In the din, the gentle observations of the author on the trials of rural folk have been lost. One of Murugan’s better selling novels, Mathorubhagan is in its fourth re-print. In an article in the Caravan magazine, author N. Kalyan Raman, writes, “Some critics have seen shades of ethnography in Murugan’s work. However, unlike in ethnography, which often functions like Medusa’s head, freezing the community in a set of unchanging customs and practices, Murugan uses the details imaginatively to bring the terrain and people alive, giving them dignity and legitimacy. Through close descriptions of the wealth of knowledge and skills in a farming community, the reader also becomes intimately familiar with the community’s inner life and the challenges that confront it continually.”
Murugan says that notices with extracts from his novel have been distributed in the district and the chorus for a ban and boycott has only become shrill. The 16-page pamphlets being distributed in households in Tirchengode shows evidence of the campaign being backed by an organization.
Once again, India’s tenuous connection with free speech is on display manifesting in calls for burning and banning literature deemed offensive by the self-appointed custodians of faith. Early last year, big publishers like Penguin pulped their books, following calls from fringe elements for a ban years after they were published.