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Sahitya Akademi Fellowship

The Sahitya Akademi Fellowship is a literary honour in India bestowed by the Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters.[1][2] It is the highest honour conferred by the Akademi on a living writer,[1] the number of fellows at no time exceeding 21.[3] Elected from among writers thought by the Akademi to be of acknowledged merit, the fellows are sometimes described as the "immortals of Indian literature."[3][4]

Sahitya Akademi Fellowship
Awarded forLiterary award in India
Sponsored bySahitya Akademi
First awarded1968
Last awarded2021
Highlights
Total awarded92
First winnerSarvepalli Radhakrishnan
Last winner
WebsiteOfficial Website

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was the first writer elected to the Fellowship; Mulk Raj Anand was the first Indian English writer to be inducted in 1989 and R. K. Narayan in 1994, the second.[5]

History and purpose

The appointment of Fellows to the Sahitya Akademi was based in part on models of academies of letters, and in particular, on the Académie française's model of honouring literary excellent by electing writers as Members.[6] The initial Constitution of the Academy proposed a limited membership of twenty-one Fellows, who were to be "literary persons of outstanding merit".[7] The first General Committee recommended an expansion in the number of fellows, by including fifty Associate Fellows, as well as five Honorary Fellows. The latter provision was to enable the Akademi to honour foreign writers as well. Despite the inclusion of this provision, the Akademi did not make appointments to the position of Associate Fellows, and in 1999 the provision for their appointment was deleted.[7]

Soon after the death of Jawaharlal Nehru, who was the first President of the Sahitya Akademi, Mulk Raj Anand proposed that Nehru be elected as a Fellow of the Akademi posthumously. This proposal was rejected, and the Akademi took the view that Fellowships would only be conferred upon living writers.[8] The General Council has, as a practice, refrained from electing its own members for the Fellowship, although there have been instances of members of the General Council become fellows after their term on the Council ends. A significant exception to this practice is the appointment of D. Jayakanthan as a Fellow while he was serving on the council.[9]

The first Fellow of the Akademi, S. Radhakrishnan, was elected as Fellow in 1968, fourteen years after the Akademi was constituted. Radhakrishnan had previously served on the Council of the Sahitya Akademi, first as vice-president, and later, as president.[9] He was appointed "in recognition of his outstanding contribution to Indian thought and to the tradition of universal humanism".[9] The first woman to be elected Fellow was Mahadevi Varma, in 1979, .[10] followed by three women writers in 1994 (Malayalam poet Balamani Amma, Bengali novelist and poet Ashapoorna Devi, and Urdu novelist Qurratulain Hyder). Hindi author Krishna Sobti was honoured in 1996, and English novelist Anita Desai in 2009.[11] On 16 February 2016, the Akademi announced the fellowship to Punjabi writer and novelist Gurdial Singh and Bengali poet Nirendranath Chakravarty. As of 2017, there are only 20 fellows of the Sahitya Akademi.[a][11][13]

Appointment of fellowships

The executive board of the Akademi recommends the names of literary persons to be elected as Fellows and Honorary Fellows to the General Council. The General Council, who operates for the period of five years, holds an authority to elect a fellow based on the recommendation made by the executive board.[14]

The fellowship was established in 1968 and is limited to twenty individuals at any given time.[11] As of 2016, the fellowship has been conferred on 92 writers.[11][13]

In 1994, the Akademi began the practice of holding an event called 'Samvad' in which Fellows read from their work, and each reading was followed by discussions with a panel of critics and writers.[15] The participants in the first series included V. B. Kolte (Marathi scholar, writer, and critic), Harbhajan Singh (Punjabi writer and critic) and Nagarjun (Maithili and Hindi poet and novelist).[15]

Fellowships to foreign authors

In addition to twenty-one fellowships to Indian nationals, the Sahitya Akademi has also instituted three fellowships to international writers and scholars.

