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        <author>Damodar Prasad</author>
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        <date when="2022">December 10, 2022</date>
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          <graphic url="images/PKT-09-05-20.jpg" width="100%"/>
          <figDesc> Cartoon by E. P. Unny  . </figDesc>
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          <titlePart type="main">E. P. Unny’s Lock Down Cartoons</titlePart>
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          <persName>Damodar Prasad</persName>
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    <body>
      <div type="lchapter" xml:id="lchp1">
        <head type="lchaphead">E. P. Unny’s Lock Down Cartoons: Piercing through infectious
reality, Testing the Asymptomatic Politics</head>
        <div type="lsection">
          <p style="noindent">“Time is no longer in the chromatism of bodies; it has become a
monochromatic eternity.”—Delueze.<ref xml:id="xfn1" target="#fn1" type="noteAnchor">[1]</ref>
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/Migrant_Exodus_Compassion_Epic.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
          </figure>
          <p>
            <list type="gloss">
              <label>Shruthi Ravi:</label>
              <item> Is there any playing with time in a single panel cartoon? </item>
              <label>E. P. Unny:</label>
              <item> By single panel you mean the one frame cartoon, right? No, it is almost instantaneous.
Though you do take time scanning it, I mean ten or twenty seconds to look at it, but mostly it
is like looking at a photograph or a frame. It’s a frame or a panel. Time doesn’t move. </item>
            </list>
          </p>
          <p>(Conversation with E. P. Unny)
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/damodar-unny-01.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 1.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>In a way the cartoon is perhaps the most inappropriate medium to express mourning or
share the grief because cartoon in its popular understanding is meant to evoke satire, sarcasm,
critical banter and sometimes wicked laughter. None of these emotions could jell with the
collective mourning of the humanity for the lives lost to the virus-Covid 19. Even collective
mourning, which is an expression of a humanly possible solidarity that we see in times of war
and ravages has turned out to be an impossibility with the state protocols taking over the
funeral religious rites in cremation. The funerals are no longer private affairs and familial.
The visuals of collective funerals with no rituals and performative rites are getting viral in
social media. Like the visuals from the war ravaged distant lands it may not evoke any special
emotions perhaps other than a certain sense of fear of invisible enemy overwhelming the

public. While in India it was our inability to express our compassion for the mass exodus of
migrant labourers fleeing to reach their homes in the far remote Indian villages from where
they had come to work and earn. Suddenly, we discovered to the utter annoyance of our
understanding that the globalization mantra of ‘global village and death of distance’ is as good
as a fake news item. The casualties of the ‘long march’ of Migrant labourers to their homes
came as shocking reminder that ideas like “Aspiring India” were hollow sounding that meant
nothing and what was being witnessed by the nation was just a trailer of devastation which
had yet not started its full play. Then what could probably be its climax? “Climax”? “Is this
some unfolding of a screenplay on screens of varying sizes?” Yes, we need mediations of screen
to understand realities even though we may wish to compensate it with other nationalist
fantasies. Mourning, compassion, sharing of grief—the elemental human emotions does
require mediations in our present life.
</p>
          <noteGrp>
            <note xml:id="fn1" n="1" style="end">[<ref target="#xfn1">1</ref>] What is a
triptych, Delueze, Francis Bacon, p 61, Continuum, 2005.</note>
          </noteGrp>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-23-03-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 2.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>However, cartoons exist in a pre-screen ecosystem and also desist itself from on-screen
mediations. Unlike the reportage, the daily news bulletin, other opinion pieces, MOJO
transmissions, cartoons are pointed to a singular and specific aspect and within the single
frame, it thus freezes time and expands to register that reality, which is dissimulated in
numerous debates and sound bite remarks. It is characteristic of the cartoons to be reluctantly
sensitive to the dominant narrative while attempting to pierce through it. It resists in its own
ingenious ways to be subjected to the paradigmatic control of the gate keeper checked items
that flow in and out of the media. This is a special feature of the cartoons in print media
which could in no way be substituted or compensated either by visual media caricature
programmes in television or social media trolls. Creative authorship is imprinted in the
cartoons. This is something obvious. One more distinctly characteristic feature about cartoon
as a media is “embeddedness in the context of tradition.” The cartoons recalls its tradition even
its little brush strokes. Trolls have no such feature. The cartoons desist from obviously stating
the reality like something that we see in trolls. It presents itself to the discerning reader to be
attentive to ideas folded into its lines and touches. Cartoons, especially, political cartoons
never submits itself to the partial preferences of political consensus and it always dissociates
itself from what is given and perhaps this remains one reason for the cartoons being mostly
cornered in the print layout as well as being attacked by the bigots. Political cartooning due to
its embeddedness in its tradition strangely escapes the predilections of post truth demands on
media. It is in this mode of understanding that we need to look at E. P. Unny’s cartoons on
lock-down imposed by the government for the containment of the pandemic. This experience
of a global pandemic and more than a month long lock down is unprecedented.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-25-04-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 3.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>E. P. Unny’s lock down cartoons dissects into the normative discourses of governance and
pliable media reports and in its own distinct way captures the worst of fates that resulted
from the governance measures, which was supposedly an extreme, emergent and exceptional
measure that State undertook with little thinking about the consequences to tackle the Covid
crisis. Suddenly, it all became the “new normal”—a catch term that could mean either way.
