UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026

📚 UPSC Mains — Optional Subject

UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026 — Complete Paper 1 & Paper 2 Guide

The complete, officially-structured UPSC Malayalam Literature Optional Syllabus for 2026 — covering Paper 1 (Language history, Pattu, Manipravalam, Folk literature, Medieval & Modern literature) and Paper 2 (Unit-wise Prescribed 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 Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026

The UPSC Malayalam Literature Optional Syllabus 2026 consists of two papers of 250 marks each (500 marks total). Paper 1 covers the history and development of the Malayalam language (origin theories, Pattu school, Manipravalam, folk literature, standardisation) and Malayalam literature from ancient to modern periods. Paper 2 is text-based, organised in six units covering classical texts (Ramacharitam, Kannassaramayanam), modern poetry (Kumaran Asan, Ayyappa Panicker), novels (O.V. Vijayan’s Khasakkinte Ithihasam, Thakazhi’s Chemmin), short stories, and essays. Malayalam Literature is one of the 23 literature optionals offered by UPSC and is particularly well-suited for aspirants from Kerala.

Malayalam Literature as a UPSC Optional — Overview

Malayalam Literature is one of the 23 Literature Optional Subjects offered by UPSC in the Civil Services Examination. It is an ideal choice for aspirants from Kerala who possess deep familiarity with the language, its literary tradition, and its rich cultural heritage. Malayalam — one of India’s four Classical Languages — has a literary history spanning over a thousand years, from the ancient Pattu tradition and Manipravalam compositions to the works of the Kavitraya (Asan, Ulloor, Vallathol) and modern giants like O.V. Vijayan and M.T. Vasudevan Nair.

The optional demands both theoretical knowledge of language and literary history (Paper 1) and close analytical engagement with prescribed texts across six units (Paper 2). It rewards aspirants who combine textual depth with the ability to apply critical frameworks.

500
Total marks (Paper 1 + Paper 2, 250 each)
3 hrs
Duration for each paper
6
Units in Paper 2 — classical to contemporary
1,000+
Years of Malayalam literary tradition covered
Mains PaperSubjectMarksDuration
Paper VIMalayalam Literature Optional — Paper 12503 hours
Paper VIIMalayalam Literature Optional — Paper 22503 hours
TotalMalayalam Literature Optional500
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Paper 1 — Theory
250 marks · Language History, Literature History
  • Section A: Origin theories, Tamil-Malayalam relation, Pattu school, Manipravalam, Folk literature, Standardisation
  • Section B: Ancient & medieval literature (Pattu, Manipravalam, Kilippattu, Thullal)
  • Modern poetry: Venmani poets, Kavitraya (Asan, Ulloor, Vallathol), Modernism
  • Modern prose: Drama, Novel, Short story, Biography, Essay & Criticism
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Paper 2 — Prescribed Texts
250 marks · 6 Units of Literary Works
  • Units 1–3 (Section A): Classical texts + Modern poetry (Asan, Vailoppilli, Ayyappa Panicker)
  • Unit 4: Novels — Indulekha, Chemmin, Khasakkinte Ithihasam
  • Unit 5: Short stories + Drama — M.T., N.S. Madhavan, C.J. Thomas
  • Unit 6: Essays — Kuttikrishna Marar, M.K. Sanu, V.T. Bhattathirippad
🎯
Why Choose Malayalam Literature? Malayalam is one of India’s four Classical Languages (along with Tamil, Sanskrit, and Telugu), reflecting its antiquity and literary richness. For Kerala aspirants, it offers the dual advantage of native language proficiency and a richly documented scholarly tradition. The 500 optional marks, well-scored, can be decisive for the final merit rank. The syllabus is structured, finite, and rewards genuine literary engagement.

UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026 — Paper 1 (Complete)

Paper 1 is the theory paper. Section A covers the linguistic history and development of Malayalam — from its origins to its contemporary form. Section B covers the full history of Malayalam literature from ancient times through medieval and modern periods, including all major literary forms.