Honorary fellowships

The Sahitya Akademi's Constitution provides for the appointment of 'Honorary Fellows' of the Akademi "from among literary persons of outstanding merit who are not nationals of India".[14] The number of such fellowships is limited to ten individuals at any given time, an increase from the original provision for five fellows.[7] The first Honorary Fellow of the Akademi was appointed in 1974: the poet, the first President of Senegal, and theorist of Négritude Léopold Sédar Senghor.[16] The citation provided to him records that "Senghor is one of the leading literary figures of the African continent. As a linguist he has been working to establish links between Dravidian, Sumerian, ancient Egyptian and African languages..."[17] In his acceptance speech, Senghor described himself as an "old admmirer of the Indian Civilisation," emphasizing his fondness for the poetry of Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore.[17]

Other Honorary Fellows of the Akademi include American linguist and Indologist Edward C. Dimock; American professor of Sanskrit, Daniel Henry Holmes Ingall; Czech scholar of Dravidian studies, Kamil Vaclav Zvelebil; Chinese professor of Indian literature and translator, Ji Xianlin; Greek diplomant, scholar and poet, Vassilis Vitsaxis; and Russian academic and scholar of Indian history, Evgeni Petrovich Chelyshev.[18]

The most recent recipient of the fellowship is a Mauritian poet, novelist Abhimanyu Unnuth who was awarded in the year 2013.[11] As of 2016, nine individuals have been elected as honorary fellows.

Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship

Named after a Sri Lankan Tamil philosopher Ananda Coomaraswamy, the "Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship" was instituted in 1996 and is offered to "a person of eminence in the field of Asian art, culture, literature and language studies" from Asian countries to pursue literary projects. It was announced on three individuals, Sri Lankan Archaeologist Senake Bandaranayake, Japanese author and anthropologist Chie Nakane, and Uzbekistani professor Azad N. Shamatov.[b] The fellowship was discontinued after its first conferral and was revived in 2005 but no conferment has been made since then.

Premchand Fellowship

The "Premchand Fellowship" is instituted in 2005 and is named after Hindi writer Premchand, who is popularly known as "Munshi Premchand", during his 125th Birth Anniversary. It is given to "a person of eminence in the field of culture and literature" doing research on Indian literature or to creative writers from the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries other than India. The first and sole recipient of the fellowship is a Pakistani national and Urdu writer Intizar Hussain. The period of Fellowship for "Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship" and "Premchand Fellowship" ranges from one month to three months depending on the convenience and availability of the recipient. The visiting Fellow needs to submit a comprehensive report of their visit which is to be placed before the executive board and are requested to deliver lectures on the topic of their specialization in universities and institutions dealing in the discipline.[11]

List of fellows

 
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan is the first recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Fellowship.
 
Léopold Sédar Senghor is the first recipient of the Honorary Fellowship.
Current fellows of Sahitya Akademi (from top to bottom)
 
 
 
