasa), Senior Professor in English, Department of English[3]

Personal life

Alagu Subramaniam was married to a graduate teacher.[10][14]

The Big Girl & Other Stories

The Big Girl & Other Stories
 
AuthorAlagu Subramaniam
CountrySri Lanka
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort Stories
PublisherBay Owl Press(Sri Lanka)
Publication date
2018(originally published in 1964)
Media typeReprint
ISBN978-955-1723-41-5

The Big Girl & Other Stories is a retro-collection of short stories by Alagu Subramaniam.

The stories recount scenes of life in Jaffna during the colonial era.[10][14]

The Big Girl contains 17 finely-written episodes(including “Professional Mourners” of humour, surprise, pathos and rare insight into the daily lives of people, with all the historical, religious, cultural and psychological diversity and complexity.[9]

The style of these stories is deceptively simple (although the stories never are). By using simple language and few obvious stylistic devices, every word becomes important.[9]

The book which had disappeared from circulation has now been updated and reprinted in its entirety. These stories evocatively capture the ethos of an era now past and will leave someone nostalgic for a simpler time.[10][14]

Background

When this book of short stories written by Alagu Subramaniam was first published in 1964, Ceylon had been independent of the British for about 16 years. Then as now, the effect of colonialism was a topic of open discussion.[9]

English writers of the past have often written from the perspective of coloniser rather than colonised. However, Ceylonese born Subramaniam writes from a Sri Lankan viewpoint. In the stories we are shown, not told. Alagu Subramaniam makes each story a small jewel of drama and compassion, revealing in large ways and small.[9]

Solomon’s Justice

One example. “Solomon’s Justice” shows how an imported religious tradition (evangelical Christianity) – here a too literal understanding of a Christian story – can desensitise people to what native traditions themselves preserve.[9]

In this story, the collision of traditions is emphasised by the coroner - who wears both white, ‘the appropriate colour for an Asian funeral’ and black, a ‘necktie, the symbol of European mourning’. The magistrate, presiding over a dispute about who is wife and who ex-wife to their deceased husband and thus entitled to make funeral arrangements, insists that the disputants keep ‘the Queen’s peace’.[9]

But the appropriateness of keeping to standards of European decorum in a Sri Lankan context is immediately questioned – ‘”The Queen’s peace in Buckingham Palace?’” The dispute’s ‘resolution’ is eventually provided by a Mother Superior. Her brutal suggestion: severing the corpse in half, thus solving the problem over the funeral, a ceremony intended as a mark of reverence, love and respect for the deceased.[9]

The Thorn

Other stories show how the displacement of traditional culture can affect so deeply the most vulnerable. “The Thorn” shows the emotional effects on a very young girl (learning English reduces her to tears), and demonstrates the casual emotional blackmail involved (your Mother won't go to heaven). These effects embed themselves into even the simplest daily act – eating a meal – causing frustration and distress through the inability to eat ‘properly’ with a ‘thorn’ (fork), rather than her fingers.[9]

The Scholar

Several stories examine the conflict between a modernising younger generation and an older tradition. In “The Scholar” Thambirajah is introduced as successful in the new, modern way (having received a scholarship to study in England for three years). Such success ironically makes him an attractive prospect for a traditional arranged marriage, which his parents duly organise for him.[9]

The story turns on this conflict between tradition and modernity, older and younger generations (Tharimbirajah has met another student, Radha, and both want to marry). However, in the end the force of tradition wins out (and here force means exactly that, physical force – Radha is beaten into submission). The power of tradition is more destructive still than simply separating two young people – but read the story to discover its ending.[9]

Cousin Thampoo

In “Cousin Thampoo” for example, changing the position of a single comma in the story's final sentence would have entirely changed the story's significance. The story's ending as written is the more complex and resonating one, an example of the care, craft and wisdom of writer and stories.[9]

Professional Mourners

In “Professional Mourners”, a funeral in a village is depicted where a self-important organiser of the funeral behaving inhumanly with low caste professional mourners despite their own mother's death on that morning.[9]

The lower caste women, gets unexpected sympathy at the funeral, and the organizer of the funeral put himself in an awkward position.[9]