Paper 1 — Section A
History of Malayalam Language
A. Early Phase & Origins of Malayalam Language
Linguistics & Origin Theories
  • Various origin theories of Malayalam: Proto-Dravidian origin theory, derivation from Tamil, Sanskrit influence theory
  • Relation between Tamil and Malayalam — the Six Nayas of A.R. Rajaraja Varma — the foundational linguistic framework explaining the Tamil-Malayalam relationship
  • Pattu School — definition and characteristics; Ramacharitam as the earliest surviving work; later Pattu works: Niranam works and Krishnagatha
  • Manipravalam — definition (mixture of Malayalam and Sanskrit); linguistic features of early Manipravalam works: Champu, Sandesakavya (Unnunilisandesam), Chandrotsava, and minor works; Later Manipravalam: Medieval Champu and Attakkatha
  • Folk Literature — Southern ballads (Vadakkan Pattu) and Northern ballads (Thekkan Pattu); Mappila songs — Islamic folk literary tradition of Kerala
  • Early Malayalam Prose: Bhashakautaliyam, Brahmanda Puranam, Attaprakaram, Kramadipika, Nambiantamil
  • Standardisation of Malayalam — Peculiarities of the language of Pana, Kilippattu, and Thullal
  • Contributions of indigenous and European missionaries to Malayalam — role of missionaries in developing Malayalam prose, grammar, and dictionaries
  • Characteristics of contemporary Malayalam — Malayalam as an administrative language; language of scientific and technical literature; media language
Paper 1 — Section B
History of Malayalam Literature — Ancient to Modern
A. Ancient and Medieval Literature
Classical Forms
  • Pattu — Ramacharitam (first dated text of Malayalam), Niranam works (Ramayanam, Bharatam, Bhagavatam — by the Niranam poets), and Krishnagatha
  • Manipravalam — early and medieval Manipravalam works including Attakkatha (Kathakali librettos) and Champu (Sanskrit-Malayalam mixed prose-verse)
  • Folk Literature — oral traditions, ballads (Vadakkan and Thekkan Pattu), Mappila literary tradition
  • Kilippattu — parrot-song narrative genre; Ezhuthachan’s Kilippattu tradition
  • Thullal — comic satirical performance literature; Kunchan Nambiar as its creator and master
  • Mahakavya — classical epic poetry tradition in Malayalam
B. Modern Malayalam Literature — Poetry
19th–21st Century
  • Venmani poets and contemporaries — Venmani Mahan Achhan, Poonam Nambudiri; the Venmani school as a transitional movement linking classical to modern Malayalam poetry
  • Advent of Romanticism — the Kavitraya (Three Great Poets):
    Kumaran Asan — social reform poet; Chintavisthayaya Sita, Veena Poovu, Karuna; challenged caste hierarchy through poetry
    Ulloor S. Parameswara Iyer — classical scholar and Romantic poet; Uma Kerala
    Vallathol Narayana Menon — nationalist poet; promoted Kerala cultural identity; founded Kerala Kalamandalam
  • Poetry after Kavitraya — transition from Romanticism to more experimental and socially engaged forms
  • Modernism in Malayalam Poetry — break from classical and Romantic conventions; existential, political, and experimental themes; Ayyappa Panicker, Akkittam, O.N.V. Kurup, Attur Ravivarma
C. Modern Malayalam Literature — Prose
Drama · Novel · Short Story · Essay
  • Drama — origin and development of Malayalam drama; key playwrights; C.J. Thomas as a pioneering modern dramatist
  • Novel — origin and development; from Indulekha (O. Chanthu Menon, 1889 — first modern Malayalam novel) through social realism to existential and modernist novels; O.V. Vijayan’s Khasakkinte Ithihasam as a landmark
  • Short Story — from social reform stories to modernist and postmodernist forms; M.T. Vasudevan Nair and N.S. Madhavan as key figures
  • Biography, Travelogue, Essay and Criticism — V.T. Bhattathirippad’s reform writings; Kuttikrishna Marar’s literary criticism; M.K. Sanu’s biographical writing
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Legacy IAS Tip for Paper 1: The linguistics section — particularly the Six Nayas of A.R. Rajaraja Varma and the distinction between Pattu and Manipravalam schools — is frequently tested in both Prelims-style and Mains theory questions. Prepare clear, concise definitions of Pattu, Manipravalam, Kilippattu, Thullal, Attakkatha, and Champu with examples. For literature history, map each period to its defining form, key author, and characteristic themes.

UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026 — Paper 2 (Complete)

Paper 2 is entirely text-based, organised across six units divided into two sections. All questions are drawn from the prescribed works. Aspirants must read these texts carefully in the original Malayalam and be prepared for passage-based, critical, and comparative questions.

Paper 2 — Section A
Units 1, 2 & 3 — Classical & Modern Poetry
Unit 1 — Classical Malayalam Texts
Ancient & Medieval
  • Ramacharitam — Pattalam 1 — the earliest surviving literary work in Malayalam; a Pattu text depicting the Ramayana story; notable for its pure Tamil-Malayalam linguistic character before Sanskrit influence
  • Kannassaramayanam — Balakandam, first 25 stanzas — a Kilippattu Ramayana attributed to Kannassa Panicker; marks the transition from Pattu to Kilippattu tradition
  • Unnunilisandesam — Purvabhagam, 25 slokas including Prastavana — a Sandesakavya (messenger poem) in Manipravalam tradition; one of the finest examples of early Manipravalam literature
  • Mahabharatham Kilippattu — Bhishmaparvam — Ezhuthachan’s Kilippattu rendering of the Mahabharata; the Bhishmaparvam (Book of Bhishma) prescribed; the Bhagavad Gita forms a central part of this section
Unit 2 — Kavitraya & Early Modern Poetry
Romantic & Reform Poetry
  • Kumaran AsanChintavisthayaya Sita (Sita in deep thought) — a landmark poem presenting Sita’s inner monologue from a feminist perspective; challenges patriarchal narrative of the Ramayana; arguably the most analysed poem in Malayalam literature
  • Vailoppilli Sreedhara MenonKudiyozhikkal (Eviction) — poem depicting the tragedy of tribal displacement; one of Malayalam poetry’s most cited works on social injustice
  • G. Sankara KurupPerunthachan — poem celebrating the legendary master carpenter; themes of art, creation, and tragic fate; Jnanpith Award recipient
  • N. V. Krishna VariarTivandiyile Pattu (Song of Trivandrum) — nostalgic poem about Kerala’s capital; evocative imagery of place and identity
Unit 3 — Modernist Malayalam Poetry
Contemporary Voices
  • O.N.V. KurupBhoomikkoru Charamageetham (A Requiem for the Earth) — environmentalist poem; elegy for nature’s destruction; Jnanpith laureate
  • Ayyappa PanickerKurukshetram — avant-garde modernist poem; experimental form and political-philosophical themes; pioneer of Malayalam literary modernism
  • Akkittam Achuthan NamboothiriPandatha Messanthi — poem reflecting spiritual and existential concerns; one of Kerala’s most celebrated contemporary poets
  • Attur RavivarmaMegharupan (Cloud-form) — lyrical poem; imagery of nature and longing; distinctive voice in contemporary Malayalam poetry
Paper 2 — Section B
Units 4, 5 & 6 — Novel, Short Story, Drama & Essay
Unit 4 — Malayalam Novels
Fiction — Realism to Modernism
  • O. Chanthu MenonIndulekha (1889) — the first modern novel in Malayalam; a social reform novel depicting the Nair community; critique of orthodoxy, advocacy for women’s education and reform; pioneering work in Indian regional fiction
  • Thakazhi Sivasankara PillaiChemmin (1956) — celebrated novel set in the fishing communities of Kuttanad; themes of love, faith, caste, and fate; won the Sahitya Akademi Award; adapted to an internationally acclaimed film
  • O. V. VijayanKhasakkinte Ithihasam (The Legends of Khasak, 1969) — landmark of modern Malayalam literature; existentialist and mythological dimensions; Ravi’s search for meaning in rural Malabar; considered the greatest Malayalam novel
Unit 5 — Short Stories & Drama
Contemporary Prose
  • M.T. Vasudevan NairVanaprastham (Collection) — short stories by Kerala’s most celebrated contemporary author; themes of human relationships, loss, memory, and Kerala’s social transformation; Jnanpith laureate
  • N. S. MadhavanHigvitta (Collection) — celebrated short stories; urban Kerala, displacement, identity, and the condition of the modern individual
  • C. J. Thomas1128-il Crime 27 — pioneering modern Malayalam drama; existentialist and absurdist; considered the father of modern Malayalam theatre
Unit 6 — Literary Criticism & Essays
Non-fiction Prose
  • Kuttikrishna MararBharataparyatanam — a landmark work of Malayalam literary criticism; a pilgrimage through the Mahabharata; combines literary analysis with philosophical and humanist insight; one of the greatest works of Malayalam prose
  • M. K. SanuNakshatrangalute Snehabhajanam (Communion of Stars) — biographical literary essays; intimate portraits of Kerala’s literary luminaries; distinctive humanist prose style
  • V. T. BhattathirippadKannirum Kinavum (Tears and Dreams) — autobiographical writing by the legendary social reformer; his personal account of fighting Namboothiri orthodoxy; a foundational text of Kerala’s social reform literature
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Legacy IAS Tip for Paper 2: For Unit 1 classical texts, understand the linguistic tradition (Pattu vs Manipravalam vs Kilippattu) as much as the content — examiners test both. For modern texts (Units 2–6), go beyond plot: understand each author’s literary movement, unique stylistic contribution, socio-cultural context, and thematic preoccupations. For Khasakkinte Ithihasam (O.V. Vijayan), the existentialist and mythological dimensions are critical — not just the surface narrative about Ravi. For Asan’s Chintavisthayaya Sita, the feminist re-reading of the Ramayana narrative is the central analytical insight examiners reward.

