Harshadev Madhav

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornHarshavadan Mansukhlal Jani
(1954-10-20) 20 October 1954 (age 70)
Vartej, Bhavnagar, Gujarat, India
Pen nameHarshadev Madhav
Occupationpoet, writer
Harshadev Madhav
Harshadev Madhav
Harshadev Madhav
BornHarshavadan Mansukhlal Jani
(1954-10-20) 20 October 1954 (age 70)
Vartej, Bhavnagar, Gujarat, India
Pen nameHarshadev Madhav
Occupationpoet, writer
LanguageSanskrit, Gujarati
NationalityIndian
Education
  • Master of Arts
  • Ph.D
Alma mater
PeriodPostmodern Gujarati literature
Years active1971 - present
Notable awards
SpouseShruti Jani (1985 - present)
ChildrenRushiraj Jani
Signature
Academic background
Thesis'Mukhy Puranoma Shap ane Teno Prabhav'
Doctoral advisorGautam Patel

Harshadev Madhav (born 20 October 1954) is a Sanskrit and Gujarati language poet and writer who won the Sahitya Akademi Award for Sanskrit in 2006 for his work of poetry, Tava Sparshe Sparshe.[1] He had composed over 2200 poems in Sanskrit as of 1992.[2]

Harshavadan Mansukhlal Jani was born on 20 October 1954 in Vartej,[2][3] a city in Bhavnagar district to Mansukhlal and Nandanben. He took his primary education from Vartej Primary School. He completed his high school education (old ssc) in 1971 from Koliyak Madhyamik Shala, Koliyak. He got his Bachelor of Arts as an external student from Saurashtra University in 1975. While working in a telegraph office in Palitana, he completed his Master of Arts in 1981 with Sanskrit from Saurashtra University with first rank, and subsequently became a lecturer at H. K. Arts College, Ahmedabad.[2] He completed B.Ed in 1983 and Ph.D in 1990 from Gujarat University.[3] He received Ph.D for his research work " Mukhya Puranoma Shap Ane Teno Prabhav" (Curse Element And Its Influence In Major Puranas).[citation needed]

He married Shruti Jani on 29 April 1985 and they have a son, Rushiraj Jani.[4]

He participated in the Kavisammelana at the 13th World Sanskrit Conference, Edinburgh[5] and the 14th World Sanskrit Conference, Kyoto.[6]

Work

He is credited with introducing Japanese Haiku and Tanka, and Korean Sijo, into Sanskrit poetry.[2] Samir Kumar Datta puts in him the category of modernist or revolutionary Sanskrit poets, and says:[7]

Harshadev Madhav is a modern poet in true sense of the term. He thinks that poetry should appeal first to intellect and thereafter to emotion. In the eternal controversy between intellectuality and emotionalism Harshadeva takes side of intellectuality […] Harshadev happens to be one of the most profound modern Sanskrit poets. He betrays the great influence exerted on him by modern vernacular poetry and some of the images carved out by modern vernacular poets.

Recognition

List of books

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI