Chathanath Achuthanunni | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1939-03-10)March 10, 1939 (age 86) |
| Occupation | Academic, literary critic, poet and translator |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Notable awards | |
Chathanath Achuthanunni (born in 1939) is a polyglot,Malayalam language writer and translator fromKerala, India. He received many awards includingKerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Overall Contributions (2011)Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award (1987) and Sahridayavedi Award (1988). In 2022 he received theSahitya Akademi Translation Prize, a literary honour in India, presented bySahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters. In 2024, he received the Kairali Global Lifetime Achievement Prize for Researchers Award, presented by the Kerala government.
Chathanath Achuthanunni was born on March 10, 1939, Chathanath,Guruvayur in present-dayThrissur district ofKerala to Menakaymal Vasudevanunnithan and Chathanath Madhavikuttyamma.[1][2][3] His father Menakaimal, who was a polyglot scholar and poet, knew Malayalam, English, Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali languages.[4]
Achuthanunni holds degrees including Sahitya Visarada, M.A. Sanskrit, M.A. Malayalam and Ph.D.[2] From 1957 to 1964 he was a teacher at the High School and from 1965 to 1971 at the Catholic College,Pathanamthitta.[2][3] He then worked as a lecturer in the Malayalam department of theUniversity of Calicut from 1971 and became a professor in 1983 and the head of the department from 1986.[2] He later became Dean of the Faculty of Languages at the university.[2] After his retirement in 2000, he also served as visiting professor atKerala Kalamandalam.[3]
Achuthanunni has also worked as the Founder Secretary of Vallathol Vidyapeeth (Shukapuram) and Vice Chairman of Tirur Thunchans Memorial.[2]
Publishing poems and essays in periodicals since 1955,[2] Achuthanunni made remarkable contributions in the fields of linguistics, poetics and literary criticism.[3] When he was 15, his first poetry collection 'Muraliganam' was published by Shanta Bookstall, a small publishing house in his birthplace Guruvayur.[4] They also selected and published drama songs written by him during that time.[4] He has also said that he had written and published a detective novel named 'Prethadurgam' in his youth.[3][4]
Achuthanunni's major literary contribution is his critical study of Indian literary theories with a contemporary perspective. His profound studies on Malayalam literary theories such asKavyalankaram,Kavi Kandabharanam, andVakrokthijeevitham are later published as more than fifty research articles and in his bookNeethi Darshana published in 1983.[1] His bookAlarkarasastram Malayalathil (1984) is notable as the first attempt to comprehensively evaluate literary texts in Malayalam.[1]
Achuthanunni has also written many poems in Sanskrit and Malayalam. His major poetry collections areThirunadayil andLayam.[1]
In 1986, Achuthanunni received theKerala Sahitya Akademi Award for his work "Alankarashastram Malayalathil" and in 1980, he received the Prof. C.N. Antony Award for his work "Reethidarshanam".[1] He received theKerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Overall Contributions in 2011,[2] and the Certificate of Honor Award from the President of India in 2019.[6] In 2022 he received theSahitya Akademi Translation Prize, a literary honour in India, presented bySahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters.[7]
In 2024, Chathanath Achuthanunni received the Kairali Global Lifetime Achievement Prize for Researchers Award, presented by the Kerala government to prominent scientists for their comprehensive contribution.[8] In the same year he received the Professor S. Guptan Nair Award instituted by the Prof. S. Guptan Nair Foundation for teachers who have made major contributions to the field of culture.[9] For his comprehensive contribution to Malayalam literature, he received the Balamaniyamma Award presented by the Kochi International Book Festival Committee, in 2025.[6]
In 2019, Chathanath Achuthanunni was accused of plagiarism.[10] The allegation was made by Dr. Shuba K. S., a college teacher. It was alleged that, An article by Achuthanunni in the November–December 2019 issue ofSahithya Vimarshanam magazine entitled 'Abhidhamuladhwani: Asangadhamaya oru sankalppam' have plagiarized ideas from the book 'Rasadhwani Siddhantam Upekshikkuka' published in 2013 by Shuba K.S.[10] She also said that Chattannath Achuthanunni has imitated her sentence structure as well.[10] However, Achuthanunni, who said that he had read Shuba's book only two days ago, clarified that nothing he says in his article is in Shuba's book and doubts that Shuba does not know Sanskrit properly, and added he was not interested in the controversy.[10]
Achuthanunni and his wife Aivi lives in his house atEdappal,Malappuram district.[4] The couple have two children, Ashis and Ashwathy.[4]