One cartoon of E. P. Unny shares this distaste of oft repeated notion of ‘new normal’.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-07-05-20-2.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 4.</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.1"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.2">
          <head type="lsechead">Indifference</head>
          <p style="noindent">One major concern shared across during the pandemic was about the
importance of public health initiatives. The threat of social spread of virus was mainly
contained by social distancing and slew of measures by the state health agencies. However,
this welfare measure was largely ignored to the extent that in many Indian states the public
health systems were in a dysfunctional state. In developed countries too, this was a major
issue. The privatized health system due to its apathetic logic could not well respond to the
immediate demands. In contrast to the extravagant spending of the State, the public health
received only a negligible share from the annual budgets. One cartoon directly calls attention
to this aspect of the lack of support public health systems received. The cartoon depicts the
mismanagement and siphoning off of funds for statues ignoring the demands for public
hospitals. (Cartoon-Statue/Public health).
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/Distancing_from_Trump.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 5.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>Indifference of some of the state to respond to the crisis in a true humanitarian way also

finds depiction in several of E. P. Unny’s lock down cartoons. In this cartoon (Cartoon-3), the
two key terms from the pandemic manual is inverted to produce exactly the opposite effect
where you find the mechanized hands of the governments failing to deliver what they ought
to. The government remains unclean and distant from the needy. The quirky logic in this
cartoon disrupts the central tenet during the pandemic and lock down, which was “trust the
State”. No matter what the character of the State is, it was no time for political opposition
because the primary human instinct was to survive and therefore it became obligatory to
follow the orders of the State.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-08-04-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 6.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>The primary response of all sovereign States to the virus attack was to put the Nation
under lockdown. It is a long held solution which the science of epidemiology also endorses. The
liberal politics well versed in bio political arrangement has already shifted its politics to mere
management of the population through governance techniques. However, the right wing with
its inherent whimsicality for drama has no such received ideas on population management
and it has to play its own version of dramatic politics on its traditional priorities to stay afloat
in a multi party democracy. However, it is worrying to note that a Right wing trained in bio
political population management techniques with perfected skills in dramaturgy can cost
democracy dearly. (The signs of up skilling were occasionally visible from the times of its
management of demonetization and NRC). But then the politics exhibited itself to be
asymptomatic of the worst ever crisis that had hit economy and livelihood of vast majority of
people pushing them to immediate destitution. E. P. Unny’s cartoon pierces through its surgical
brush strokes the overtly asymptomatic expressions of the politics to capture the deeply
infected internal organs of the body politic. One such cartoon that turns upside the idea of
‘asymptomatic’ and ‘isolation’ is the one on continuing house arrest of Mehbooba Mufti,
former CM of Kashmir and PDP leader.</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-04-05-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 7.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p> The cartoon takes on the biopolitics of medical management with an interesting turn. It
says: “Unlike Medicine, Law supports endless asymptomatic isolation”. In the cartoon piece,
there is no human presence of Mehbooba Mufti. It has just one prop of a suitcase captioned J
and K and a profile of a shelter in the background.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-02-04-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 8.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>Social distancing, washing hands with soaps and also wearing masks are the essential
components of the survival-instructional manual issued by the State after state. This has
become what in contemporary parlance is termed as ‘new normal’. E. P. Unny has a few
interesting takes on the new norms and they are surcharged with political current as well.
