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A poet of soil, struggle and society: Vairamuthu’s literature of resistance

By Ravi Ranjan* 
The announcement that Vairamuthu has been selected for the Jnanpith Award for the year 2025 marks a significant moment in Indian literary history and a moment of pride for Tamil literary culture. Widely regarded as one of the most influential contemporary voices in Tamil literature, Vairamuthu has spent decades crafting poetry, fiction and essays that reflect the struggles, aspirations and dignity of ordinary people. 
The recognition places him among the most distinguished writers of the country and affirms the enduring vitality of Tamil literary traditions. At seventy-two, he becomes only the third Tamil writer to receive this honour after Akilan and Jayakanthan, underscoring both his personal achievement and the broader cultural significance of the award.
Born on July 13, 1953, in the village of Mettoor in what was then Madurai district—now Vadugapatti in Theni district of Tamil Nadu—Vairamuthu grew up in a family of agriculturalists. His parents, Ramasamy Thevar and Angammal, depended on farming for their livelihood, and the rhythms of rural life deeply influenced his imagination. When he was just four years old, the construction of the Vaigai Dam led to the displacement of several villages, including his own. 
The forced relocation of his family left a lasting impression on the young boy and shaped his lifelong sensitivity toward the suffering of communities uprooted by development projects. This early encounter with displacement later became a recurring theme in his literary works, especially in his explorations of agrarian distress and the loss of rural worlds.
From an early age Vairamuthu showed a remarkable interest in language and poetry. By the age of ten he had begun composing poems, and during his school years he gained recognition as both a gifted orator and a young poet. Inspired by the classical Tamil text "Tirukkural", attributed to the ancient poet Thiruvalluvar, he experimented with traditional poetic forms even as a teenager. The socio-political climate of the 1960s also influenced his intellectual formation. 
The Dravidian movement’s emphasis on social justice, rationalism and linguistic pride shaped his worldview. Leaders and writers such as Periyar E. V. Ramasamy, C. N. Annadurai, M. Karunanidhi, Subramania Bharathi, Bharathidasan and Kannadasan deeply influenced his thinking and encouraged him to view literature as a medium for social transformation.
His formal education further strengthened this orientation. Vairamuthu studied at Pachaiyappa's College in Chennai, where he quickly gained recognition as a promising young poet and speaker. At the age of nineteen he published his first poetry collection, "Vaikarai Mēkaṅkaḷ" (Clouds at Dawn). The anthology attracted considerable attention and was even prescribed as part of the curriculum at Women's Christian College Chennai. 
He later completed a Master’s degree in Tamil literature at University of Madras. After his studies he worked as a translator at the Tamil Nadu Official Language Commission, translating legal texts from English into Tamil under the supervision of Justice Maharajan. This experience sharpened his command of language and reinforced his commitment to linguistic precision.
In 1979 he published his second anthology, "Tirutti Eẕutiya Tīrppukaḷ" (Revised and Rewritten Verdicts), which is widely regarded as a milestone in the modern Tamil poetry movement known as Pudukkavithai. The collection marked a transition from lyrical romanticism to a sharper critique of social hierarchies, institutional authority and inherited moral codes. 
The “verdicts” in the title symbolised the predetermined destinies imposed upon the marginalised—verdicts that the poet sought to challenge and rewrite through the power of language. Scholars often regard this collection as the moment when Vairamuthu emerged as a poet of social conscience, articulating the idea that human identity itself is forged through struggle against unjust structures.
A decisive turning point in his career came in 1980 when he entered the Tamil film industry with the song “Pon Maalai Pozhuthu” in the film "Nizhalgal", directed by Bharathiraja and composed by Ilaiyaraaja. This marked the beginning of an extraordinarily prolific career in cinema that eventually produced more than 7,500 songs. 
Working with composers such as Ilaiyaraaja and A. R. Rahman, he wrote lyrics for landmark films including "Roja", "Bombay", "Padayappa" and "Enthiran". His lyrical contributions earned him a record seven National Film Award for Best Lyrics. Despite the immense popularity that cinema brought him, he continued to pursue literary writing with equal dedication.
