Jnanpith Award | ||
Award Information | ||
---|---|---|
Category | Literature (Individual) | |
Instituted | 1961 | |
First Awarded | 1965 | |
Last Awarded | 2010[1] | |
Total Awarded | 46[1] (51 persons) | |
Awarded by | Bharatiya Jnanpith | |
Description | Literary award in India |
|
First Awardee(s) | G Sankara Kurup | |
Last Awardee(s) | Amar Kant, Shrilal Shukla and Chandrashekhara Kambara[1] |
The Jnanpith Award is a literary award in India. Along with the Sahitya Akademi Fellowship,[2] it is one of the two most prestigious literary honours in the country.[3] It is presented by the Bharatiya Jnanpith, a trust founded by the Sahu Jain family, the publishers of the The Times of India newspaper.
Contents |
The name of the award is taken from Sanskrit words gnyāna and pīṭha (knowledge-seat). It carries a check for 7 lakh, a citation plaque and a bronze replica of Saraswati, the Indian goddess of knowledge, music, and the arts.[4]
The award was instituted in 1961, and its first recipient, in 1965, was the Malayalam writer G. Sankara Kurup. Any Indian citizen who writes in any of the official languages of India is eligible for the honour.
Prior to 1982, the awards were given for a single work by a writer; since then, the award has been given for a lifetime contribution to Indian literature. Nine individuals [Including the 2009 award which is being shared by two Hindi writers] writing in Hindi have been honoured with the award, eight in Kannada, five in Bengali and Malayalam, four in Urdu and three in Gujarati, Oriya and Marathi.
The award announcements have lately been lagging behind the award-years. The awards for the years 2005 and 2006 were announced on November 22, 2008, and were awarded to the Hindi writer Kunwar Narayan for 2005 and jointly to Konkani writer Ravindra Kelekar and Sanskrit scholar Satya Vrat Shastri for 2006.[5] Satya Vrat Shastri is the first Sanskrit poet to be conferred the award since its inception.[6] The awards for the 45th and 46th Jnanpith for the years 2009 and 2010 respectively, were announced on 20 September, 2011.[1] The 45th award was jointly conferred on Hindi littérateurs Amar Kant and Shrilal Shukla, and the 46th on the Kannada littérateur Chandrashekhara Kambara.[1]
Year | State | Name | Works | Language | Picture |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1965 | Kerala | G. Sankara Kurup | Odakkuzhal (Flute) | Malayalam | |
1966 | West Bengal | Tarashankar Bandopadhyaya | Ganadevta | Bengali | |
1967 | Karnataka | Kuppali Venkatappagowda Puttappa (Kuvempu) | Sri Ramayana Darshanam | Kannada | |
1967 | Gujarat | Umashankar Joshi | Nishitha | Gujarati | |
1968 | Sumitranandan Pant | Chidambara | Hindi | ||
1969 | Uttar Pradesh | Firaq Gorakhpuri | Gul-e-Naghma | Urdu | |
1970 | Andhra Pradesh | Viswanatha Satyanarayana | Ramayana Kalpavrikshamu (A resourceful tree:Ramayana) | Telugu | |
1971 | Bengal | Bishnu Dey | Smriti Satta Bhavishyat | Bengali | |
1972 | Bihar | Ramdhari Singh 'Dinkar' | Urvashi | Hindi | |
1973 | Karnataka | Dattatreya Ramachandra Bendre | Nakutanti (Naku Thanthi) (Four Strings) | Kannada | |
1973 | Orissa | Gopinath Mohanty | Paraja | Oriya | |
1974 | Maharashtra | Vishnu Sakharam Khandekar | Yayati | Marathi | |
1975 | Tamilnadu | P. V. Akilan | Chitttrappavai | Tamil | |
1976 | Bengal | Ashapurna Devi | Pratham Pratisruti | Bengali | |
1977 | Karnataka | K. Shivaram Karanth | Mookajjiya Kanasugalu (Mookajjis dreams) | Kannada | |
1978 | Uttar Pradesh | Sachchidananda Hirananda Vatsyayan 'Ajneya' | Kitni Navon Men Kitni Bar (How many times in many boats?) | Hindi | |
1979 | Assam | Birendra Kumar Bhattacharya | Mrityunjay (Immortal) | Assamese | |
1980 | Kerala | S. K. Pottekkatt | Oru Desathinte Katha (Story of a land) | Malayalam | |
1981 | Amrita Pritam | Kagaj te Canvas | Punjabi | ||
1982 | Uttar Pradesh | Mahadevi Varma | Yama | Hindi | |
1983 | Karnataka | Maasti Venkatesh Ayengar | Chikkaveera Rajendra (Life and struggle of Kodava King Chikkaveera Rajendra) | Kannada | |
1984 | Kerala | Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai | Kayar {Coir} | Malayalam | |
1985 | Pannalal Patel | Maanavi Ni Bhavaai (માનવીની ભવાઇ) | Gujarati | ||
1986 | Sachidananda Rout Roy | Oriya | |||
1987 | Maharashtra | Vishnu Vaman Shirwadkar (Kusumagraj) | Natsamrat | Marathi | |
1988 | Andhra Pradesh | Dr. C. Narayana Reddy | Vishwambhara | Telugu | |
1989 | Qurratulain Hyder | Akhire Shab Ke Humsafar | Urdu | ||
1990 | Karnataka | V. K. Gokak (Vinayaka Krishna Gokak) | Bharatha Sindhu Rashmi | Kannada | |
1991 | Bengal | Subhas Mukhopadhyay | Padati | Bengali | |
1992 | Naresh Mehta | Hindi | |||
1993 | Sitakant Mahapatra | "for outstanding contribution to the enrichment of Indian literature, 1973-92"[7] | Oriya | ||
1994 | Karnataka | U. R. Ananthamurthy | for his contributions to Kannada literature | Kannada | |
1995 | Kerala | Dr. M. T. Vasudevan Nair | for his contributions to Malayalam literature | Malayalam | |
1996 | Bengal | Mahasweta Devi | Hajar Churashir Ma | Bengali | |
1997 | Ali Sardar Jafri | Urdu | |||
1998 | Karnataka | Girish Karnad | "for his contributions to Kannada literature and for contributions to kannada theater (yayati)"[8] | Kannada | |
1999 | Nirmal Verma | Hindi | |||
1999 | Gurdial Singh | Punjabi | |||
2000 | Assam | Indira Goswami | Assamese | ||
2001 | Rajendra Keshavlal Shah | Gujarati | |||
2002 | Tamilnadu | D. Jayakanthan | Tamil | ||
2003 | Maharashtra | Vinda Karandikar | Ashtadarshana (poetry) | Marathi | |
2004 | Jammu & Kashmir | Rahman Rahi | Subhuk Soda, Kalami Rahi and Siyah Rode Jaren Manz | Kashmiri[9] | |
2005 | Uttar Pradesh | Kunwar Narayan | Hindi[5] | ||
2006 | Goa | Ravindra Kelekar | Konkani[5] | ||
2006 | Uttar Pradesh | Satya Vrat Shastri | Sanskrit[6][10] | ||
2007 | Kerala | Dr. O. N. V. Kurup | for his contributions to Malayalam literature | Malayalam[11] | |
2008 | Uttar Pradesh | Akhlaq Mohammed Khan 'Shahryar' | Urdu[11] | ||
2009 | Uttar Pradesh | Amar Kant | Hindi[1] | ||
2009 | Uttar Pradesh | Shrilal Shukla | Hindi[1] | ||
2010 | Karnataka | Chandrashekhara Kambara | for his contributions to Kannada literature | Kannada[1] |