One is captioned as ‘keep an astronomical distance from the trump’. In this cartoon (4), Trump
is visualized as Hardy (Laurel and Hardy) like figure with his long American tie and towards
the corner right you have PM Modi standing and in his front there stands a table with
sanitizer. Similarly, the cartoon on Tablighi Jamat meet at Nizamudeen also twists on the idea
of clean hands and pointing of fingers. Red zone, wearing of mask gets interesting twists and
turns in these cartoons. The mask worn by Trump is printed with a warning sign to India. The
interesting aspect of this cartoon (5) what is explicitly stated is words of gratitude but the
threat is printed over the mask while it is in effect more explicit than what is clearly stated.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-03-04-20-1.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 9.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>In Red Zone, North Korean dictator Kim is illustrated to express the closure of barber
shops. Someone has actually pointed out that the hair growth has become a factor aiding
emotional depression during lock down. There were numerous rumors about North Korean
dictator Kim being unwell or even dead during the lock down period. However, later a few
photographs of Kim inaugurating a factory was circulated ending for a while the rumors
about Kim’s death. The uniqueness in the cartoons is to blend two or three ideas, which
obviously has no such specific relations but when connected with each other produces a
different order of meaning.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-31-03-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 10.</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.2"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.3">
          <head type="lsechead">Intimidation</head>
          <p style="noindent">While governance measures were tightened to strictly implement the
lock down, the front line staff which includes Doctors, Nurses, Paramedical staffs were facing
a different kind of apathy even after Prime Minister Narendra Modi had asked people to
display respects for them by clanging pots etc. In several places, the health workers were

tyrannized or attacked. Some were denied entry to their homes. In some extreme cases, the
health workers were hounded out from the places they were staying. It was trying times for
them. After long hours of duty they found themselves being attacked as carriers and
spreaders of virus despite Government’s call to take strict police action against anyone who
harmed the health workers. The organized media—TV channels, print media and known
online news sites-had stories supporting and cheering up the front-line staff. The media could
not have done otherwise as they were also in the front line in reporting to the country the
course of the pandemic. The support rendered to the front line staff is a mature response of a
society that understood and saw the reason in the following what medical sciences had to
offer however limited it was. The cartoon “Attack on Medics” is a take on this and it is bluntly
captioned on the top side as “lock up” as a way to deal with it.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/Migrant_Exodus_Compassion_Epic.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 11.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>The media regularly with an optimistic note reported on the scientific and lab activities
being undertaken for vaccine development. The single protocol to be followed in this was to
listen to the scientific advice whatever be its limited understanding of how society
functioned. If this was the situation world over, in India there was funny shades to the
‘indigenous’ medicines discovered by fringe religious groups. One such was the advice of
drinking “Gomutra”, urine of the cow, as a cure for Covid-19. With responsibility, media
reported about how such calamities are being used for spread of pseudo scientific ideas. While
such rabid ideas of contagion containment happened regularly, some ministers of the Union
government were also tweeting about other indigenous treatment they knew about. But the
gruesome incident took place in UP where the fleeing migrant labourers were sprayed
disinfectant. The video became viral over the social media. Except for one to two national
television channels, this gruesome incident was something to be ignored. They didn’t see any
political value other man making their political bosses embarrassed about the deeds of their
government officials. E. P. Unny picked this up for his cartoon.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-04-04-20-1.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 12.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>The big brother official of UP wearing PPE suits spraying cow urine as disinfectant
showed the larger image of an apathetic state. The official in the cartoon carried on his
shoulder a bag that had the figure of death stalking skeleton while he carried a small bottle
of cow urine in hands.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-29-04-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 13.</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.3"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.4">
          <head type="lsechead">Apathy</head>
          <p style="noindent">In the preceding day to the nationwide lock down, the information
and broadcasting ministry of India decided to re-telecast the television serials of epic
Ramayana through national broadcaster, Doordarshan. Vivifying the nostalgic memories of a
Bharatheeya middle class, the government had only a limited interest in soothing these souls
with “epidoses” of Ramayana. Next day after the lock down began, a Minister in the Union
cabinet had tweeted with a picture of him comfortably viewing the epic at his official
residence. He later deleted the tweet. While this epic of compassion was being telecast over the
television, a large exodus of migrant laborers has started to flee from the cities they live for
work. They had nothing to be comfortable about. Devoid of job, food and a shelter, the
migrant labourers had no other choice than to walk back stretched over miles to their home
places. Their home places being so distant and with no modes of transport available, they had
to literally walk the miles. There was a hue and cry over the issue. The State governments
after State governments appealed to the migrant labourers fleeing the city to stay back and
assured food and shelter. However, it had little impact. The apathy and misery they have all
along encountered seemed to worsen their fears. The apathy was more so visible in some
private national television channels which reported that the labourers were instigated to
crowd themselves and create mass discontent. It evoked the haunting images of exodus during
partition time. The fleeing migrant labourers were treated as a health security problem by
the nation reeling under the pressures of virus transmission. The rich and the salaried middle
classes were worried whether this would exacerbate the calamity. E. P. Unny’s cartoon on the
coziness of isolationism of the rich class and mass exodus whose body-less visibility is captured
in this cartoon. (Cartoon-Epic of compassion).
