presenting the 50th
Jnanpith Award to Bhalchandra Nemade on 25 April 2015 Nemade wrote his first novel
Kosala () in 1963. It is a fictitious autobiographical novel of one Pandurang Sangvikar, a youth from rural
Maharashtra who studies in a college in
Pune; but it is loosely based on Nemade's own life in his youth. Sangvikar, the narrator in
Kosala, uses everyday Marathi spoken in rural Maharashtra and his worldview also reflects that held by residents of rural Maharashtra.
Kosala is a chronological autobiographical narration, yet it employs certain innovative techniques. Thus, Sangvikar describes one year in his life in the form of a witty diary. As another innovative technique, the narration describes "historical investigations" often undertaken by Sangvikar and his friend Suresh Bapat, which ultimately uncover to them the absurdity and tragedy of their present condition.
Kosla is extensively translated into various languages including English, Hindi, Gujarati, Kannada, Assamese, Punjabi, Bengali, Urdu, Oriya, et al. After
Kosala, Nemade presented a different protagonist, Changadev Patil, through his four novels
Bidhar (),
Hool (),
Jarila () and
Jhool (). Another tetralogy begins with
Hindu – Jagnyachi Samruddha Adgal () in 2010 having Khanderao, the archaeologist as its protagonist. The differences between Sangvikar and Patil are not confined to just their age, profession, habits, and intellectual and emotional perception: While Sangvikar at times keeps the world at bay or even rejects the world, Patil is all for the world and is forever engaged in confronting and understanding it. Sangvikar is mercurial, Patil is more realistic, whereas Khanderao's consciousness moves across 5000 years to Indus Valley culture in the
Hindu tetralogy. As a critic, Nemade's contribution rests in initiating
Deshivad, a theory that negates globalisation or internationalism, asserting the value of writers' native heritage, indicating that Marathi literature ought to try to revive its native base and explore its indigenous sources. Nemade antagonised his contemporaries by contending that the short story is a genre inferior to that of the novel. Nemade won the prestigious
Jnanpith Award in February 2015. He was the fourth laureate receiving the award for work in Marathi language. Winner of the
Sahitya Akademi Award, he was conferred with
Padma Shri in 2011 by Government of India. ==Bibliography==