Key Poets & Authors to Study for UPSC Malayalam Literature

A thorough understanding of each author’s period, literary movement, prescribed works, and lasting significance in Malayalam literature is essential for both critical analysis and passage-based questions in Paper 2.

Classical · 13th–14th Century
Ramacharitam Author
Anonymous; Ramacharitam — oldest surviving Malayalam literary work; Pattu tradition; pure Tamil-Malayalam language without Sanskrit influence; foundational for Paper 2 Unit 1.
Medieval · 15th–16th Century
Thunchath Ezhuthachan
Father of modern Malayalam; Adhyatma Ramayanam Kilippattu, Mahabharatham Kilippattu; standardised Malayalam script; transformed Kerala’s literary language and spiritual culture.
Medieval · 18th Century
Kunchan Nambiar
Creator of Thullal — comic satirical performance poetry; Kalyanasaugandhikam, Syamantakam; social critique of Brahmin orthodoxy; beloved as the “People’s Poet of Kerala.”
Kavitraya · 19th–20th Century
Kumaran Asan
Social reform poet; disciple of Sree Narayana Guru; Chintavisthayaya Sita, Veena Poovu, Karuna; challenged caste oppression and gender discrimination through Romantic poetry.
Kavitraya · 19th–20th Century
Vallathol Narayana Menon
Nationalist poet; Bandhanasthanaya Aniruddhan; founded Kerala Kalamandalam (classical arts academy); championed Kerala’s cultural identity and Kathakali.
Reform Novel · 19th Century
O. Chanthu Menon
Indulekha (1889) — first modern Malayalam novel; social reform themes — education for women, critique of Nair orthodoxy; landmark in Indian regional literary history.
Jnanpith · 20th Century
G. Sankara Kurup
First Jnanpith Award recipient (1965); Odakkuzhal; Perunthachan (prescribed); blends classical imagery with modern existential concerns; transitional figure between Kavitraya and modernism.
Realist Novel · 20th Century
Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai
Chemmin (prescribed) — set in Kuttanad’s fishing communities; Sahitya Akademi Award; Thottiyude Makan; chronicler of Kerala’s working-class and rural communities.
Modernist Novel · 20th Century
O. V. Vijayan
Khasakkinte Ithihasam (prescribed) — the greatest Malayalam novel; existentialist, mythological, philosophical; Sahitya Akademi Award; also a celebrated political cartoonist.
Jnanpith · 20th–21st Century
M. T. Vasudevan Nair
Vanaprastham (prescribed); Randamoozham (novel); Jnanpith laureate; screenwriter; master of psychological realism and Kerala’s social transformation narratives.
Modernist Poetry · 20th Century
Ayyappa Panicker
Kurukshetram (prescribed); pioneer of Malayalam modernism in poetry; Sahitya Akademi Award; introduced free verse and experimental forms; also a leading scholar of comparative literature.
Criticism & Reform · 20th Century
V. T. Bhattathirippad
Kannirum Kinavum (prescribed); legendary social reformer who fought Namboothiri orthodoxy; his autobiography is a landmark document of Kerala’s reform history.

Recommended Books for UPSC Malayalam Literature Optional

Book TitleAuthor / EditorPaper
Kerala Sahitya CharitramP.K. Parameswaran NairPaper 1
Malayalam Literary CriticismM. LeelavathyPaper 1
Modern Malayalam PoetryAyyappa Paniker (ed.)Paper 1 & 2
Selected works of O.V. VijayanO.V. VijayanPaper 1 & 2
Selected works of M.T. Vasudevan NairM.T. Vasudevan NairPaper 1 & 2
Kumaran Asaninte KavithakalKumaran AsanPaper 1 & 2
Selected works of Kamala Suraiyya (Kamala Das)Kamala Das / MadhavikuttyPaper 1 & 2
Ramacharitam (Pattalam 1)Anonymous (ed. critical edition)Paper 2
Kannassaramayanam (Balakandam, first 25 stanzas)Kannassa PanickerPaper 2
Unnunilisandesam (Purvabhagam, 25 slokas + Prastavana)Unnayi Warrier (Sandesakavya tradition)Paper 2
Mahabharatham Kilippattu — BhishmaparvamThunchath EzhuthachanPaper 2
Chintavisthayaya SitaKumaran AsanPaper 2
KudiyozhikkalVailoppilli Sreedhara MenonPaper 2
PerunthachanG. Sankara KurupPaper 2
Tivandiyile PattuN.V. Krishna VariarPaper 2
Bhoomikkoru CharamageethamO.N.V. KurupPaper 2
KurukshetramAyyappa PanickerPaper 2
Pandatha MessanthiAkkittam Achuthan NamboothiriPaper 2
MegharupanAttur RavivarmaPaper 2
IndulekhaO. Chanthu MenonPaper 2
ChemminThakazhi Sivasankara PillaiPaper 2
Khasakkinte IthihasamO.V. VijayanPaper 2
Vanaprastham (Collection)M.T. Vasudevan NairPaper 2
Higvitta (Collection)N.S. MadhavanPaper 2
1128-il Crime 27C.J. ThomasPaper 2
BharataparyatanamKuttikrishna MararPaper 2
Nakshatrangalute SnehabhajanamM.K. SanuPaper 2
Kannirum KinavumV.T. BhattathirippadPaper 2

