Almost the same type of books and magazines
were popular in India also during the same time till in sixties Hind Pocket
Books came out with one rupee books. The pulp fiction was called “Ghasleti
Sahitya” in India, which meant Kerosene Literature. It was called so, because
in the opinion of bourgeois it was stinky as kerosene , and it could even stink
the mind of readers. Such books were sold wrapped up in yellow foil so that
curious bystanders do not pick up and turn the pages. Anonymous became the
synonym of Mastram. Many bestselling authors of Hindi emerged from a community
of readers and writers of these books.
During all these years great
literature was written all over the world, especially in Europe, e.g. F. Scott Fitzgerald, E. M. Forster, Ernest
Hemingway, Aldous Huxley, Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, W. Somerset Maugham,
Albert Camus, Joseph Conrad, D .H. Lawrence,
C.S. Lewis, George Orwell, Sinclair Lewis, Arthur Conan Doyle, James Joyce,
Andre Gide, Rudyard Kipling, Hermann
Hesse, Ayn Rand, Jean Paul Sartre etc. wrote wonderful books which are
categorized as “Classic Literature”.
On the other hand in Hindi, the
famous authors who created parallel classical literature during the same period
were Bhishma Sahni, Dushyant Kumar, Devkinandan Khatri, Dharamvir Bharti,
Hajari Prasad Dwivedi, Jainendra Kumar, Kamleshwar, Kedarnath Agarwal, Krishna
Sobati, Mannu Bhandari, Mohan Rakesh, Nagarjun, Suryakant Tripathi Nirala,
Phanishwar Nath Renu, Padma Sachdeva, Ramdhari Singh Dinkar, Sachchidananda
Vatsyayan, Vishnu Prabhakar, Yashpal etc. .
It looks like best literature in
Hindi and English was written during the first half of the twentieth century
when pulp fiction and kerosene literature was also equally or rather more
popular if we decide the popularity by sale. Thousands of copies of cheap (in
price) detective novels by Ved Prakash Sharma, Surendra Mohan Pathak and Keshav
Pandit were sold on the date of release. They were James Hadley Chase,
Frederick Forsyth and Earl Stanley Gardner of India.
What attracted people to these
books? There was no TV, Video games, Internet and other numerous means of
entertainment. Middle class, half
educated youth was attracted by pulp fiction as bees are attracted by nectar.
These books were sold in 25 Paisa which was called Chawanni or a quarter of a
rupee. Later everything that was cheap or vulgar was called “chawanna”. That
was the only source of entertainment where you can extract the full value of
your money provided you can read. In those days the rate of literacy (which
meant people who could read and write their name) was hardly ten percent, so reading a book was a
status symbol and folks were impressed by it. Especially because this type of
fiction provided enough scope for imagination.
If for a moment we get rid off of
our English mania, the Hindi literature created during the first half of the
past century was much superior to or at least at par with literature created in
Europe, and the USSR. USA at that time was more busy in the economic growth of
the country.
This is high time we accept the work
of all authors and honor the talent of creative writing ignoring what is being
written, if it is popular amongst the
masses.
© Vipin Behari Goyal
Advocate, Rajasthan High Court, Jodhpur, India