UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026

📚 UPSC Mains — Optional Subject

UPSC Hindi Literature Optional Syllabus 2026 — Complete Paper 1 & Paper 2 Guide

The complete, officially-structured UPSC Hindi Literature Optional Syllabus for 2026 — covering Paper 1 (History of Hindi Language, Four Literary Periods, Prose Forms, Drama, Criticism) and Paper 2 (Prescribed Classical & Modern Texts), with recommended books, key authors, and expert preparation strategy from Legacy IAS faculty.

✍️ By Legacy IAS Faculty 📅 Updated: May 2026 ⏱️ ~14 min read 🎯 UPSC Mains Optional
⚡ Quick Answer — UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026

The UPSC Hindi Literature Optional Syllabus 2026 consists of two papers of 250 marks each (500 marks total). Paper 1 covers the history of Hindi language and Nagari Lipi, the four major literary periods (Adikal, Bhaktikal, Ritikal, Adhunik Kal), Hindi prose forms, drama, and literary criticism. Paper 2 is text-based — covering prescribed works by Kabir, Surdas, Tulsidas, Jayasi, Bihari, Maithili Sharan Gupta, Prasad, Nirala, Dinkar, Agyeya, Muktibodh, Premchand, Mohan Rakesh, Phanishwar Nath Renu, and others. Hindi Literature is one of the most popular and highest-scoring optional subjects for UPSC aspirants with a Hindi medium background.

Hindi Literature as a UPSC Optional — Overview

Hindi Literature is one of the most popular optional subjects in the UPSC Civil Services Examination, particularly among aspirants from Hindi-speaking states. It covers a vast and richly layered literary tradition — from 8th-century Apabhransha compositions and the medieval Bhakti movement to the Chhayavad romantics and the Progressive and Nai Kavita movements of the 20th century.

The optional tests both historical and theoretical knowledge (Paper 1) and close literary engagement with prescribed texts (Paper 2). For aspirants with a strong command of Hindi and genuine interest in its literary heritage, it offers a compelling combination of cultural richness, finite syllabus, and strong scoring potential.

500
Total marks (Paper 1 + Paper 2, 250 each)
3 hrs
Duration for each paper
4
Major literary periods — Adikal to Adhunik Kal
800+
Years of Hindi literary tradition covered
Mains PaperSubjectMarksDuration
Paper VIHindi Literature Optional — Paper 12503 hours
Paper VIIHindi Literature Optional — Paper 22503 hours
TotalHindi Literature Optional500
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Paper 1 — Theory
250 marks · Language, Literature History, Forms, Criticism
  • Section A: History of Hindi Language & Nagari Lipi — dialects, grammar, standardisation
  • Section B: Four literary periods — Adikal, Bhaktikal, Ritikal, Adhunik Kal
  • Modern poetry movements: Chhayavad, Pragativad, Prayogvad, Nai Kavita
  • Katha Sahitya: Novel and Short Story — origin and key authors
  • Drama & Theatre, Literary Criticism, Prose forms (Nibandh, Rekhachitra, Sansmaran)
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Paper 2 — Prescribed Texts
250 marks · Classical & Modern Works
  • Section A: Classical — Kabir, Surdas, Tulsidas, Jayasi, Bihari, Maithili Sharan, Prasad, Nirala, Dinkar, Agyeya, Muktibodh, Nagarjun
  • Section B: Modern — Bharatendu, Mohan Rakesh, Ramchandra Shukla, Premchand, Prasad, Yashpal, Renu, Mannu Bhandari, Rajendra Yadav
🎯
Why Choose Hindi Literature? Hindi Literature optional has consistently produced high-scoring candidates in UPSC. Its key advantages: a well-structured, finite syllabus; the ability to write answers in Hindi (giving native speakers a significant stylistic advantage); extremely rich scholarship and reference material; and the ability to link literary themes directly to broader UPSC themes of social reform, nationalism, identity, and governance. The optional also heavily rewards aspirants who read primary texts seriously.

UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026 — Paper 1 (Complete)

Paper 1 is the theory paper. Section A covers the historical and structural development of Hindi language and Nagari script. Section B covers the full history of Hindi literature across four major periods, followed by the development of specific literary forms — novel, short story, drama, criticism, and prose genres.

Paper 1 — Section A
History of Hindi Language & Nagari Lipi
A. History of Hindi Language and Nagari Script
Linguistics
  • Grammatical and applied forms of Apabhransha, Awahatta (Avahattha), and Arambhik (early) Hindi
  • Development of Braj and Awadhi as literary languages during the medieval period
  • Early forms of Khari-boli in Siddha-Nath Sahitya, Khusro’s verses, Sant Sahitya, Rahim’s dohas, and Dakhni Hindi
  • Development of Khari-boli and Nagari Lipi during the 19th century — the Bharatendu era
  • Standardisation of Hindi Bhasha and Nagari Lipi — role of literary movements and institutional efforts
  • Development of Hindi as a National Language during the freedom movement
  • Development of Hindi as the National Language of the Union of India — constitutional status, Article 343, Official Languages Act
  • Scientific and Technical Development of Hindi — terminology, neologism, translation challenges
  • Prominent dialects of Hindi — Braj, Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Maithili, Bundeli, Rajasthani — and their inter-relationships
  • Salient features of Nagari Lipi — efforts for reform and the debate around standardisation of Hindi script
  • Grammatical structure of Standard Hindi — sentence types, morphology, syntax
Paper 1 — Section B
History of Hindi Literature & Literary Forms
A. History of Hindi Literature — Four Periods
Adikal to Adhunik Kal
  • The relevance and importance of Hindi literature and the tradition of writing its history
  • Adikal (Veer Gatha Kaal) — Siddha, Nath, and Raso Sahitya; prominent poets: Chandravardai (Prithviraj Raso), Khusro (riddles, dohas), Hemchandra, Vidyapati
  • Bhaktikal — the golden age of Hindi literature:
    • Sant Kavyadhara (knowledge-based devotion — Kabir)
    • Sufi Kavyadhara (love mysticism — Jayasi)
    • Krishna Bhaktidhara (Surdas)
    • Ram Bhaktidhara (Tulsidas)
    Prominent poets: Kabir, Jayasi, Sur, Tulsi
  • Ritikal (Shringar Kaal):
    • Riti Kavya (court poetry bound by Riti rules)
    • Riti Badh Kavya (structured court poetry)
    • Riti Mukta Kavya (free from Riti constraints — Ghananand)
    Prominent poets: Keshav, Bihari, Padmakar, Ghananand
  • Adhunik Kal — Renaissance, development of prose, Bharatendu Mandal; prominent writers: Bharatendu, Bal Krishna Bhatt, Pratap Narain Mishra
B. Modern Hindi Poetry Movements
19th–21st Century
  • Chhayavad (Romanticism/Mysticism) — Maithili Sharan Gupta, Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi Verma
  • Pragativad (Progressivism) — Marxist-influenced social and political poetry; Nagarjun, Dinkar
  • Prayogvad (Experimentalism) — Agyeya’s “Tar Saptak” poets; experimental forms and techniques
  • Nai Kavita (New Poetry) — post-Independence poetry; realism, existentialism, urban themes
  • Navgeet — revival of the geet form with modern sensibility
  • Contemporary poetry and Janvadi Kavita (People’s Poetry) — protest, resistance, marginalised voices
  • Prominent modern poets: Maithili Sharan Gupta, Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi, Dinkar, Agyeya, Muktibodh, Nagarjun
C. Katha Sahitya — Novel & Short Story
Fiction
  • Origin and development of Hindi Novel — from Devaki Nandan Khatri to the realist novel
  • Hindi novel and realism — the contribution of Premchand to social realism in fiction
  • Prominent novelists: Premchand (Godan, Gaban), Jainendra Kumar, Yashpal (Divya), Renu (Maila Anchal), Bhishm Sahani (Tamas)
  • Origin and development of Hindi Short Story — from the Kissi Kahani tradition to modern forms
  • Prominent short story writers: Premchand, Prasad, Agyeya, Mohan Rakesh, Krishna Sobti
D. Drama & Theatre, Criticism & Prose Forms
Drama · Criticism · Essay
  • Origin and development of Hindi Drama — from Bharatendu’s social plays to Mohan Rakesh’s modern drama
  • Prominent dramatists: Bharatendu, Prasad, Jagdish Chandra Mathur, Ram Kumar Verma, Mohan Rakesh
  • Development of Hindi Theatre — IPTA, NSD, and the modern theatre movement
  • Origin and development of Hindi Literary Criticism:
    Saidhantik Alochana (Theoretical Criticism)
    Vyavharik Alochana (Practical Criticism)
    Pragativadi Alochana (Progressive Criticism)
    Manovishleshanvadi Alochana (Psychoanalytic Criticism)
    Nai Alochana (New Criticism)
  • Prominent critics: Ramchandra Shukla (Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihas), Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma, Nagendra
  • Other prose forms: Lalit Nibandh (personal/lyrical essay), Rekhachitra (character sketch), Sansmaran (memoir), Yatra-vrittant (travelogue)
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Legacy IAS Tip for Paper 1: Section A (language history) is highly scoring and often underestimated by aspirants. The evolution from Apabhransha → Awahatta → Arambhik Hindi → Khari-boli → Standard Hindi is a crisp, factual topic that rewards systematic preparation. For Section B, prepare a one-page timeline of each literary period — dates, defining features, key poets, and characteristic works — for rapid Prelims revision and Mains answer introduction paragraphs.

UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026 — Paper 2 (Complete)

Paper 2 is entirely text-based — all questions are drawn from prescribed literary works. Aspirants must engage deeply with the original Hindi texts and be prepared for passage-based, critical analysis, and comparative questions across both sections.

Paper 2 — Section A
Classical & Modern Poetry Texts
  • Kabir — Kabir Granthawali, Ed. Shyam Sundar Das (First 100 Sakhis) — saint-poet of the Nirguna Bhakti tradition; radical social reformer; critique of caste, religious hypocrisy
  • Soordas (Surdas) — Bhramar Geetsar, Ed. Ramchandra Shukla (First 100 Padas) — poet of Krishna Bhakti; Bhramar Geet depicts the Gopis’ debate with Uddhav
  • Tulsidas — RamcharitManas (Sundar Kand) + Kavitavali (Uttarakhand) — the most celebrated poet of Hindi literature; Ram Bhakti tradition
  • Jayasi — Padmavat, Ed. Shyam Sundar Das (Sinhal Dwip Khand and Nagmativiyog Khand) — Sufi allegorical epic; love as the path to spiritual union with God
  • Bihari — Bihari Ratnakar, Ed. Jagannath Prasad Ratnakar (First 100 Dohas) — master of the doha couplet; Shringar (love) and Niti (wisdom) themes
  • Maithili Sharan Gupta — Bharat Bharati — nationalist poem; first major expression of Hindi literary nationalism; celebration of India’s civilisational heritage
  • Prasad (Jaishankar Prasad) — Kamayani (Chinta and Shraddha Sarg) — epic poem; Chhayavad masterpiece; allegory of human consciousness and love
  • Nirala (Suryakant Tripathi) — Rag-Virag, Ed. Ram Vilas Sharma — Ram Ki Shakti Pooja (Ram’s prayer before battle) and Kukurmutta (satirical progressive poem)
  • Dinkar (Ramdhari Singh) — Kurukshetra — epic poem responding to Mahabharata’s war ethics; explores war, peace, power, and sacrifice
  • Agyeya (Sachchidananda Hirananda Vatsyayan) — Aangan Ke Paar Dwar — Asadhya Veena — Prayogvad poetry; existentialist and experimental sensibility
  • Muktibodh (Gajanan Madhav) — Brahm Rakhashas — landmark poem of Hindi modernism; political anxiety, intellectual alienation, and social responsibility
  • Nagarjun — Badal Ko Ghirte Dekha Hai, Akal Ke Bad, Harijan Gatha — progressive and protest poetry; voice of the marginalised and the rural poor
Paper 2 — Section B
Drama, Prose, Novel & Short Story Texts
  • Bharatendu Harishchandra — Bharat Durdasha (Drama) — satirical allegory on India’s colonial condition; pioneering modern Hindi drama
  • Mohan Rakesh — Ashadh Ka Ek Din (Drama) — modern Hindi theatre’s landmark; the conflict between art, love, and social responsibility; based on Kalidasa’s life
  • Ramchandra Shukla — Chintamani Part I — Kavita Kya Hai (What is Poetry?) and Shraddha aur Bhakti (Faith and Devotion) — foundational Hindi literary criticism
  • Dr. Satyendra — Nibandh Nilaya — essays by: Bal Krishna Bhatt, Premchand, Gulab Rai, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma, Agyeya, Kuber Nath Rai
  • Premchand:
    Godan (Novel) — the definitive novel of the Indian peasant; Hori’s tragedy as an allegory of colonial agrarian exploitation
    Premchand ki Sarvashreshtha Kahaniyan (Short Stories) — Ed. Amrit Rai/Manjusha
  • Prasad — Skandagupta (Drama) — historical play; Gupta empire’s resistance against Huns; themes of sacrifice, duty, and nationalism
  • Yashpal — Divya (Novel) — historical novel set in the Mauryan era; themes of slavery, freedom, and liberation
  • Phanishwar Nath Renu — Maila Anchal (Novel) — landmark regional novel set in post-Independence rural Bihar; Anchalik (regional realist) fiction
  • Mannu Bhandari — Mahabhoj (Novel/Drama) — political satire; corruption, casteism, and post-Emergency disillusionment in Indian politics
  • Rajendra Yadav — Ek Duniya Samanantar (All stories) — short story collection; Nai Kahani movement; middle-class urban alienation and psychological realism
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Legacy IAS Tip for Paper 2: For each prescribed text, prepare a structured note covering: (1) author’s literary movement and period; (2) thematic concerns and central argument; (3) narrative technique / poetic style; (4) socio-cultural and historical context; (5) at least two memorable lines or passages; (6) how the text connects to broader UPSC themes (nationalism, caste, gender, governance). For Premchand’s Godan, the connections to agrarian distress and colonial exploitation are particularly rich for UPSC Mains-level analysis.