Closing Time & Other Stories

Closing Time & Other Stories
 
AuthorAlagu Subramaniam
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort Stories
PublisherOhm Books Publishing(United Kingdom)
Publication date
2021(originally published in 1971)
Media typeReprint
ISBN979-853-1049-59-9

Closing Time & Other Stories is a collection of short stories set in London and depicts the life of a foreign student in the Second World War era London.[15]

Single Room

Single Room is about a new student in London, looking for a room for himself.[15]

The Kid

The Kid features a law student who is also a writer.[15]

Liabilities

Liabilities is about a barrister who also works as a manager of a bookshop.[15]

Closing Time

Closing Time is about a number of writers and poets who move from one pub to another after each one closes.[15]

Bibliography

  • Subramaniam, Alagu (1964), The Big Girl and Other Stories, Universal Printers(Sri Lanka)(Original from The University of Michigan; Digitized 5 Mar 2007), ISBN 955-1723-41-4
  • Subramaniam, Alagu (2018), The Big Girl and Other Stories, Bay Owl Press(Sri Lanka)(Reprint), ISBN 978-955-1723-41-5
  • Subramaniam, Alagu (2021), Closing Time, Ohm Books Publishing(United Kingdom)(Reprint), ISBN 979-853-1049-59-9

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Alagu Subramaniam". Open University. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Professional Mourners by Alagu Subramaniam". Scholar’s Park. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Reminiscences of the Traditional Jaffna Community in Transition under Colonialism". The Island (Sri Lanka). 23 June 2019. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Spam Professional Moourners, By Alagu Subramaniam". Bartleby.com. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  5. ^ "Servile Mourning for the Powerful: A Critical Reading of "Professional Mourners" by Alagu Subramaniam". Academia.edu. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Alagu Subramaniam Analysis". Internet Public Library. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  7. ^ "Spam 'Professional Mourners' By Alagu Subramaniam". Internet Public Library. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  8. ^ Subramaniam, Alagu (9 May 2012). "The Mathematician". Wasafiri. 27 (2): 25–27. doi:10.1080/02690055.2012.662313. S2CID 219612432. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "The Big Girl". Daily FT. 16 February 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "The Big Girl". Perera Hussein Publishing House. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  11. ^ "The Big Girl". Rakuten Kobo. 14 January 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  12. ^ "The Big Girl". Sarasavi Bookshop. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  13. ^ "A Funeral and Its Professional Lamentation". Thuppahi’s Blog. 6 March 2017. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g "The Big Girl And Other Stories". Mary Martin Bookshop. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  15. ^ a b c d e f "The extraordinary Alagu Subramaniam". Daily Mirror(Sri Lanka). 21 November 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2020.

