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Even lesser-known international authors are getting large audiences
Giants from the field of literature and otherwise (read Oprah Winfrey) drew thousands into cramped spaces,terraces and whitewashed railings of Diggi Palace,but at the Jaipur Literature Festival,young lesser-known international authors did not feel out of place either. Instead,for most of them,the festival acted as a melting pot of ideas and opinions. It was a platform where these young authors could represent their literary culture.
Dhaka-born and London-based author Tamima Anam,who won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize for A Golden Age,too,spoke about culture and its impact. There is nothing like a Muslim community. There are Muslim communities, said the 36-year-old during the session titled Creativity,Censorship and Dissent. One of the foremost Bangladeshi contemporary authors who write in English,Anam also spoke on being a good Muslim.
I feel very passionate about the country but I feel like Im a citizen of the world. I have grown up in so many countries,so I have looked at Bangladesh from the inside as well as from the outside. This helps me as a writer, said Anam,adding that in the next five years,there will be a rise in the number of authors in her country.
For Nigerian-Ghanaian writer and photographer Taiye Selasi,the festival was a platform to promote her next novel,Ghana Must Go. The writer of the much-acclaimed short story The Sex Lives of African Girls,published in the UK-based literary magazine Granta,said,African literature by young writers is going to experience a renaissance in the next two years. The process has already started with writers such as Chimamanda Adichi and Teju Cole.
Across the venue,36-year-old Cole did not happen to hear that remark,but he had his share of fans at the festival. The celebrated author,art historian and photographer was engaged in individual conversations with the audiences. I think writing is a way to transfer my mind to other peoples minds. I get thrilled when I meet someone who says I have read your book and I love it. It means that Ive had an interaction with a person whom I dont know, said Cole.
Selasi summed up her experience at the festival with the words,It is full of energy,dynamism and a great writers interaction.
For live tweets from the Express team at JLF,go to @iexpresslive
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