Manoj Das (2006)
Key
# Indicates a current fellow
  Indicates Honorary Fellowship
  Indicates Premchand Fellowship
§ Indicates Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship
List of Sahitya Akademi fellows, showing the year[11][13]
Year Recipient
1968 Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
1969 Tarasankar Bandyopadhyay
D. R. Bendre
Sumitranandan Pant
C. Rajagopalachari
1970 Vaikom Muhammad Basheer
Firaq Gorakhpuri
Vishnu Sakharam Khandekar
Viswanatha Satyanarayana
1971 Dattatreya Balkrushna Kalelkar
Gopinath Kaviraj
Kalindi Charan Panigrahi
Gurbaksh Singh
1973 Masti Venkatesha Iyengar
Mangharam Udharam Malkani
Nilmoni Phukan
Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi
Sukumar Sen
Vishnuprasad Ranchhodlal Trivedi
1974 Léopold Sédar Senghor  
1975 T. P. Meenakshisundaram
1979 Atmaram Ravaji Deshpande
Jainendra Kumar
Kuppali Venkatappa Puttappa 'Kuvempu'
V. Raghavan
Mahadevi Varma
1985 Umashankar Joshi
K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar
K. Shivarama Karanth
1989 Mulk Raj Anand
Vinayaka Krishna Gokak
Laxmanshastri Balaji Joshi
Amritlal Nagar
Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai
Annada Shankar Ray
1994 Nagarjun
Balamani Amma
Ashapoorna Devi
Qurratulain Hyder
Vishnu Bhikaji Kolte
Kanhu Charan Mohanty
P. T. Narasimhachar
R. K. Narayan
Harbhajan Singh
1996 Jayakanthan
Senake Bandaranayake §
Edward C. Dimock  
Daniel H. H. Ingalls Sr.  
Vinda Karandikar
Chie Nakane[b] §
Vidya Niwas Mishra
Subhash Mukhopadhyay
Raja Rao
Sachidananda Routray
Azad N. Shamatov §
Krishna Sobti
Ji Xianlin  
Kamil Zvelebil  
1999 Syed Abdul Malik
K. S. Narasimhaswamy
Gunturu Seshendra Sarma
Rajendra Shah
Ram Vilas Sharma
N. Khelchandra Singh
2000 Ramchandra Narayan Dandekar
Rehman Rahi #
2001 Ram Nath Shastri
2002 Kaifi Azmi
Eugene Chelyshev  
Govind Chandra Pande
Nilmani Phookan #
Bhisham Sahni
Vassilis Vitsaxis  
2004 Kovilan
U. R. Ananthamurthy
Vijaydan Detha
Shankha Ghosh #
Bhadriraju Krishnamurti
Amrita Pritam
Nirmal Verma
2005 Intizar Hussain  
2006 Manoj Das #
Vishnu Prabhakar
2007 Ronald E. Asher  
Anita Desai #
Kartar Singh Duggal
Ravindra Kelekar
2009 Gopi Chand Narang #
Ramakanta Rath #
2010 Chandranath Mishra Amar #
Kunwar Narayan #
Bholabhai Patel
Kedarnath Singh #
Khushwant Singh
2013 Raghuveer Chaudhari #
Arjan Hasid #
Sitakant Mahapatra #
M. T. Vasudevan Nair #
Asit Rai #
Satya Vrat Shastri #
Abhimanyu Unnuth  
2014 Santeshivara Lingannaiah Bhyrappa #
C. Narayana Reddy #
2016 Nirendranath Chakravarty #
Gurdial Singh
2017 Namvar Singh
2019 Jayanta Mahapatra #
Padma Sachdev
Vishwanath Prasad Tiwari #
Nagen Saikia[19] #
2020 Velcheru Narayana Rao[20] #
2021 Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay[21] #
M. Leelavathy[22] #
Ruskin Bond #
Vinod Kumar Shukla #
Bhalchandra Nemade #
Tejwant Singh Gill #
Rambhadracharya #
Indira Parthasarathy #

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Gurdial Singh, who was selected as fellow on 16 February 2016, died six months later on 16 August 2016.[12]
  2. ^ a b Out of three recipients, only Bandaranayake and Shamatov availed the fellowship and spent several weeks in India doing literary research. Nakane did not avail the fellowship.

