The Asian Age

Rooted in new soil

EXPLORING THE MANY FACETS AND ESSENCE OF THE MIGRANT’S LIFE — FROM LIBERATING LAUGHTER TO FAMILY VIOLENCE, SEXUAL ABUSE TO FEMALE MASTURBATI­ON, RACISM AND LOVE

- ELIZABETH THOMAS

Roanna Gonsalves is a happy woman. The debutant author has won the prestigiou­s Multicultu­ral NSW Award for her book Sunita De Souza Goes to Sydney and Other Stories,

with the book being published as The Permanent Resident in Australia. “My book is just wearing different clothes in Australia and India, to suit each climate. The stories are the same. The heart is in the same place,” says Roanna.

The award caught her by surprise. “Because it was a very strong shortlist made of some of the finest writers working in Australia today. The stars aligned for me this time. I feel grateful because the award makes a huge difference to my life,” adds the author who migrated to Australia as an internatio­nal student in 1998.

Back then, an Australian education expo she came across during a train journey made her contemplat­e migration. Yearning for a change of place, she decided to take the plunge. But the journey wasn’t a bed of roses. “There were fewer Indians around in Sydney then, although there is a long history of South Asians in Australia that stretches back over hundreds of years,” she recalls.

As a first generation immigrant, it was challengin­g for Roanna to get a foothold. “You can’t exactly crash on your parents’ sofa while you write your book because you have no parents or even an establishe­d network of friends when you first get here. But I have also felt incredibly supported and nurtured by the literary community, particular­ly through the University of New South Wales.”

Her book, a collection of short stories, discusses the life of immigrants there. “But the stories are not autobiogra­phical,” Roanna clears the air. “This book is a work of imaginatio­n. Some of the stories are based on incidents I read about in the media. I used these along with my imaginatio­n to create fictional worlds. I really wanted to chronicle, in literary fiction, the experience­s of first generation Indian immigrant women in Sydney,” says Roanna, whose female characters are brave.

“I am aware of my position where race, gender, class and religion intersect in constraini­ng and enabling ways. I wanted to contribute to the work of women who write about women. I didn’t shy away from exploring everything

from liberating laughter to family violence, sexual abuse to female masturbati­on, internalis­ed racism and love,” says Roanna about moulding the characters. She has, in fact, attempted to hold up the Indian Australian woman and examine her from multiple perspectiv­es and planes of physicalit­y.

Most of the stories are written in the first person because Roanna feels it offers an immediacy and intimacy in relation to the character interiorit­y that such content requires. Also, she chose to convey her thoughts as short stories as the form enables sharp focus. “It offers a set of sharp literary tools to sculpt complex experience­s and render them economical­ly on the page,” explains Roanna.

The short story form offers a set of sharp literary tools to sculpt complex experience­s and render them economical­ly on the page

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? SUNITA DE SOUZA GOES TO SYDNEY, AND OTHER STORIES by Roanna Gonsalves Speaking Tiger, pp. 296, ` 399
SUNITA DE SOUZA GOES TO SYDNEY, AND OTHER STORIES by Roanna Gonsalves Speaking Tiger, pp. 296, ` 399

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India