Vivek Narayanan’s The Kuruntokai and Its Mirror is a fractalized translation and reinterpretation of a classical work in the Tamil Sangam canon, an anthology of 401 short poems composed between 100 CE and 300 CE. As Narayanan writes, the poems “explore in excruciating detail the relationship between the interior and the exterior, the personal and the public” to reflect on the facture of poetry itself.
The influence of The Kuruntokai on Tamil culture and more broadly has been vast but webbed; the poems’ inherent eroticism and expressive range has complicated their history of open dissemination, surfacing most prominently in the English-speaking world through a formally liberal, or “Poundian,” translation by A. K. Ramanujan in the late 1960s, the era that likewise gave birth to the Hanuman Books avant-garde. For our contemporary moment, Narayanan provides a close experience and elaboration of The Kuruntokai. His bilingual edition, with text in Tamil and in English, highlights the book’s obliquities, its rich tapestry of internal rhyme in the “dance of the akaval metre,” its poems that “wink” mysteriously to themselves. Raw and fresh, minimalistic and intensive, Narayanan’s The Kuruntokai and Its Mirror romances the ancient amid the exigencies of modern life.
Vivek Narayanan was born in India and raised in Zambia. Narayanan’s books of poems include Universal Beach (Harbour Line Press, 2006/In Girum Books, 2011), Life and Times of Mr S (HarperCollins India, 2012), and After (New York Review of Books, 2022). He was the co-editor of Almost Island, an India-based literary journal, from 2007 to 2019. His essays, criticism, and poetry have appeared widely in publications such as Granta, The Paris Review, and Caravan. He earned an MA in cultural anthropology from Stanford University, and an MFA in creative writing from Boston University. He teaches in the MFA Creative Writing Program at George Mason University.