Ecology, Landscape, Memory and Love: A Comparative Study of The Poems of Pradip Kumar Patra and Jayanta Kumar Mahapatra

Paper Details
Manuscript ID: 2126-0517-5809
Vol.: 2 Issue: 5 Pages: 212-224 May - 2026 Subject: Arts And Humanities Language: English
ISSN: 3068-1995 Online ISSN: 3068-109X DOI: https://doi.org/10.64823/ijter.2605017
Abstract

ABSTRACT This comparative study explores the poetic worlds of Pradip Kumar Patra and Jayanta Kumar Mahapatra through the interrelated themes of ecology, landscape, memory, and love. The study examines how both poets transform natural surroundings into emotionally resonant spaces that preserve cultural identity, personal history, and human relationships. While Patra’s poetry reveals an intimate engagement with rural ecology and indigenous sensibility, Mahapatra’s poems often portray silence, decay, and existential loneliness through the landscapes of Odisha. Nature in their poetry is not merely decorative; it functions as a living archive of memory and emotional consciousness. Rivers, rain, soil, forests, and village spaces become symbolic mediums through which the poets negotiate displacement, nostalgia, affection, and spiritual yearning. The research further investigates how love emerges within ecological settings as both a personal and collective experience, linking human intimacy with environmental belonging. By employing comparative literary analysis and eco-critical perspectives, the study highlights convergences and divergences in their poetic representations of land and memory. It argues that both poets articulate a profound ecological awareness rooted in regional culture while simultaneously addressing universal human emotions. Their poetry ultimately presents landscape as a dynamic space where memory, identity, and love coexist, offering a powerful critique of modern alienation and environmental loss in contemporary Indian English poetry.

Keywords
Ecology Landscape Memory Love Eco-criticism Indian English Poetry Nature Identity Cultural Memory Comparative Literature
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Cite this Article

SWASTI BISAI, DR. TANUSHREE NAYAK (2026). Ecology, Landscape, Memory and Love: A Comparative Study of The Poems of Pradip Kumar Patra and Jayanta Kumar Mahapatra. International Journal of Technology & Emerging Research (IJTER), 2(5), 212-224. https://doi.org/10.64823/ijter.2605017

BibTeX
@article{ijter2026212605175809,
  author = {SWASTI BISAI and DR. TANUSHREE NAYAK},
  title = {Ecology, Landscape, Memory and Love: A Comparative Study of The Poems of Pradip Kumar Patra and Jayanta Kumar Mahapatra},
  journal = {International Journal of Technology &  Emerging Research },
  year = {2026},
  volume = {2},
  number = {5},
  pages = {212-224},
  doi =  {10.64823/ijter.2605017},
  issn = {3068-109X},
  url = {https://www.ijter.org/article/212605175809/ecology-landscape-memory-and-love-a-comparative-study-of-the-poems-of-pradip-kumar-patra-and-jayanta-kumar-mahapatra},
  abstract = {ABSTRACT
  This comparative study explores the poetic worlds of Pradip Kumar Patra and Jayanta Kumar Mahapatra through the interrelated themes of ecology, landscape, memory, and love. The study examines how both poets transform natural surroundings into emotionally resonant spaces that preserve cultural identity, personal history, and human relationships. While Patra’s poetry reveals an intimate engagement with rural ecology and indigenous sensibility, Mahapatra’s poems often portray silence, decay, and existential loneliness through the landscapes of Odisha. Nature in their poetry is not merely decorative; it functions as a living archive of memory and emotional consciousness. Rivers, rain, soil, forests, and village spaces become symbolic mediums through which the poets negotiate displacement, nostalgia, affection, and spiritual yearning. The research further investigates how love emerges within ecological settings as both a personal and collective experience, linking human intimacy with environmental belonging. By employing comparative literary analysis and eco-critical perspectives, the study highlights convergences and divergences in their poetic representations of land and memory. It argues that both poets articulate a profound ecological awareness rooted in regional culture while simultaneously addressing universal human emotions. Their poetry ultimately presents landscape as a dynamic space where memory, identity, and love coexist, offering a powerful critique of modern alienation and environmental loss in contemporary Indian English poetry.
   
  },
  keywords = {Ecology, Landscape, Memory, Love, Eco-criticism, Indian English Poetry, Nature, Identity, Cultural Memory, Comparative Literature},
  month = {May},
}
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Copyright © 2025 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.