Preparation Strategy & Expert Tips for Malayalam Literature Optional

01
Begin with a Complete Syllabus Mapping
Before opening any book, read the official UPSC syllabus for both papers carefully. Create a topic-by-topic map linking each Paper 1 topic to reference books and each Paper 2 unit to its specific prescribed texts. Note the precise portions prescribed for classical texts (Unit 1 specifies exact stanzas/slokas). This architectural clarity prevents wasted effort and ensures complete coverage.
02
Master the Language Traditions First
The distinctions between Pattu, Manipravalam, Kilippattu, Thullal, and Attakkatha are foundational for both Section A of Paper 1 and Unit 1 of Paper 2. Prepare precise definitions, characteristic features, representative works, and the historical sequence of each tradition. The Six Nayas of A.R. Rajaraja Varma (explaining Tamil-Malayalam linguistic relation) is a high-frequency exam topic — prepare it concisely and clearly.
03
Read All Prescribed Texts in Original Malayalam
For Paper 2, there is no substitute for direct engagement with the original Malayalam texts. Read Khasakkinte Ithihasam, Chemmin, Chintavisthayaya Sita, and all other prescribed works in Malayalam — not English translations. The linguistic texture, imagery, and idiomatic choices in original Malayalam are themselves subjects of examination questions. Secondary analyses cannot replicate this depth.
04
Prepare Unit-wise Structured Notes
For Paper 2, maintain a separate structured note for each of the six units — covering: literary tradition/period, each prescribed work’s author-movement-theme-style-context, key memorable passages or lines, and the critical frameworks most applicable to that text. For Unit 6 (essay/criticism), understand the distinctive prose styles of Kuttikrishna Marar (philosophical-critical), M.K. Sanu (biographical-humanist), and V.T. Bhattathirippad (reformist-autobiographical).
05
Apply Critical Frameworks to Key Texts
The highest-scoring answers apply relevant critical lenses: Feminist criticism for Asan’s Chintavisthayaya Sita (Sita’s feminist re-reading) and Kamala Das’s works; Post-colonial criticism for Vailoppilli’s Kudiyozhikkal (tribal displacement) and O.V. Vijayan’s existentialist exile; Marxist/Progressive criticism for Thakazhi’s depictions of fishing communities; Dalit criticism for works addressing Kerala’s caste hierarchies. Being able to name and apply these frameworks demonstrates the analytical sophistication that earns top marks.
06
Draw Comparative References
Compare Malayalam works with works from other Indian and world literatures to enrich answers. Compare O.V. Vijayan’s existentialism with Camus or Kafka; Thakazhi’s regional realism with Thomas Hardy or Premchand; Kumaran Asan’s reform poetry with Kabir, Basavanna, or Tagore; C.J. Thomas’s absurdist drama with Beckett or Ionesco. These comparisons signal intellectual breadth and genuine literary engagement beyond a single tradition.
07
Practice Answer Writing Regularly in Malayalam
Write at least one complete literature answer per day in Malayalam — alternating between Paper 1 theory questions (language history, literary period analysis, prose form development) and Paper 2 text-based questions (character analysis, thematic discussion, critical evaluation). Pay attention to the structure: open with the work’s place in literary tradition; analyse with specific textual examples; apply a critical framework; conclude with the work’s enduring significance.
08
Solve Previous Year Questions Thoroughly
Analyse at least 10 years of UPSC Malayalam Literature PYQs to identify recurring themes and question types. Note which texts appear most frequently in passage-based questions, which authors generate comparative questions, and which theoretical topics in Paper 1 are most consistently tested. Practise full answers under timed conditions — roughly 20 minutes per long-form question — and review them critically for analytical depth.
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Legacy IAS Score-Maximising Insight: The three-layer formula for top-scoring Malayalam Literature answers: (1) Contextual precision — locate the text exactly within its literary tradition (Pattu / Manipravalam / Kavitraya / Modernism) and social-historical moment; (2) Textual intimacy — quote or closely paraphrase specific passages, images, or stylistic features from the prescribed text; (3) Critical depth — apply a named critical framework (Feminist, Post-colonial, Existentialist, Marxist) to generate an original analytical insight. A candidate who can do all three for Asan’s Chintavisthayaya Sita or O.V. Vijayan’s Khasakkinte Ithihasam will consistently score in the top bracket.