The Four Periods of Hindi Literature — Quick Reference

The UPSC Hindi Literature syllabus is organised around four major historical periods. Understanding each period’s defining features, prominent poets, and characteristic literary forms is essential for both Prelims MCQs and Mains analytical answers.

Adikal · 8th–14th Century
Adikal (Veer Gatha Kaal)
Character: Heroic poetry, Siddha-Nath literature, Raso texts, early devotional verse.
Key poets: Chandravardai (Prithviraj Raso), Khusro (riddles, dohas), Hemchandra, Vidyapati.
Languages: Apabhransha, Awahatta, early Khari-boli
Bhaktikal · 14th–17th Century
Bhaktikal (Golden Age)
Character: Devotional poetry across four streams — Nirguna (Kabir), Sufi (Jayasi), Krishna (Sur), Ram (Tulsi).
Key poets: Kabir, Jayasi, Surdas, Tulsidas.
Languages: Awadhi (Jayasi, Tulsi), Braj (Sur), Sadhukkadi (Kabir)
Ritikal · 17th–19th Century
Ritikal (Shringar Kaal)
Character: Court poetry; Shringar (erotic/romantic) theme dominant; poetry written per Riti (rhetorical rules).
Key poets: Keshav (Riti), Bihari (Riti Badh), Padmakar, Ghananand (Riti Mukta).
Language: Braj Bhasha
Adhunik Kal · 19th Century – Present
Adhunik Kal (Modern Period)
Character: Social reform (Bharatendu), nationalism, Chhayavad, Pragativad, Prayogvad, Nai Kavita, Dalit/feminist literature.
Key figures: Bharatendu, Premchand, Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi, Dinkar, Agyeya, Muktibodh, Nagarjun.
Language: Modern Standard Hindi / Khari-boli

Key Poets & Authors to Study for UPSC Hindi Literature

Each author below appears in the prescribed texts of Paper 2. Understanding their period, movement, major works, and literary significance is indispensable for both critical analysis and passage-based questions.