References

  1. ^ a b Kachru, Braj B. (2005), Asian Englishes: Beyond the Canon, Hong Kong University Press, pp. 145–, ISBN 978-962-209-665-3Quote: "In his acceptance speech when India's National Academy of Letters (Sahitya Akademi) in 1997 conferred its highest honour, the Fellowship, to Raja Rao, he said, "My dream would have been to write in that luminous and precise language Sanskrit ..."
  2. ^ Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 7.
  3. ^ a b George, Rosemary Marangoly (2013), Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature, Cambridge University Press, p. 144, ISBN 978-1-107-04000-7 Quote: Poet, President of Senegal, and theorist of "Négritude" Leopold Sangor was elected the first Honorary Fellow of the Sahitya Akademi in 1974. This group was to complement the category of "Fellows of the Akademi" whose number was at no time to exceed twenty-one in total and who were to be living Indian writers of undisputed excellence — "the immortals of literature."
  4. ^ "Sahitya Akademi: Fellows and Honorary Fellows". sahitya-akademi.gov.in. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  5. ^ George, Rosemary Marangoly (2013), Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature, Cambridge University Press, p. 144, ISBN 978-1-107-04000-7 Quote: "S. Radhakrishnan was the first "Fellow of the Akademi" to be given this title in 1968 after he left the service of both the government and the Akademi. ... Mulk Raj Anand was the first Indian English writer to be inducted in 1989 and R. K. Narayan the second Indian writer working in English to be inducted in 1994."
  6. ^ Rao, D. S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 1.
  7. ^ a b c Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 10.
  8. ^ Rao, D. S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 20.
  9. ^ a b c Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 21.
  10. ^ Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 22.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "Sahitya Akademi Fellows". Sahitya Akademi. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  12. ^ "Noted Punjabi writer Gurdial Singh passes away". The Indian Express. Bathinda. 16 August 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  13. ^ a b c "Sahitya Akademi Fellowship Announced" (PDF) (Press release). New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. 16 February 2016. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
  14. ^ a b "Sahitya Akademi: The Constitution I". Sahitya Akademi. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
    • "Sahitya Akademi: The Constitution II". Sahitya Akademi. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  15. ^ a b Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 23.
  16. ^ George 2013, p. 144.
  17. ^ a b Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 25.
  18. ^ Rao, D.S. (2004). Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters, India: A Short History of Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 26.
  19. ^ "Press Release : Election of Fellows of Sahitya Akademi" (PDF). sahitya-akademi.gov.in. Sahitya Academy. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  20. ^ Varma, P. Sujatha (27 February 2021). "Kendra Sahitya Akademi award for Velcheru Narayana Rao". The Hindu – via www.thehindu.com.
  21. ^ "Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay: সাহিত্য অকাদেমির 'ফেলো' সম্মান শীর্ষেন্দুর, বাংলা সাহিত্যের মুকুটে নতুন পালক". www.anandabazar.com (in Bengali). Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  22. ^ "Ruskin Bond, Vinod Kumar Shukla and Six Others Named For Sahitya Akademi Fellowship". The Indian Express. Retrieved 19 September 2021.

Bibliography

  • George, Rosemary Marangoly (2013). Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature. Cambridge University Press. p. 285. ISBN 978-1-107-04000-7.