⭐ Key Takeaways — UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026
  • Malayalam Literature Optional is 500 marks total — Paper 1 and Paper 2, 250 marks each; 3 hours per paper.
  • Malayalam is one of India’s four Classical Languages — this historical status is relevant for framing Paper 1 language history answers.
  • Paper 1 Section A covers origin theories, Six Nayas of A.R. Rajaraja Varma, Pattu school, Manipravalam, Folk literature, and standardisation of Malayalam.
  • Paper 1 Section B covers ancient/medieval literature (Pattu, Manipravalam, Kilippattu, Thullal) and modern literature (poetry, drama, novel, short story, essay, criticism).
  • The Kavitraya (three great poets) — Kumaran Asan, Ulloor S. Parameswara Iyer, and Vallathol Narayana Menon — are central to the Romantic/reform era of Malayalam poetry.
  • Paper 2 is organised into 6 units: Units 1–3 (Section A) cover classical and modern poetry; Units 4–6 (Section B) cover novels, short stories, drama, and essays.
  • Unit 4 prescribed novels: Indulekha (reform), Chemmin (regional realism), Khasakkinte Ithihasam (modernist-existentialist) — three different novelistic traditions.
  • Kuttikrishna Marar’s Bharataparyatanam is one of the greatest works of Malayalam literary criticism — essential for Unit 6 and for understanding critical methodology in Paper 1.
  • G. Sankara Kurup received the first-ever Jnanpith Award (1965) for Malayalam; O.N.V. Kurup and M.T. Vasudevan Nair are also Jnanpith laureates — all prescribed in Paper 2.
  • Applying feminist, post-colonial, and existentialist critical frameworks to prescribed texts is the key differentiator for high-scoring answers.

