Vidyavinodini
M.E. 1068 Makaram (c. December 1892) edition of Vidyavinodini | |
Former editors | C. P. Achutha Menon, Appu Nedungadi, T. K. Krishna Menon, Palliyil Gopala Menon |
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Categories | Literary magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | November 1889 |
Final issue | March 1902 |
Company | V. Sundarayyar & Sons |
Country | Cochin |
Language | Malayalam |
Vidyavinodini or Vidya Vinodini (Malayalam: വിദ്യാവിനോദിനി) was a
It started publication in November 1889 and ceased publication in March 1902.History
Vidyavinodini Press was established in 1886 (Malayalam Era 1062). It was run by V. Sundarayyar and his son Viswanathayyar, the owners of
The first issue of Vidyavinodini was published in November 1889. Vidya Vilasini, the first magazine in Malayalam, had ceased publication around this time, which helped Vidyavinodini establish itself as a power in the land.[2] Vidyavinodini was able to contribute to the literary, cultural, and scientific fields of Kerala for more than a decade. This magazine published 150 issues (twelve books and six issues) until it ceased publication in March 1902.[3] The magazine had changed its name to Vidyavinodini Vakthavu in its final years.
After the resignation of C. P. Achutha Menon in 1898, Appu Nedungadi, T. K. Krishna Menon,[2] and Palliyil Gopala Menon also served as the editors of Vidyavinodini.
Vidyavinodini was not just a literary magazine. Instead, the magazine covered history, culture, finance, agriculture, and science. C. S. Gopala Panicker, who specialised in natural science, was the chief science reporter of Vidyavinodini.[4] The magazine, which Palliyil Gopala Menon finally owned, ceased operations in March 1902. The place of Vidyavinodini was filled up for a time by Rasika Ranjini, a monthly that was owned and conducted by H. H. Rama Varma Appan Thampuran of Cochin.[2]
Trivia
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References
- ^ a b Shaji A. (2017). Politicisation of Caste Relations in a Princely State: Communal Politics in Modern Travancore (1891–1947). Gurgaon: Zorba Books. p. 57.
- ^ a b c T. K. Krishna Menon (1939). A Primer of Malayalam Literature. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services.
- ^ Bellary Shamanna Kesavan (1985). History of Printing and Publishing in India: A Story of Cultural Re-awakening · Volume 2. New Delhi: National Book Trust. pp. 666–667.
- ^ Jomi Thomas (2010). Farm programs of electronic media: a comparative study of audience perception in Kerala (Thesis). Cochin University of Science and Technology. p. 80.