• R.K.Narayan born (10/10/1906)

    From Ross Clark@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 10 22:44:06 2024
    Indian writer (died 2001). Hm! I have a couple of his books on the shelf
    here; should put them on the "to-read" pile.

    Graham Greene was an early fan: "[Narayan] has offered me a second home. Without him I could never have known what it is like to be Indian."

    In an essay called "Street Names" (1956), Narayan writes about "the
    passion for changing names of streets, towns, parks and squares" in
    India after independence.

    "Smith Lane...is always in danger of being attacked by righteous-minded persons. Someone will suddenly discover that Smith was an odious
    colonial administrator and transform the lane, with every pomp, to
    Jagadguru Lane."

    A Jagadguru...doesn't need such an honour; nor is the change "likely to
    make the ghost of the old despot go pale with shame or remorse. On the contrary, the despot's name should be left untouched just to show how
    his despotism has proved futile in the long run."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._K._Narayan

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  • From Athel Cornish-Bowden@21:1/5 to Ross Clark on Thu Oct 10 18:14:46 2024
    On 2024-10-10 09:44:06 +0000, Ross Clark said:

    Indian writer (died 2001). Hm! I have a couple of his books on the
    shelf here; should put them on the "to-read" pile.

    Graham Greene was an early fan: "[Narayan] has offered me a second
    home. Without him I could never have known what it is like to be
    Indian."

    In an essay called "Street Names" (1956), Narayan writes about "the
    passion for changing names of streets, towns, parks and squares" in
    India after independence.

    "Smith Lane...is always in danger of being attacked by righteous-minded persons. Someone will suddenly discover that Smith was an odious
    colonial administrator and transform the lane, with every pomp, to
    Jagadguru Lane."

    A Jagadguru...doesn't need such an honour; nor is the change "likely to
    make the ghost of the old despot go pale with shame or remorse. On the contrary, the despot's name should be left untouched just to show how
    his despotism has proved futile in the long run."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._K._Narayan

    That seems to have been the policy of Singapore's governments over the
    years. Virtually every name that I remember from my childhood
    (1947-1950) whether in Rnglish (Thompson Road, the Raffles Hotel,
    Woodlands Road ...) or Malay (Bukit Timah road ...) remains in use
    today, and all the traffic signs are in the language of the oppressor.
    Rimau (where I lived) is now View Road, but that derives from a
    lengthening of the road to subsume Rimau. When I was in Singapore in
    2015 or thereabouts I mentioned in my talk that I couldn't find Rimau
    on the map; afterwards a helpful student consulted his grandfather, who
    knew about such things and had a collection of old maps, who told him
    that Rimau was now View Road. I was thus able to find where I had
    lived, and found it to be one of the very few places in Singapore
    (along with the Raffles Hotel and the zoo) that looked the same as in
    1950.

    --
    Athel -- French and British, living in Marseilles for 37 years; mainly
    in England until 1987.

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