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-06-04-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 14.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>The single caption of “epic of compassion” captures the heartless, soulless, apathy and
indifference for the migrant labourers. The cartoon brilliantly demonstrates the castling of
the elite ruling class from the glaring condition of poverty and wretchedness. Amid this
disturbing situation which was going on unabated, the citizens of India had two rounds of
‘coming together’ as urged by the Prime Minister to clap hands, ring bells and a few days later
to light the lamps. A cartoon on homelessness and light from the cooking fire pokes at the
privileged class for their fascination for the easily demonstrable ideals. (Cartoon on light
from cooking fire).

</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT_01-05-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 15.</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.4"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.5">
          <head type="lsechead">Infodemic and Isalmophobia</head>
          <p style="noindent">The rate of spread of covid-19 was out beaten by only one thing: the
virulent viral spread of fake news. Pandemic could not quite literally catch up with the
infodemic. It was the unverified, non-fact checked rumors, false reports, statistical data, bit
information on medicines, health advises on prevention and recovery and also stories that
intended communal ravage that spread faster than wild fire through new media platforms.
Islamophobia was rampant in viral media. Palghar incident was a direct outcome of communal
mongering through social media. However, the mainstream channels doctored the fake news
story into a national debate with clear intend on spreading politics of hate and “othering”.
Tablighi Conference at Nizamuddin also was seized upon as an event for social stigmatization
and hate mongering. The shocking aspect of it is that some mainstream media ran such stories
as if the distinction between it and the social media just blurred. The world was compelled to
take attention of the rampant Islamophobia and hate messages getting viral through social
media platforms. E. P. Unny’s cartoon on Nizamuddin is remarkable in this context with
figurations of the supposed “other” and clearly stating about the clean hands and no finger
pointing. The cartoon on ‘attack on Medics’ seek attention on the attack on medical workers
based on false and ill information about the spread of Covid-19.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/PKT-05-05-20.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 16.</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.5"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.6">
          <head type="lsechead">Short-circuiting events</head>
          <p style="noindent">In between events, during the lock down, which would have been just
by passed as one of an event during the lock down distinctly appeared in E. P. Unny’s cartoon.
Ambedkar’s birth anniversary, Marx’s two hundred birth anniversary, Bollywood’s brilliant

actor Irrfan’s untimely death, May day and 100 the birth anniversary of Satyajith Ray. These
events that occurred in between the lock down found space in the cartoon and it were all
treated and textured with the seething problems of covid lock down. In the cartoon, which was
homage to Karl Marx, the representation is that of Marx’s statues at High gate cemetery. The
words scribbled beneath the statue of Marx are an interesting twist of “workers of the world
unite” to “workers of all lands survive”. It captures the massive subjection of the working class
population to the extremities of lock down mismanagement. In the cartoon commemorating
Ambedkar’s birthday, the caption is kept simple: to reboot the Nation while in the drawing on
Ray’s 100 birth anniversary, the classic scene of train is evoked to connect with the exhausting
train journey of taking migrant labourers to their home from their place of work. The May
Day cartoon integrates into the pandemic period appearance of robotics as a substitute to the
worker. The cartoonists connect it with disappearance of workers to their villages vacating
the urban spaces for the AI to occupy. In another cartoon, Chaplin’s Modern Times is invoked
to depict the anti-labour amendments to the existing law. One of the real consequence of the
lock down is presumed to be making labour laws flexible for the benefit of Capital. Yogi
Adityanath Government in order to short circuit the economic slowdown has decided to
overhaul the labour laws. The amended laws have extended working hours and other hire and
fire policy. The amendments proposes to take back the labour and capital to primordial times
of capitalist accumulation where wage labour resembling factory workers predicament in
Chaplin’s Modern Times. The question of economic justice gets some prime importance in
E. P. Unny’s cartoons. During the lock down, the economic down turn was a seriously debated
topic. A fewer cartoons concerns with the economic proposals of the Union government and
also Finance Minister’s announcement of stimulus package. In one cartoon, the announcement
of 20 lakh crore stimulus package finds expression. Before the announcement the Nation also
had witnessed Prime Minister asking the citizens to support the local. In the cartoon, 20 lakh
crore is pictured on the screen while the caption says: “If corner shop is shut, try Photoshop”.
To augment the appeal for citizens, the Photoshop is a fascinating option and used several
times before. The extended financial support for space projects is contrasted with no
particular economic package for the destitute migrant labourers. Arogya Setu surveillance
finds a reference in the lock down cartoons.