External links

  • Official website

sahitya, akademi, fellowship, literary, honour, india, bestowed, sahitya, akademi, india, national, academy, letters, highest, honour, conferred, akademi, living, writer, number, fellows, time, exceeding, elected, from, among, writers, thought, akademi, acknow. The Sahitya Akademi Fellowship is a literary honour in India bestowed by the Sahitya Akademi India s National Academy of Letters 1 2 It is the highest honour conferred by the Akademi on a living writer 1 the number of fellows at no time exceeding 21 3 Elected from among writers thought by the Akademi to be of acknowledged merit the fellows are sometimes described as the immortals of Indian literature 3 4 Sahitya Akademi FellowshipAwarded forLiterary award in IndiaSponsored bySahitya AkademiFirst awarded1968Last awarded2021HighlightsTotal awarded92First winnerSarvepalli RadhakrishnanLast winnerGurdial SinghNirendranath ChakravartyWebsiteOfficial WebsiteSahitya Akademi Award Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was the first writer elected to the Fellowship Mulk Raj Anand was the first Indian English writer to be inducted in 1989 and R K Narayan in 1994 the second 5 Contents 1 History and purpose 2 Appointment of fellowships 3 Fellowships to foreign authors 3 1 Honorary fellowships 3 2 Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship 3 3 Premchand Fellowship 4 List of fellows 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory and purpose EditThe appointment of Fellows to the Sahitya Akademi was based in part on models of academies of letters and in particular on the Academie francaise s model of honouring literary excellent by electing writers as Members 6 The initial Constitution of the Academy proposed a limited membership of twenty one Fellows who were to be literary persons of outstanding merit 7 The first General Committee recommended an expansion in the number of fellows by including fifty Associate Fellows as well as five Honorary Fellows The latter provision was to enable the Akademi to honour foreign writers as well Despite the inclusion of this provision the Akademi did not make appointments to the position of Associate Fellows and in 1999 the provision for their appointment was deleted 7 Soon after the death of Jawaharlal Nehru who was the first President of the Sahitya Akademi Mulk Raj Anand proposed that Nehru be elected as a Fellow of the Akademi posthumously This proposal was rejected and the Akademi took the view that Fellowships would only be conferred upon living writers 8 The General Council has as a practice refrained from electing its own members for the Fellowship although there have been instances of members of the General Council become fellows after their term on the Council ends A significant exception to this practice is the appointment of D Jayakanthan as a Fellow while he was serving on the council 9 The first Fellow of the Akademi S Radhakrishnan was elected as Fellow in 1968 fourteen years after the Akademi was constituted Radhakrishnan had previously served on the Council of the Sahitya Akademi first as vice president and later as president 9 He was appointed in recognition of his outstanding contribution to Indian thought and to the tradition of universal humanism 9 The first woman to be elected Fellow was Mahadevi Varma in 1979 10 followed by three women writers in 1994 Malayalam poet Balamani Amma Bengali novelist and poet Ashapoorna Devi and Urdu novelist Qurratulain Hyder Hindi author Krishna Sobti was honoured in 1996 and English novelist Anita Desai in 2009 11 On 16 February 2016 the Akademi announced the fellowship to Punjabi writer and novelist Gurdial Singh and Bengali poet Nirendranath Chakravarty As of 2017 update there are only 20 fellows of the Sahitya Akademi a 11 13 Appointment of fellowships EditThe executive board of the Akademi recommends the names of literary persons to be elected as Fellows and Honorary Fellows to the General Council The General Council who operates for the period of five years holds an authority to elect a fellow based on the recommendation made by the executive board 14 The fellowship was established in 1968 and is limited to twenty individuals at any given time 11 As of 2016 update the fellowship has been conferred on 92 writers 11 13 In 1994 the Akademi began the practice of holding an event called Samvad in which Fellows read from their work and each reading was followed by discussions with a panel of critics and writers 15 The participants in the first series included V B Kolte Marathi scholar writer and critic Harbhajan Singh Punjabi writer and critic and Nagarjun Maithili and Hindi poet and novelist 15 Fellowships to foreign authors EditIn addition to twenty one fellowships to Indian nationals the Sahitya Akademi has also instituted three fellowships to international writers and scholars Honorary fellowships Edit The Sahitya Akademi s Constitution provides for the appointment of Honorary Fellows of the Akademi from among literary persons of