External links

  • The Extraordinary Alagu Subramaniam, Thuppahi's Blog

alagu, subramaniam, 1910, 1971, british, ceylon, born, writer, prominent, figure, london, bloomsbury, literary, circle, barrister, honourable, society, lincoln, advocate, supreme, court, ceylon, born1910jaffna, british, ceylondied1971jaffnaoccupation, writer, . Alagu Subramaniam 1910 1971 was a British Ceylon born writer a prominent figure in London s Bloomsbury literary circle a Barrister at Law of The Honourable Society of Lincoln s Inn and an Advocate of the Supreme Court of Ceylon 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Alagu SubramaniamAlagu SubramaniamBorn1910Jaffna British CeylonDied1971JaffnaOccupation s Writer BarristerKnown forAuthor of The Big Girl amp Other StoriesHe is the author of The Big Girl amp Other Stories a retro collection of short stories they recount scenes of life in Jaffna during the colonial era which includes the short story Professional Mourners which reflects the obsolete customs and practices of professional mourning done by some Sri Lankan Tamil communities He also authored the book Closing Time amp Other Stories which contains stories set in London during the World War 2 era Mulk Raj Anand and Iqbal Singh published one of his short stories in their anthology Indian Short Stories New India Publishing Company 1946 His short stories were published by a number of journals such as Life Letters Today Left Review and Tribune 1 He was involved with the anti colonial organization Swaraj House which was formed in 1942 as a break away group from the British Committee of the Indian National Congress 1 He was one of the founders and editors of the literary magazine Indian Writing of which Rabindranath Tagore and Jawaharlal Nehru also contributed 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Commentary by notable people 3 Personal life 4 The Big Girl amp Other Stories 4 1 Background 4 2 Solomon s Justice 4 3 The Thorn 4 4 The Scholar 4 5 Cousin Thampoo 4 6 Professional Mourners 5 Closing Time amp Other Stories 5 1 Single Room 5 2 The Kid 5 3 Liabilities 5 4 Closing Time 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditAlagu Subramaniam belongs to the Sri Lankan Tamil community His father was a judge in Ceylon and his grandfather was a literary personage 10 14 He had his early schooling at Jaffna Central College 15 Commentary by notable people Edit Mr Subramaniayam could have had a sound practice at the English Bar but he preferred to pursue his literary work which is of a higher order Lester Hutchinson D es L Former MP British House of Commons 10 14 dd dd dd dd dd Stories told sardonically and succinctly Philip Day Sunday Times London 10 14 dd dd dd dd dd Among the Sri Lankan writers who belonged to the English speaking elite of the early post independence era the London based barrister Alagu Subramaniam used to be prominent At a time we are heading for the third decade of the 21st Century when most of what used to be commonplace has become history it was a great pleasure to have a copy of the new impression of the 1964 imprint of The Big Girl amp Other Stories by Subramaniam whose Professional Mourners I consider one of the best Sri Lankan short stories written in English for the sincerity and localness he maintains throughout his narration My paper on it uploaded to the www academia edu in early 2018 under the topic Servile Mourning for the Powerful A Critical Reading of Professional Mourners by Alagu Subramaniam has attracted nearly 4000 views from an international readership spread across the world I have received many commendations for uploading it as the humour it carries is both innocent and caustic at the same time E A Gamini Fonseka BA Kelaniya MA Edinburgh PhD Vaasa Senior Professor in English Department of English 3 dd dd dd dd dd Personal life EditAlagu Subramaniam was married to a graduate teacher 10 14 The Big Girl amp Other Stories EditThe Big Girl amp Other Stories AuthorAlagu SubramaniamCountrySri LankaLanguageEnglishGenreShort StoriesPublisherBay Owl Press Sri Lanka Publication date2018 originally published in 1964 Media typeReprintISBN978 955 1723 41 5The Big Girl amp Other Stories is a retro collection of short stories by Alagu Subramaniam The stories recount scenes of life in Jaffna during the colonial era 10 14 The Big Girl contains 17 finely written episodes including Professional Mourners of humour surprise pathos and rare insight into the daily lives of people with all the historical religious cultural and psychological diversity and complexity 9 The style of these stories is deceptively simple although the stories never are By using simple language and few obvious stylistic devices every word becomes important 9 The book which had disappeared from circulation has now been updated and reprinted in its entirety These stories evocatively capture the ethos of an era now past and will leave someone nostalgic for a simpler time 10 14 Background Edit When this book of short stories written by Alagu Subramaniam was first published in 1964 Ceylon had been independent of the British for about 16 years Then as now the effect of colonialism was a topic of open discussion 9 English writers of the past have often written from the perspective of coloniser rather than colonised However Ceylonese born Subramaniam writes from a Sri Lankan viewpoint In the stories we are shown not told Alagu Subramaniam makes each story a small jewel of drama and compassion revealing in large ways and small 9 Solomon s Justice Edit One example Solomon s Justice shows how an imported religious tradition evangelical Christianity here a too literal understanding of a Christian story can desensitise people to what native traditions themselves preserve 9 In this story