Gopal Baratham
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Gopal Baratham | |
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Born | September 9, 1935 |
Died | April 23, 2002 (aged 66) Singapore |
Profession | Doctor |
Institutions | Department of Neurosurgery, University of Edinburgh Tan Tock Seng Hospital Private practice |
Specialism | Neurosurgeon |
Research | Neurosurgery |
Known for | Author |
Education | University of Malaya Royal London Hospital Medical College |
Notable prizes | 1991: Southeast Asia Write Award |
Relations | Father:Baratham Ramaswamy Sreenivasan |
Gopal Baratham was a Singaporean author and neurosurgeon. He was known for his frank style and his ability to write about topics that were often considered controversial in the rigid city-state.
Contents |
[edit] Career
Born to a physician and a nurse, Baratham decided to follow his parents and entered the medical profession. However, his youth is marked by the experience of the Japanese occupation. In 1954 he registered at the Medical College of the University of Malaya, Singapore, and after studying at the Royal London Hospital in 1965, he entered the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Edinburgh in 1969. He finished his studies by 1972, when he was already 36 years old, to become a surgeon at the Thomson Road General Hospital in Singapore. He headed the Neurosurgery Department at the Tan Tock Seng Hospital between 1984 and 1987, and went into private practice after relinquishing his post as department head.
[edit] Baratham, the writer
Baratham began his passion for writing in the 1960s, and had never stopped doing so throughout his medical career. His first novel, Fuel in Vacant Lots, was however never finished. In 1974 he was able to get his first short story, "Island", published in Commentary, the publication of the National University of Singapore Society. It was only in 1981, that his first book collection of short stories titled Figments of Experience was published. In 1991, Dr. Baratham published his most successful novel, A Candle or the Sun, which he had started working on in 1983. The novel was published in London and not in Singapore due to its controversial nature. The novel was loosely based on the case of the so-called Marxist plotters, a group of Catholic activists who the Singapore government had declared to be Communists and subsequently arrested. The same year he also published an erotic love-story called Sayang set in Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia. He won the S.E.A. Write Award and was elected the president of the ASEAN Association of Neurosurgeons.
In 1994, Dr. Baratham wrote an account of the events surrounding the American Michael Fay, called The Caning of Michael Fay.
[edit] Literary Works by Gopal Baratham
[edit] Short story collections
- Figments of Experience (Times Books International, 1981)
- People Make You Cry (1988)
- Memories that Glow in the Dark (1995)
- The City of Forgetting (2001)
[edit] Novels
- A Candle or The Sun (Serpent's Tail, 1991)
- Sayang (Times Books International, 1991)
- Moonrise, Sunset (Serpent's Tail, 1996)
[edit] Non-Fiction
- The Caning of Michael Fay (KRP Publications, 1994)
[edit] Secondary Texts
- Of memory and desire: The stories of Gopal Baratham by Kah Choon Ban (Times Books International, 2000)