Bhaktikal · 15th Century
Kabir
Nirguna saint-poet; Bijak, Kabir Granthawali; radical critique of caste, religious hypocrisy; dohas and sakhis of timeless social relevance.
Bhaktikal · 15th Century
Surdas
Blind poet of Krishna Bhakti; Sur Sagar — 100,000 verses; Bhramar Geet — Gopis’ spiritual debate; master of Braj Bhasha poetry.
Bhaktikal · 15th–16th Century
Tulsidas
Greatest poet of Hindi literature; RamcharitManas — the most read Hindi text; Kavitavali, Vinay Patrika. Ram as the ideal man and ruler.
Bhaktikal · 16th Century
Jayasi
Padmavat — Sufi allegorical epic in Awadhi; Padmini’s beauty as divine love; Ratansen’s quest as spiritual journey. A landmark of Hindi-Sufi tradition.
Ritikal · 17th Century
Bihari
Bihari Satsai — 700 dohas on Shringar and Niti themes; masterful compression of meaning into the doha couplet; court poet of Jaipur.
Adhunik · 19th Century
Bharatendu Harishchandra
Father of modern Hindi literature; Bharat Durdasha (drama); pioneered social reform literature in Hindi; founded the Bharatendu Mandal movement.
Chhayavad · 20th Century
Jaishankar Prasad
Kamayani — Chhayavad’s greatest epic poem; Skandagupta (drama); combines romanticism, mysticism, and cultural nationalism.
Chhayavad · 20th Century
Nirala
Suryakant Tripathi Nirala — revolutionary in poetic form; Ram Ki Shakti Pooja, Kukurmutta; blended classical grandeur with Progressive themes; broke metrical conventions.
Pragativad · 20th Century
Dinkar
Ramdhari Singh Dinkar — Rashtriya poet; Kurukshetra, Rashmirathi, Urvashi (Jnanpith); voice of nationalist and humanist poetry; inspired generations of freedom fighters.
Pragativad · 20th Century
Nagarjun
People’s poet — Harijan Gatha, Akal Ke Bad; protest poetry on hunger, caste, and political corruption; wrote in Hindi, Maithili, and Sanskrit.
Premchand · 20th Century
Munshi Premchand
Father of modern Hindi fiction; Godan, Gaban, Nirmala (novels); Kafan, Poos Ki Raat (short stories); social realism — caste, poverty, women’s oppression, colonial agrarian distress.
Regional Realism · 20th Century
Phanishwar Nath Renu
Maila Anchal — landmark Anchalik (regional) novel; rural Bihar post-Independence; lyrical prose blending folk traditions with realist observation.

Recommended Books for UPSC Hindi Literature Optional

Book TitleAuthor / EditorPaper
Hindi Sahitya Ka ItihasAcharya Ramchandra ShuklaPaper 1
Adhunik Hindi SahityaDr. NagendraPaper 1
Hindi Sahitya Ka ItihasDr. Nagendra (ed.)Paper 1
Hindi Sahitya Ki BhumikaHazari Prasad DwivediPaper 1
Kavita Kya Hai / Chintamani (Part I)Ramchandra ShuklaPaper 1 & 2
Hindi Bhasha Ka Udbhav aur VikasUdayanarayan TiwariPaper 1
Kabir GranthawaliEd. Shyam Sundar Das (First 100 Sakhis)Paper 2
Bhramar GeetsarSurdas — Ed. Ramchandra Shukla (First 100 Padas)Paper 2
RamcharitManas (Sundar Kand)TulsidasPaper 2
Kavitavali (Uttarakhand)TulsidasPaper 2
Padmavat (Sinhal Dwip Khand & Nagmativiyog Khand)Jayasi — Ed. Shyam Sundar DasPaper 2
Bihari Ratnakar (First 100 Dohas)Bihari — Ed. Jagannath Prasad RatnakarPaper 2
Bharat BharatiMaithili Sharan GuptaPaper 2
Kamayani (Chinta & Shraddha Sarg)Jaishankar PrasadPaper 2
Rag-Virag (Ram Ki Shakti Pooja & Kukurmutta)Nirala — Ed. Ram Vilas SharmaPaper 2
KurukshetraRamdhari Singh DinkarPaper 2
Aangan Ke Paar Dwar (Asadhya Veena)AgyeyaPaper 2
Brahm RakhashasMuktibodhPaper 2
Badal Ko Ghirte Dekha Hai, Akal Ke Bad, Harijan GathaNagarjunPaper 2
Bharat DurdashaBharatendu HarishchandraPaper 2
Ashadh Ka Ek DinMohan RakeshPaper 2
GodanPremchandPaper 2
Premchand Ki Sarvashreshtha KahaniyanEd. Amrit Rai / ManjushaPaper 2
Nibandh NilayaDr. SatyendraPaper 2
SkandaguptaJaishankar PrasadPaper 2
DivyaYashpalPaper 2
Maila AnchalPhanishwar Nath RenuPaper 2
MahabhojMannu BhandariPaper 2
Ek Duniya SamanantarRajendra YadavPaper 2