Frequently Asked Questions — UPSC Malayalam Literature Syllabus 2026

What is the UPSC Malayalam Literature Optional Syllabus 2026?
The UPSC Malayalam Literature Optional Syllabus 2026 has two papers of 250 marks each (500 total). Paper 1 covers Section A — history and development of the Malayalam language (origin theories, Pattu school, Manipravalam, folk literature, standardisation) and Section B — history of Malayalam literature from ancient Pattu and Manipravalam through medieval Kilippattu and Thullal to modern poetry movements (Kavitraya, Modernism) and modern prose (drama, novel, short story, essay). Paper 2 is text-based, covering six units of prescribed classical and modern works.
How many marks is Malayalam Literature optional in UPSC?
Malayalam Literature Optional is 500 marks total — Paper 1 (250 marks) and Paper 2 (250 marks), each 3 hours long. These marks form a significant portion of the UPSC Mains total score and directly affect final merit rank. Literature optionals generally have less competition for top marks compared to subjects like Public Administration, making them potentially high-scoring for well-prepared aspirants.
Who are the Kavitraya of Malayalam literature?
The Kavitraya (Three Great Poets) of Malayalam literature are Kumaran Asan, Ulloor S. Parameswara Iyer, and Vallathol Narayana Menon — three early 20th-century poets who collectively transformed Malayalam poetry from the classical Manipravalam and Pattu traditions into a modern, Romantic, and socially engaged literary form. Kumaran Asan focused on social reform and Dalit rights through poetry; Ulloor was a classical scholar and Romantic; Vallathol championed Kerala’s cultural identity and nationalism. All three are central to the UPSC syllabus — Kumaran Asan’s Chintavisthayaya Sita is prescribed in Paper 2.
What is the difference between Pattu and Manipravalam in Malayalam literature?
Pattu (literally “song”) is the earliest school of Malayalam literature, characterised by pure Tamil-Malayalam language with minimal Sanskrit influence. Ramacharitam (prescribed in Paper 2) is the earliest surviving Pattu work. Manipravalam (literally “ruby and coral” — Sanskrit and Malayalam intertwined) is a later literary tradition characterised by an extensive mixture of Sanskrit and Malayalam, producing a hybrid literary language. Early Manipravalam works include Champu, Sandesakavya (Unnunilisandesam — also prescribed), and Chandrotsava. The transition from Pattu to Manipravalam and then to the standardised Malayalam of Ezhuthachan’s Kilippattu tradition represents the key linguistic-literary evolution in early Malayalam literature — a central theme for Paper 1 Section A.
Is Malayalam Literature a good optional for UPSC?