outstanding merit who are not nationals of India 14 The number of such fellowships is limited to ten individuals at any given time an increase from the original provision for five fellows 7 The first Honorary Fellow of the Akademi was appointed in 1974 the poet the first President of Senegal and theorist of Negritude Leopold Sedar Senghor 16 The citation provided to him records that Senghor is one of the leading literary figures of the African continent As a linguist he has been working to establish links between Dravidian Sumerian ancient Egyptian and African languages 17 In his acceptance speech Senghor described himself as an old admmirer of the Indian Civilisation emphasizing his fondness for the poetry of Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore 17 Other Honorary Fellows of the Akademi include American linguist and Indologist Edward C Dimock American professor of Sanskrit Daniel Henry Holmes Ingall Czech scholar of Dravidian studies Kamil Vaclav Zvelebil Chinese professor of Indian literature and translator Ji Xianlin Greek diplomant scholar and poet Vassilis Vitsaxis and Russian academic and scholar of Indian history Evgeni Petrovich Chelyshev 18 The most recent recipient of the fellowship is a Mauritian poet novelist Abhimanyu Unnuth who was awarded in the year 2013 11 As of 2016 update nine individuals have been elected as honorary fellows Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship Edit Named after a Sri Lankan Tamil philosopher Ananda Coomaraswamy the Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship was instituted in 1996 and is offered to a person of eminence in the field of Asian art culture literature and language studies from Asian countries to pursue literary projects It was announced on three individuals Sri Lankan Archaeologist Senake Bandaranayake Japanese author and anthropologist Chie Nakane and Uzbekistani professor Azad N Shamatov b The fellowship was discontinued after its first conferral and was revived in 2005 but no conferment has been made since then Premchand Fellowship Edit The Premchand Fellowship is instituted in 2005 and is named after Hindi writer Premchand who is popularly known as Munshi Premchand during his 125th Birth Anniversary It is given to a person of eminence in the field of culture and literature doing research on Indian literature or to creative writers from the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation SAARC countries other than India The first and sole recipient of the fellowship is a Pakistani national and Urdu writer Intizar Hussain The period of Fellowship for Ananda Coomaraswamy Fellowship and Premchand Fellowship ranges from one month to three months depending on the convenience and availability of the recipient The visiting Fellow needs to submit a comprehensive report of their visit which is to be placed before the executive board and are requested to deliver lectures on the topic of their specialization in universities and institutions dealing in the discipline 11 List of fellows Edit Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan is the first recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Fellowship Leopold Sedar Senghor is the first recipient of the Honorary Fellowship Current fellows of Sahitya Akademi from top to bottom Krishna Sobti 1996 Shankha Ghosh 2004 Manoj Das 2006 Ramakanta Rath 2009 Kedarnath Singh 2010 Raghuveer Chaudhari 2013 Sitakant Mahapatra 2013 M T Vasudevan Nair 2013 Satya Vrat Shastri 2013 S L Bhyrappa 2014 Key Indicates a current fellow Indicates Honorary Fellowship Indicates Premchand Fellowship Indicates Ananda Coomaraswamy FellowshipList of Sahitya Akademi fellows showing the year 11 13 Year Recipient1968 Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan1969 Tarasankar BandyopadhyayD R BendreSumitranandan PantC Rajagopalachari1970 Vaikom Muhammad BasheerFiraq GorakhpuriVishnu Sakharam KhandekarViswanatha Satyanarayana1971 Dattatreya Balkrushna KalelkarGopinath KavirajKalindi Charan PanigrahiGurbaksh Singh1973 Masti Venkatesha IyengarMangharam Udharam MalkaniNilmoni PhukanVasudev Vishnu MirashiSukumar SenVishnuprasad Ranchhodlal Trivedi1974 Leopold Sedar Senghor 1975 T P Meenakshisundaram1979 Atmaram Ravaji DeshpandeJainendra KumarKuppali Venkatappa Puttappa Kuvempu V RaghavanMahadevi Varma1985 Umashankar JoshiK R Srinivasa IyengarK Shivarama Karanth1989 Mulk Raj AnandVinayaka Krishna GokakLaxmanshastri Balaji JoshiAmritlal NagarThakazhi Sivasankara PillaiAnnada Shankar Ray1994 NagarjunBalamani AmmaAshapoorna DeviQurratulain HyderVishnu Bhikaji KolteKanhu Charan MohantyP T NarasimhacharR K NarayanHarbhajan Singh1996 JayakanthanSenake Bandaranayake Edward C Dimock Daniel H H Ingalls Sr Vinda KarandikarChie Nakane b Vidya Niwas MishraSubhash MukhopadhyayRaja RaoSachidananda RoutrayAzad N Shamatov Krishna SobtiJi Xianlin Kamil Zvelebil 1999 Syed Abdul MalikK S NarasimhaswamyGunturu Seshendra SarmaRajendra ShahRam Vilas SharmaN Khelchandra Singh2000 Ramchandra Narayan DandekarRehman Rahi 2001 Ram Nath