Over the course of his career Vairamuthu has authored dozens of books across genres including poetry, novels, essays, travelogues and translations. His works have been translated into several languages, expanding his readership far beyond Tamil Nadu. Among his most significant novels is "Kallikkāṭṭu Itikācam" (The Epic of Kallikadu), which received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 2003. 
The novel vividly portrays the trauma experienced by farmers forced to abandon their lands during the construction of the Vaigai Dam. By documenting local dialects, customs and ecological landscapes, the narrative preserves the memory of submerged villages and serves as a literary testimony to the human cost of development.
Another major work, "Karuvācci Kāviyam", examines the gendered dimensions of rural poverty through the story of a resilient village woman who confronts domestic violence, social stigma and economic deprivation. The novel foregrounds the invisible labour of rural women and presents its protagonist not merely as a victim but as a symbol of endurance and dignity. 
Similarly, "Mūṉṟām Ulakappōr" (The Third World War) addresses the agrarian crisis in contemporary India, depicting the cycles of drought, debt and despair that have pushed many farmers toward extreme distress. Through such works Vairamuthu consistently returns to the lives of those at the margins of economic and social power.
Alongside creative writing, he has also engaged deeply with literary scholarship. His essays in "Tamizhāṟṟuppaṭai" examine the long history of Tamil literature from the Sangam era to modern times, interpreting classical poets alongside contemporary writers. Rather than treating the classical canon as a relic of the past, he presents it as a living tradition capable of illuminating contemporary ethical questions.
The philosophical core of Vairamuthu’s work is perhaps best captured in one of his most frequently quoted lines: “As long as it burns, fire remains fire; as long as the earth spins, the earth remains the earth; and as long as he struggles, man remains man.” This formulation defines identity not as a static state but as a dynamic process. Fire exists through burning, the earth through motion, and humanity through struggle. The poet thereby transforms adversity into a defining element of human dignity.
This idea runs throughout his poetry. Rivers remain rivers only while they flow, trees remain trees while they give, and scholars remain scholars only while they continue to learn. Such metaphors emphasise action rather than status. A scholar who ceases to learn, the poet suggests, becomes merely a repository of stale knowledge. In this sense Vairamuthu echoes philosophical traditions that understand existence as perpetual becoming rather than fixed being.
The poem’s later metaphors intensify this theme of productive struggle. A stone becomes a statue only by enduring the sculptor’s chisel; gold becomes an ornament only after passing through the furnace; a labourer becomes a force only while he resists oppression. Rather than portraying suffering as meaningless, the poet interprets it as the medium through which form and value are created. These images resonate strongly with the social realities of labour and marginalisation that frequently appear in his literary works.
The poem also turns toward the survival of language and culture. Just as wind remains wind while it breathes, language remains alive only while it is spoken and sung. A language preserved solely in archives but not used in everyday life gradually loses its vitality. By linking speech with breathing, the poet equates linguistic expression with life itself. This metaphor carries particular significance in the context of Tamil identity, where language has long been intertwined with cultural self-assertion.
Taken together, these ideas present a vision of existence defined by motion, effort and resistance. Human beings remain human, the poet suggests, not because they are free from hardship but because they continue to confront it. Struggle, learning, service and truth-seeking become the fundamental actions that sustain both individual identity and collective civilisation.
The recognition of Vairamuthu with the Jnanpith Award therefore represents more than the celebration of an individual career. It acknowledges a body of work that has consistently linked artistic expression with social conscience. Through poetry, fiction and song, Vairamuthu has documented the lives of farmers, labourers, women and displaced communities, ensuring that their experiences enter the cultural memory of the nation. 
His writings remind readers that literature can serve simultaneously as aesthetic creation, historical testimony and moral witness. In doing so, he has expanded the imaginative landscape of Tamil literature while affirming the enduring dignity of human struggle.
---
*Professor & Former Head (Retd.), Department of Hindi, University of Hyderabad. This is the abridged version of the author's original paper 

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