the collision of traditions is emphasised by the coroner who wears both white the appropriate colour for an Asian funeral and black a necktie the symbol of European mourning The magistrate presiding over a dispute about who is wife and who ex wife to their deceased husband and thus entitled to make funeral arrangements insists that the disputants keep the Queen s peace 9 But the appropriateness of keeping to standards of European decorum in a Sri Lankan context is immediately questioned The Queen s peace in Buckingham Palace The dispute s resolution is eventually provided by a Mother Superior Her brutal suggestion severing the corpse in half thus solving the problem over the funeral a ceremony intended as a mark of reverence love and respect for the deceased 9 The Thorn Edit Other stories show how the displacement of traditional culture can affect so deeply the most vulnerable The Thorn shows the emotional effects on a very young girl learning English reduces her to tears and demonstrates the casual emotional blackmail involved your Mother won t go to heaven These effects embed themselves into even the simplest daily act eating a meal causing frustration and distress through the inability to eat properly with a thorn fork rather than her fingers 9 The Scholar Edit Several stories examine the conflict between a modernising younger generation and an older tradition In The Scholar Thambirajah is introduced as successful in the new modern way having received a scholarship to study in England for three years Such success ironically makes him an attractive prospect for a traditional arranged marriage which his parents duly organise for him 9 The story turns on this conflict between tradition and modernity older and younger generations Tharimbirajah has met another student Radha and both want to marry However in the end the force of tradition wins out and here force means exactly that physical force Radha is beaten into submission The power of tradition is more destructive still than simply separating two young people but read the story to discover its ending 9 Cousin Thampoo Edit In Cousin Thampoo for example changing the position of a single comma in the story s final sentence would have entirely changed the story s significance The story s ending as written is the more complex and resonating one an example of the care craft and wisdom of writer and stories 9 Professional Mourners Edit In Professional Mourners a funeral in a village is depicted where a self important organiser of the funeral behaving inhumanly with low caste professional mourners despite their own mother s death on that morning 9 The lower caste women gets unexpected sympathy at the funeral and the organizer of the funeral put himself in an awkward position 9 Closing Time amp Other Stories EditClosing Time amp Other Stories AuthorAlagu SubramaniamCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishGenreShort StoriesPublisherOhm Books Publishing United Kingdom Publication date2021 originally published in 1971 Media typeReprintISBN979 853 1049 59 9Closing Time amp Other Stories is a collection of short stories set in London and depicts the life of a foreign student in the Second World War era London 15 Single Room Edit Single Room is about a new student in London looking for a room for himself 15 The Kid Edit The Kid features a law student who is also a writer 15 Liabilities Edit Liabilities is about a barrister who also works as a manager of a bookshop 15 Closing Time Edit Closing Time is about a number of writers and poets who move from one pub to another after each one closes 15 Bibliography EditSubramaniam Alagu 1964 The Big Girl and Other Stories Universal Printers Sri Lanka Original from The University of Michigan Digitized 5 Mar 2007 ISBN 955 1723 41 4Subramaniam Alagu 2018 The Big Girl and Other Stories Bay Owl Press Sri Lanka Reprint ISBN 978 955 1723 41 5Subramaniam Alagu 2021 Closing Time Ohm Books Publishing United Kingdom Reprint ISBN 979 853 1049 59 9References Edit a b c d Alagu Subramaniam Open University Retrieved 19 September 2020 Professional Mourners by Alagu Subramaniam Scholar s Park Retrieved 19 September 2020 a b Reminiscences of the Traditional Jaffna Community in Transition under Colonialism The Island Sri Lanka 23 June 2019 Retrieved 19 September 2020 Spam Professional Moourners By Alagu Subramaniam Bartleby com Retrieved 19 September 2020 Servile Mourning for the Powerful A Critical Reading of Professional Mourners by Alagu Subramaniam Academia edu Retrieved 19 September 2020 Alagu Subramaniam Analysis Internet Public Library Retrieved 19 September 2020 Spam Professional Mourners By Alagu Subramaniam Internet Public Library Retrieved 22 September 2020 Subramaniam Alagu 9 May 2012 The Mathematician Wasafiri 27 2 25 27 doi 10 1080 02690055 2012 662313 S2CID 219612432 Retrieved 22 September 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n The Big Girl Daily FT 16 February 2019 Retrieved 22 September 2020 a b c d e f g The Big Girl Perera Hussein Publishing House Retrieved 22 September 2020 The Big Girl Rakuten Kobo 14 January 2019 Retrieved 22 September 2020 The Big Girl Sarasavi Bookshop Retrieved 22 September 2020 A Funeral and Its Professional Lamentation Thuppahi s Blog 6 March 2017 Retrieved 19 September 2020 a b c d e f g The Big Girl And Other Stories Mary Martin Bookshop Retrieved 22 September 2020 a b c d e f The extraordinary Alagu Subramaniam Daily Mirror Sri Lanka 21 November 2020 Retrieved 22 November 2020 External links EditThe Extraordinary Alagu Subramaniam Thuppahi s Blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alagu Subramaniam amp oldid 1137717178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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