Preparation Strategy & Expert Tips for Hindi Literature Optional

01
Master the Syllabus Structure First
Read the official UPSC syllabus for both papers completely before buying a single book. Create a topic-by-topic map linking each syllabus item to specific texts, reference books, and key authors. This prevents the common mistake of over-studying medieval poetry while neglecting the linguistics section or prose forms — both of which carry significant marks in Paper 1.
02
Build Chronological Literary Period Charts
For Paper 1, prepare one-page visual timelines for each of the four literary periods (Adikal, Bhaktikal, Ritikal, Adhunik Kal) — noting dates, defining characteristics, key poets, characteristic forms (Raso, Prabandha, Doha, Chhayavad), and language used. These charts become your most-used revision tools and also serve as the framework for answering period-based Mains questions.
03
Read Every Prescribed Text in Original Hindi
For Paper 2, reading English summaries or secondary analyses without engaging with the original Hindi texts is a preparation error that shows clearly in answers. Examiners can identify candidates who have read Godan, Kamayani, or Kabir’s Sakhis directly versus those who have not. The depth, precision, and authenticity of your analysis depends on direct textual engagement.
04
Prepare Author-wise and Text-wise Structured Notes
For each author, maintain structured notes covering: literary period/movement, major prescribed works, distinctive style, central themes, social and historical context, and at least 2–3 memorable lines or passages with their significance. For critics like Ramchandra Shukla, understand their critical methodology and key arguments in detail — Shukla’s Chintamani is both a prescribed text and a reference tool for literary criticism questions.
05
Practice Answer Writing Daily in Hindi
Write at least one full Hindi Literature answer per day — alternating between Paper 1 theory (literary movements, forms, criticism schools) and Paper 2 text-based questions. Pay attention to: opening that places the work in its literary tradition; body that analyses themes, style, and socio-cultural significance; conclusion that evaluates the work’s enduring relevance. Use Hindi literary vocabulary (Chhayavad, Nirguna, Dhwani, Alankara, Anchalik) naturally and precisely.
06
Apply Critical Frameworks to Prescribed Texts
Apply multiple critical lenses to key texts — Marxist/Progressive criticism for Premchand’s Godan or Nagarjun’s Harijan Gatha; feminist criticism for Mannu Bhandari’s Mahabhoj or Mahadevi Verma’s work; Post-colonial criticism for Bharatendu’s Bharat Durdasha or Renu’s Maila Anchal; Psychoanalytic criticism for Muktibodh’s Brahm Rakhashas. This multi-framework approach produces the analytical sophistication that examiners reward with high marks.
07
Draw Comparative References Across Literatures
Comparing Hindi works with comparable works from other Indian and world literatures enriches answers decisively. Compare Premchand’s rural realism with Tagore (Bengali) or Hardy (English); Kabir’s mysticism with Rumi or Guru Nanak; Chhayavad with English Romanticism (Keats, Shelley); Nagarjun’s protest poetry with Jashuva (Telugu) or Pablo Neruda. These connections signal intellectual breadth and genuine literary engagement.
08
Solve Previous Year Questions Strategically
Analyse at least 10 years of UPSC Hindi Literature PYQs to identify recurring question patterns — which poets are asked most frequently, which literary movements attract theory questions, and which texts generate passage-based questions. Practise full answers under timed conditions (roughly 15 minutes per 150-mark question). Evaluate your own answers critically for both content accuracy and quality of literary analysis.
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Legacy IAS Score-Maximising Insight: The highest-scoring Hindi Literature answers share a three-layer structure: (1) Historical depth — locating the text/author precisely within a literary period and movement; (2) Textual intimacy — analysing specific stylistic features, passages, or characters from the prescribed text; (3) Critical framework — applying a relevant critical lens (Progressive, Feminist, Post-colonial, Psychoanalytic) to generate original insight. A candidate who can do all three for Muktibodh’s Brahm Rakhashas or Renu’s Maila Anchal will consistently score in the top bracket.