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/damodar-unny-chaplin.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 17.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>The labour makes its appearance in Unny’s cartoons as the product of neo-liberal order and
innumerable bare foot prints of the class depicts the acutest dehumanization that has been
pervading all realms of human life and engagement. (Cartoon govt catching up with…)
</p>
          <figure rend="fcenter" type="gre">
            <graphic url="images/damodar-unny-sonia.jpg" width="170.71652pt" rendition="gre"/>
            <figDesc style="thumb">Cartoon 18.</figDesc>
          </figure>
          <p>(This article was written for the book, Covid Infodemic: Problems, prospects and retrospect, Route
maps of Kerala edited by Dr. S. R. Sanjeev.)

</p>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.6"-->
        <div type="lsection" xml:id="sec1.7">
          <head type="lsechead">Damodar Prasad</head>
          <figure rend="fleft" type="gra">
            <graphic url="images/damodar.jpg" rendition="gra"/>
          </figure>
          <p style="noindent">
</p>
          <p>Works in the field of education and media. He writes in English and Malayalam. Not
regularly, but occasionally.
</p>
        </div>
        <!--end of "section 0.0/1.7"-->
      </div>
      <!--end of "chapter 0/1"-->
      <!--END OF CHAPTER 0/1-->
    </body>
    <back>
      <div xml:id="colo">
        <head type="colophon">Colophon</head>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Title:</hi>  E. P. Unny’s Lock Down Cartoons
(ml: E. P. Unny’s Lock Down Cartoons).</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Author(s):</hi>  Damodar Prasad.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">First publication details:</hi>  Sayahna
Foundation; Trivandrum, Kerala; 2021-04-06. </p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Deafult language:</hi>  ml, Malayalam.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Keywords:</hi>  Article, Damodar Prasad, E. P.
Unny’s Lock Down Cartoons, Open Access Publishing, Malayalam, Sayahna Foundation, Free
Software, XML.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Digital Publisher:</hi>  Sayahna
Foundation; JWRA 34, Jagthy; Trivandrum 695014; India.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Date:</hi>  December 10, 2022.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Credits:</hi>  The text of the original item is
copyrighted to the author. The text encoding and editorial notes were created and​/or
prepared by the Sayahna Foundation and are licensed under a <ref target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/">Creative Commons
Attribution By NonCommercial ShareAlike 4​.0 International License</ref>  (CC
BY-NC-SA 4​.0). Commercial use of the content is prohibited. Any reuse of the material should
credit the Sayahna Foundation and must be shared under the same terms.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Cover:</hi>   Cartoon by E. P. Unny  .
The image is taken from <ref target="https://commons.wikimedia.org">Wikimedia
Commons</ref>  and is gratefully acknowledged.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Production history:</hi>  <hi rend="bold">Data entry:</hi>  the author; <hi rend="bold">Typesetter:</hi>  JN Jamuna; <hi rend="bold">Editor:</hi>
 PK Ashok; <hi rend="bold">Encoding:</hi>  JN Jamuna.</p>
        <p xml:id="less" n="1"><hi rend="bold">Production notes:</hi>   The entire
document processing has been done in a computer running GNU/Linux operating system and
TeX and friends. The PDF has been generated using XeLaTeX from TeXLive distribution 2021
using <ref target="https://ithal.io">Ithal (ഇതൾ)</ref>, an online framework for
text formatting. The <ref target="https://tei-c.org">TEI</ref>  (P5) encoded
XML has been generated from the same LaTeX sources using <ref target="https://luatex.org">LuaLaTeX</ref>. HTML version has been generated from
XML using XSLT stylesheet (sfn-tei-html.xsl) developed by <ref target="http://cvr.cc">CV Radhakrkishnan</ref>.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Fonts:</hi>  The basefont used in PDF and
HTML versions is <ref target="https://rachana.or.in">RIT Rachana</ref>
 authored by KH Hussain, et al., and maintained by the <ref target="https://rachana.or.in">Rachana Institute of Typography</ref>. The font
used for Latin script is <ref target="http://libertine-fonts.org/">Linux
Libertine</ref>  developed by <ref target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_Libertine">Phillip Poll</ref>.</p>
        <p style="hang"><hi rend="bold">Web site:</hi>  Maintained by <ref target="https://rajeeshknambiar.wordpress.com">KV Rajeesh</ref>.</p>
        <p style="hang"><ref target="https://books.sayahna.org/xml/damodar-epunny.xml">Download document
sources in TEI encoded XML format</ref>.</p>
        <p style="hang"><ref target="https://books.sayahna.org/ml/pdf/damodar-epunny.pdf">Download Phone
PDF</ref>.</p>
      </div>
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