Shastri2002 Kaifi AzmiEugene Chelyshev Govind Chandra PandeNilmani Phookan Bhisham SahniVassilis Vitsaxis 2004 KovilanU R AnanthamurthyVijaydan DethaShankha Ghosh Bhadriraju KrishnamurtiAmrita PritamNirmal Verma2005 Intizar Hussain 2006 Manoj Das Vishnu Prabhakar2007 Ronald E Asher Anita Desai Kartar Singh DuggalRavindra Kelekar2009 Gopi Chand Narang Ramakanta Rath 2010 Chandranath Mishra Amar Kunwar Narayan Bholabhai PatelKedarnath Singh Khushwant Singh2013 Raghuveer Chaudhari Arjan Hasid Sitakant Mahapatra M T Vasudevan Nair Asit Rai Satya Vrat Shastri Abhimanyu Unnuth 2014 Santeshivara Lingannaiah Bhyrappa C Narayana Reddy 2016 Nirendranath Chakravarty Gurdial Singh2017 Namvar Singh2019 Jayanta Mahapatra Padma SachdevVishwanath Prasad Tiwari Nagen Saikia 19 2020 Velcheru Narayana Rao 20 2021 Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay 21 M Leelavathy 22 Ruskin Bond Vinod Kumar Shukla Bhalchandra Nemade Tejwant Singh Gill Rambhadracharya Indira Parthasarathy See also EditList of Sangeet Natak Akademi fellows List of Lalit Kala Akademi fellows Jnanpith Award annual literary award conferred by the Bharatiya Jnanpith Explanatory notes Edit Gurdial Singh who was selected as fellow on 16 February 2016 died six months later on 16 August 2016 12 a b Out of three recipients only Bandaranayake and Shamatov availed the fellowship and spent several weeks in India doing literary research Nakane did not avail the fellowship References Edit a b Kachru Braj B 2005 Asian Englishes Beyond the Canon Hong Kong University Press pp 145 ISBN 978 962 209 665 3 Quote In his acceptance speech when India s National Academy of Letters Sahitya Akademi in 1997 conferred its highest honour the Fellowship to Raja Rao he said My dream would have been to write in that luminous and precise language Sanskrit Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 7 a b George Rosemary Marangoly 2013 Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature Cambridge University Press p 144 ISBN 978 1 107 04000 7 Quote Poet President of Senegal and theorist of Negritude Leopold Sangor was elected the first Honorary Fellow of the Sahitya Akademi in 1974 This group was to complement the category of Fellows of the Akademi whose number was at no time to exceed twenty one in total and who were to be living Indian writers of undisputed excellence the immortals of literature Sahitya Akademi Fellows and Honorary Fellows sahitya akademi gov in Retrieved 22 March 2017 George Rosemary Marangoly 2013 Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature Cambridge University Press p 144 ISBN 978 1 107 04000 7 Quote S Radhakrishnan was the first Fellow of the Akademi to be given this title in 1968 after he left the service of both the government and the Akademi Mulk Raj Anand was the first Indian English writer to be inducted in 1989 and R K Narayan the second Indian writer working in English to be inducted in 1994 Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 1 a b c Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 10 Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 20 a b c Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 21 Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 22 a b c d e f g Sahitya Akademi Fellows Sahitya Akademi Retrieved 7 December 2022 Noted Punjabi writer Gurdial Singh passes away The Indian Express Bathinda 16 August 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2017 a b c Sahitya Akademi Fellowship Announced PDF Press release New Delhi Sahitya Akademi 16 February 2016 Retrieved 15 December 2016 a b Sahitya Akademi The Constitution I Sahitya Akademi Retrieved 2 January 2017 Sahitya Akademi The Constitution II Sahitya Akademi Retrieved 2 January 2017 a b Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 23 George 2013 p 144 a b Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 25 Rao D S 2004 Five Decades of The National Academy of Letters India A Short History of Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Sahitya Akademi p 26 Press Release Election of Fellows of Sahitya Akademi PDF sahitya akademi gov in Sahitya Academy Retrieved 29 January 2019 Varma P Sujatha 27 February 2021 Kendra Sahitya Akademi award for Velcheru Narayana Rao The Hindu via www thehindu com Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay স হ ত য অক দ ম র ফ ল সম ম ন শ র ষ ন দ র ব ল স হ ত য র ম ক ট নত ন প লক www anandabazar com in Bengali Retrieved 19 September 2021 Ruskin Bond Vinod Kumar Shukla and Six Others Named For Sahitya Akademi Fellowship The Indian Express Retrieved 19 September 2021 Bibliography EditGeorge Rosemary Marangoly 2013 Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature Cambridge University Press p 285 ISBN 978 1 107 04000 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sahitya Akademi fellows Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sahitya Akademi Fellowship amp oldid 1147697812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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