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Abstract
A.K. Ramanujan’s poetry offers a poignant portrayal of the fragmented modern self, navigating spaces of memory, language, and cultural duality. This article examines the intertwined themes of alienation and existentialism in Ramanujan’s poetic oeuvre, exploring how they emerge through his diasporic consciousness, strained familial relationships, linguistic ambivalence, and psychological introspection. Drawing from key poems in The Striders, Relations, and Second Sight, this paper argues that Ramanujan's work captures the postcolonial self’s dislocation and its quest for meaning in a world stripped of traditional certainties. Employing existential philosophy (especially the works of Sartre and Camus) and psychoanalytic insights, this study traces how Ramanujan crafts a poetry of alienated presence—a voice both within and outside its own cultural echo.
This paper aims to explore how the themes of alienation and existentialism are deeply interwoven in A.K. Ramanujan’s poetry. It will draw on selected works from The Striders (1966), Relations (1971), and Second Sight (1986), engaging with both literary and philosophical frameworks—including existentialism (Camus, Sartre), psychoanalytic theory (Lacan), and postcolonial discourse (Bhabha, Said). By analyzing the formal and thematic strategies Ramanujan employs, the study will illuminate the poet’s sustained inquiry into the condition of the modern human—lonely, conflicted, but persistently self-aware.