⭐ Key Takeaways — UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026
  • Hindi Literature Optional is 500 marks total — Paper 1 and Paper 2, 250 marks each; 3 hours per paper.
  • Paper 1 Section A covers Hindi language history — from Apabhransha through Khari-boli to standard Hindi; dialects; Nagari Lipi; grammar.
  • Paper 1 Section B covers four literary periods — Adikal (heroic, Siddha-Nath), Bhaktikal (Kabir, Sur, Tulsi, Jayasi), Ritikal (Bihari, Keshav, Ghananand), Adhunik Kal (Chhayavad to contemporary).
  • Modern poetry movements to master: Chhayavad, Pragativad, Prayogvad, Nai Kavita, Navgeet, Janvadi Kavita.
  • Paper 1 also covers Hindi novel, short story, drama, literary criticism schools, and prose forms (Lalit Nibandh, Rekhachitra, Sansmaran, Yatra-vrittant).
  • Paper 2 Section A prescribes 12 texts — from Kabir’s Sakhis to Muktibodh’s Brahm Rakhashas.
  • Paper 2 Section B prescribes 10 texts — including Godan (Premchand), Maila Anchal (Renu), Ashadh Ka Ek Din (Mohan Rakesh), Mahabhoj (Mannu Bhandari).
  • Premchand is the most prominent figure — prescribed in both novel (Godan) and short story (Sarvashreshtha Kahaniyan) sections.
  • Key literary critics: Ramchandra Shukla (Chintamani — prescribed text), Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma, Nagendra.
  • Applying multiple critical frameworks (Progressive, Feminist, Post-colonial) to prescribed texts is the key differentiator for high-scoring answers.

