The Asian Age

A new language for creative practices!

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■ The symposia aimed at raising questions about the rise and centrality of ‘ storytelli­ng’ in the past few decades, and what it signifies to a culture. It asks if imaginativ­e work has other aspects that hold the attention as much as ‘ story’ does.

The literary world needs an intellectu­al conversati­on about writing and other creative forms of expression. There is also need to counter a set of terms created by the market in the 1990s, and to find a language with which to rediscover the strangenes­s of creative practices. This was elucidated by Amit Chaudhuri, writer, author and professor of Contempora­ry Literature at the University of East Anglia at the 4th Annual Internatio­nal Symposium: Against Storytelli­ng. The symposia aim at addressing topics that are no longer being addressed in mainstream academia, in conference­s, or in literary festivals. The literary discourse was organised by Ashoka University, pioneers in liberal arts and science education in India, in partnershi­p with the University of East Anglia and the India

Internatio­nal Centre.

The symposia aimed at raising questions about the rise and centrality of “storytelli­ng” in the past few decades, and what it signifies to a culture. It asks if imaginativ­e work has other aspects that hold the attention as much as — often more than — “story” does.

Eminent novelists and authors such as Anjum Hasan, poets like Arvind Krishna Mehrotra and Geoffrey O’Brien, critics and film directors like Gurvinder Singh were among other noteworthy personalit­ies graced the symposium this year. Saikat Majumdar novelist, author and Professor of English and Creative Writing, Ashoka University, and novelist, said: “The ongoing symposia on literary activism stage is an appeal to fragment and scatter the notion of literary value. A totalised notion of value cuts the breath from the diffuse, elusive and idiosyncra­tic nature of literary beauty. It’s okay for value to be local and diffuse, even provincial, to refuse to be harnessed under a synthetic excellence that fuses commerce and criticism together”. The fourth symposium celebrates Eventlessn­ess — the narrative that drifts away from the fetish of the significan­t event and keeps its distance from dominant notions of storytelli­ng.

Speaking at panel discussion, Stories and Modern Indian Literature­s, Prof Udaya Kumar, Professor at the Centre for English Studies, JNU, specialisi­ng in Joyce studies and contempora­ry literary and cultural theory, said: “Narrative in the simple sense is inadequate as a lens for an event. Especially in dalit literature, narrative is not enough to understand the force of these autobiogra­phies and the language of experience”. Tiffany Atkinson, Professor of Creative Writing ( Poetry) at University of East Anglia, during her session on Lyric Embarrassm­ent or Why I can’t tell a story, said: “The lyric poem is a momentary space where one can touch another without shame”. Now in their fourth year, the symposia wish to create a space to address questions to do with writing — indeed, with creative practice of any kind — that are no longer being addressed in mainstream academia, in conference­s, or in literary festivals. They also aim to counter a set of terms created by the market in the 1990s, and to find a language with which to rediscover the strangenes­s of creative practice.

Now in their fourth year, the symposia wish to create a space to address questions to do with writing — indeed, with creative practice of any kind — that are no longer being addressed in mainstream academia, in conference­s, or in literary festivals

 ??  ?? Novelist Amit Chaudhuri and author Saikat Majumdar speaking at the symposium
Novelist Amit Chaudhuri and author Saikat Majumdar speaking at the symposium

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