Yes, Malayalam Literature is an excellent optional for aspirants from Kerala with strong Malayalam language proficiency. Its advantages include: a clearly structured finite syllabus; the ability to write answers in Malayalam (expressive and stylistic advantage for native speakers); one of India’s richest regional literary traditions spanning over a millennium; strong scholarly reference materials; and high scoring potential for aspirants who combine textual intimacy with critical analytical depth. Malayalam’s Classical Language status adds additional richness to the literary history sections of Paper 1.
What is the significance of Khasakkinte Ithihasam in UPSC Malayalam Literature?
Khasakkinte Ithihasam (The Legends of Khasak, 1969) by O.V. Vijayan is widely regarded as the greatest Malayalam novel and a landmark of 20th-century Indian literature in any language. Prescribed in Paper 2 Unit 4, it follows Ravi — a young man who retreats to the fictional village of Khasak (based on Thasrak in Palakkad) to teach in a government school. The novel operates simultaneously on realistic and mythological registers — Khasak is both a real village and a cosmological space. Its significance for UPSC: it inaugurated Malayalam literary modernism; it can be analysed through existentialist, post-colonial, and mythological-critical lenses; it has profoundly influenced all subsequent Malayalam fiction. Understanding its narrative style, philosophical themes, and literary historical position is essential for Paper 2.
What are the best books for UPSC Malayalam Literature optional?
For Paper 1: Kerala Sahitya Charitram by P.K. Parameswaran Nair (comprehensive literary history), Malayalam Literary Criticism by M. Leelavathy (for literary theory and critical methodology), and Modern Malayalam Poetry ed. Ayyappa Paniker. For Paper 2: All prescribed primary texts — Ramacharitam (Pattalam 1), Kannassaramayanam (Balakandam first 25 stanzas), Unnunilisandesam (Purvabhagam 25 slokas), Mahabharatham Kilippattu (Bhishmaparvam), Chintavisthayaya Sita (Kumaran Asan), Indulekha (O. Chanthu Menon), Chemmin (Thakazhi), Khasakkinte Ithihasam (O.V. Vijayan), Vanaprastham (M.T. Vasudevan Nair), Bharataparyatanam (Kuttikrishna Marar), and Kannirum Kinavum (V.T. Bhattathirippad).
Who are the Jnanpith Award winners in UPSC Malayalam Literature?
Malayalam has produced multiple Jnanpith laureates, and several appear in the UPSC prescribed texts: G. Sankara Kurup — first-ever Jnanpith Award recipient (1965, for Odakkuzhal); his poem Perunthachan is prescribed in Paper 2 Unit 2. O.N.V. Kurup — Jnanpith laureate; Bhoomikkoru Charamageetham is prescribed in Paper 2 Unit 3. M.T. Vasudevan Nair — Jnanpith laureate; Vanaprastham collection is prescribed in Paper 2 Unit 5. Additionally, Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai (Chemmin — Unit 4) won the Sahitya Akademi Award, as did O.V. Vijayan (Khasakkinte Ithihasam — Unit 4) and Ayyappa Panicker (Unit 3).

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