Frequently Asked Questions — UPSC Hindi Literature Syllabus 2026

What is the UPSC Hindi Literature Optional Syllabus 2026?
The UPSC Hindi Literature Optional Syllabus 2026 has two papers of 250 marks each (500 total). Paper 1 covers: Section A — History of Hindi Language and Nagari Lipi (development from Apabhransha, dialects, grammar, standardisation); Section B — History of Hindi Literature across four periods (Adikal, Bhaktikal, Ritikal, Adhunik Kal), modern poetry movements, Katha Sahitya (novel and short story), drama, literary criticism, and prose forms. Paper 2 is text-based, covering 12 prescribed works in Section A (classical and modern poetry) and 10 works in Section B (drama, prose, novels, and short stories).
How many marks is Hindi Literature optional in UPSC?
Hindi Literature Optional is 500 marks total — Paper 1 (250 marks, 3 hours) and Paper 2 (250 marks, 3 hours). These 500 marks form a significant portion of the UPSC Mains total and directly determine merit rank and interview eligibility. Literature optionals generally have less competition for top marks, making them potentially high-scoring for well-prepared aspirants.
What are the four periods of Hindi Literature in UPSC?
The four major periods of Hindi Literature in the UPSC syllabus are: (1) Adikal (Veer Gatha Kaal, 8th–14th century) — heroic poetry, Siddha-Nath Sahitya, Raso texts; key poets Chandravardai, Khusro, Vidyapati; (2) Bhaktikal (14th–17th century) — the golden age; four streams (Nirguna/Kabir, Sufi/Jayasi, Krishna Bhakti/Surdas, Ram Bhakti/Tulsidas); (3) Ritikal (Shringar Kaal, 17th–19th century) — court poetry; Shringar theme; key poets Keshav, Bihari, Padmakar, Ghananand; (4) Adhunik Kal (19th century–present) — reform (Bharatendu), Chhayavad, Pragativad, Prayogvad, Nai Kavita, contemporary.
Is Hindi Literature a good optional for UPSC?
Yes, Hindi Literature is one of the most popular and potentially high-scoring optional subjects in UPSC, particularly for aspirants with a Hindi medium background. Its key advantages: a clearly defined and finite syllabus; the ability to write answers in Hindi (stylistic and expressive advantage for native speakers); an extremely rich scholarly tradition with high-quality reference books; and the ability to link literary themes (social reform, nationalism, caste, gender) directly to UPSC’s broader GS themes. The optional rewards serious readers and analytical thinkers who engage deeply with the primary texts.
What are the modern poetry movements in UPSC Hindi Literature?
The modern Hindi poetry movements in the UPSC syllabus are: (1) Chhayavad (1918–1938) — Romantic mysticism; Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi Verma, Maithili Sharan Gupta; (2) Pragativad (Progressive, 1930s–50s) — Marxist-influenced social poetry; Nagarjun, Dinkar; (3) Prayogvad (Experimentalism, 1943 onwards) — Agyeya’s Tar Saptak; experimentation in form and imagery; (4) Nai Kavita (New Poetry, 1950s–60s) — post-Independence realism, existentialism, urban themes; (5) Navgeet — revival of the geet form with modern sensibility; (6) Janvadi Kavita (People’s Poetry) — protest literature, marginalised voices, resistance poetry.
What is the significance of Premchand in UPSC Hindi Literature?
Premchand (Dhanpat Rai Srivastav) is the most important figure in modern Hindi fiction and appears in both the novel and short story sections of Paper 2. Godan (1936) is his masterpiece — the definitive novel of the Indian peasant, depicting Hori’s tragedy as an allegory of colonial agrarian exploitation, caste oppression, and economic marginalisation. For UPSC, Godan is analytically rich: it connects to themes of rural distress, land alienation, moneylender exploitation, caste, and gender that are directly relevant to GS Paper II and III. His short stories (Kafan, Poos Ki Raat, Bade Bhai Sahab) demonstrate social realism at its most concise and powerful.
What are the best books for UPSC Hindi Literature optional?
For Paper 1: Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihas by Acharya Ramchandra Shukla (foundational history), Adhunik Hindi Sahitya by Dr. Nagendra, Hindi Sahitya Ki Bhumika by Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, and Hindi Bhasha Ka Udbhav aur Vikas by Udayanarayan Tiwari (for language section). For Paper 2: All prescribed primary texts — Kabir Granthawali (Ed. Shyam Sundar Das), Bhramar Geetsar (Surdas), RamcharitManas Sundar Kand (Tulsidas), Padmavat (Jayasi), Bihari Ratnakar, Kamayani (Prasad), Kurukshetra (Dinkar), Godan and Sarvashreshtha Kahaniyan (Premchand), Maila Anchal (Renu), Ashadh Ka Ek Din (Mohan Rakesh), Mahabhoj (Mannu Bhandari), and Chintamani Part I (Ramchandra Shukla).
What is Chhayavad in Hindi Literature?
Chhayavad (literally “shadow-ism” or “impressionism”) is the dominant modern Hindi literary movement from approximately 1918 to 1938. It is characterised by Romantic mysticism, individualism, idealism, nature imagery, and the exploration of inner emotional experience — in contrast to the didactic and nationalistic poetry of the Bharatendu era. Its four pillars are Jaishankar Prasad (Kamayani — prescribed text), Suryakant Tripathi Nirala (Ram Ki Shakti Pooja — prescribed), Mahadevi Verma (feminine mysticism), and Maithili Sharan Gupta (Bharat Bharati — prescribed). Chhayavad has been compared to English Romanticism (Keats, Shelley) in its celebration of beauty, imagination, and emotion over reason.

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