The poetry of Kumar Ambuj, specifically the twelve works published in 'Samalochan' in April 2026, serves as a profound and vibrant document of contemporary Indian society that intertwines personal wounds with deep-seated social structures. Ambuj’s sociological and aesthetic vision is one that peels away layers of reality without resorting to slogans, standing firmly in favor of democracy, secularism, and scientific consciousness while critiquing the minutiae of capitalist modernity.
In the poem 'Ghāva' (The Wound), he depicts the silent and ignored departures of modern life as an embodiment of Zygmunt Bauman’s concept of 'Liquid Modernity,' where relationships and emotional bonds have become fleeting and invisible. This liquidity is further explained through the lens of Anthony Giddens, as individuals obsessed with constructing self-identity lose simple social rituals like an embrace or a lingering gaze.
Ambuj suggests that the modern Indian middle class is caught in a neo-liberal flow that destroys traditional collective solidarity, replacing it with an individualistic liquidity that treats even the closest relationships as non-final. This structural wound reflects an erosion of emotional capital and an increasing urban loneliness where human beings are reduced to commodities.
In 'Sambhrama' (Confusion), Ambuj explores the sociology of the environment and a crisis of collective memory, reflecting Ulrich Beck’s 'Risk Society' where modernity has made risks so mundane that the past remains only an illusion. The loss of a river becomes a symbol for the disintegration of collective rules, or 'anomie,' as described by Durkheim.
This environmental destruction is presented as a result of a capitalist development model that turns collective memory into a mirage, as observed by thinkers like André Béteille and Dipankar Gupta. Ambuj’s work similarly critiques Max Weber’s rationality in 'Upalabdhi' (Achievement), where success is viewed not as a grand building but as the accumulated debris of repeated collapses. Here, he strikes at middle-class false consciousness, showing that what is considered achievement is actually the residue of social breakdown and structural inequality deepened by capitalism.
The poem 'Pharka' (The Difference) exposes the structural violence between power and class, echoing Michel Foucault’s 'Power/Knowledge' and Weber’s definition of the state’s monopoly on violence. By contrasting the poor man's curse with the power’s bullet, Ambuj highlights the interrelationship of caste and class, resonating with B.R. Ambedkar’s 'Annihilation of Caste'. This violence renders the grievances of the marginalized meaningless, illustrating a reality where physical control is the ultimate truth.
In 'Kyomki' (Because), Ambuj looks at objectified social relations through mother’s left-behind things, which serve as the last remaining social capital in a fragmenting family structure. These objects possess a 'social life' as described by Arjun Appadurai, acting as witnesses to the past and extensions of the mother’s presence. This preservation of memory through objects provides a creative way to combat loneliness and maintain human dignity after death.
In 'Yaha Bhī Prema' (This Too Is Love), love is redefined as a social echo, reflecting a failure of Jürgen Habermas’s 'communicative action' where dialogue in modern society has become mere resonance in a lonely valley. This exists within a world of 'McDonaldization,' a process identified by George Ritzer where principles of efficiency and control dominate human sensibilities and imprison society in an 'Iron Cage'. Ambuj contrasts this with 'Nitya' (Daily), which deals with the routinization of life and reflexive modernity, where the act of looking at the familiar as if it were unknown creates a constant renewal of social relations. This aligns with Leo Tolstoy’s 'defamiliarization,' where art makes the known fresh and miraculous again.
The poem 'Palatakara Dekhane Se' (Looking Back) integrates the sociology of the body, as developed by Bryan Turner, showing that emotions are physical and that the body is a reflection of social influences. By calling the heart a muscle, Ambuj connects biological truth with human sensibilities, suggesting that our physical being is meant to keep alive love and the assurance of not letting go.
In 'Vayaskatā' (Adulthood), he addresses the crisis of displacement, using Hannah Arendt’s 'The Rights of Man' to describe adulthood as a stage where one becomes a refugee in their own country, stripped of the natural security of childhood. This cultural alienation, also noted by Ashis Nandy, results in a 'citizenship of nowhere' where the modern individual is cut off from their roots and autonomy.
Ambuj’s 'Vicitra Aparādha' (A Strange Crime) reverses Emile Durkheim’s concept of suicide; whereas Durkheim saw society as a cause of death, Ambuj shows society treating death as a crime due to its interference with social utility and duty. The insensitivity of modern society is so deep that it views an untimely departure as an intentional violation of a contract.
In 'Sāpekṣatā' (Relativity), the poet uses the color saffron to discuss social identity and secularism, echoing Jean-François Lyotard’s postmodern incredulity toward universal truths. Ambuj argues that identity and meaning only survive through diversity and the presence of 'the other,' warning that the imposition of homogeneity leads to meaninglessness. Finally, 'Taba Bhī 1-0' (Even Then 1-0) offers a sociological hope of resistance, reminding one of James C. Scott’s 'Weapons of the Weak'. Even when structures are cruel, small actions and the spirit of effort allow the marginalized to maintain agency and record symbolic victories against the system.
Aesthetically, Ambuj transforms these sociological observations into new forms of beauty. He reinterprets Abhinavagupta’s 'Rasa' theory by finding 'Rasa' in the absence of an embrace or the failure to look at the sky, creating a 'wound of beauty' that is raw and unresolved. In 'Sambhrama,' he utilizes Anandavardhana’s 'Dhvani' (suggestion), where the soul of the poem lies in the resonance of a lost river. This beauty is often negative, as described by Theodor Adorno, where true art exposes social cruelty and distortion without fabrication.
Whether seeking achievement in debris or love in an echo, Ambuj adopts and extends the traditions of thinkers like Tagore, Kant, Hegel, and Benjamin. Ultimately, these poems create a world where pain, memory, and effort become deep forms of beauty that challenge the reader to confront the harsh realities of contemporary Indian life.
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*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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