Analyzing the Interplay of Visual Aesthetics, Faith, and Cultural Memory in Arun Kolatkar’s Poems

लेखक

  • V.N. Nerezhilan and Dr. S. Suresh

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https://doi.org/10.8224/journaloi.v73i4.1030

सार

 

Poetry often serves as a powerful medium through which visual perception, spiritual experience, and collective memory intersect to shape cultural meaning. In modern Indian English poetry, these intersections become especially significant as poets negotiate tradition and modernity within rapidly changing social landscapes. This study examines the interplay of visual aesthetics, faith, and cultural memory in Arun Kolatkar's selected poems from Jejuri—"The Bus," "Heart of Ruin," and "The Station Dog"—revealing how sensory imagery redefines spirituality amid postcolonial skepticism. Kolatkar employs stark visual details, such as the fractured reflections in a pilgrim's spectacles in "The Bus," to juxtapose youthful doubt against elder faith, portraying the pilgrimage as a tactile, bumpy ride that ionizes devotional certainty. The findings highlight visual aesthetics as a conduit for spiritual ambivalence: ruins in "Heart of Ruin" evoke decayed sanctity through debris-strewn temples, questioning cultural reverence while preserving memory via fragmented stone idols. Irony permeates human perception, subverting god-centric tropes—"The Station Dog" locates the "spirit of place" in a profane stray's mangy form, blending tactile visuals with marginalized lives to democratize faith beyond rituals. Cultural memory emerges through ritual objects, sacred sites, and subaltern figures, constructing a profane sacred that critiques Brahminical traditions. Kolatkar's irony bridges modernity and antiquity, affirming faith's endurance in everyday transience. These poems thus redefine devotion as perceptual, rooted in visual immediacy and collective remembrance, challenging orthodox spirituality.

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प्रकाशित

2026-02-03

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