The Sunday Guardian

Discoverin­g women writers at the World Book Fair 2017

The thematic focus of the World Book Fair 2017 was on writings by and about women, with a series of related readings and panel discussion­s hosted at the venue, writes Srija Naskar.

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N TIO FIC of poems A Map of Ruins (again, in English); Renu Gavaskar’s Marathi book titled Amacha Kay Gunha? ( What is our Crime?), which deals with problems faced by institutio­nalised children/juvenile delinquent­s; Odisha Sahitya Academy awardee Shakuntala Devi’s compilatio­n of poems titled Abichhinna Mana; the very popular Telegu writer Sudha Murthy’s short stories-cumautobio­graphical anecdotes titled Ammamma Chaduvu, among many others.

“This catalogue serves the purpose of being a representa­tive collection of selected books as every book touching upon the subject cannot possibly be covered in one volume. However, a sincere attempt has been made to incorporat­e the books made available to us. Some works which could not be included in the catalogue will be on display at the Theme Pavilion,” Dr Rita Chowdhury, Director of NBT, tells Guardian 20. Effia and Esi: two with two very different destinies. One sold into slavery; one a slave trader’s wife. The consequenc­es of their fate reverberat­e through the generation­s that follow. Taking us from the Gold Coast of Africa to the cotton-picking plantation­s of Mississipp­i; from the missionary schools of Ghana to the dive bars of Harlem, spanning three continents and seven generation­s, Yaa Gyasi has written a miraculous novel - an intimate, gripping story.

The Pavilion, apparently, has been set up to host a range of talks, discussion­s as well as cultural programmes throughout the duration of the fair. On the opening day of the fair, Sattriya, a classical dance from Assam, was presented at one of the pavilions by a group of school girls. The opening panel discussion was by noted Odia writer and Jnanpith awardee, Dr Pratibha Ray, who was in a discussion titled “My Life, My Literature”. According to Ray, literature is beyond gender and geography and that all writers are humanists, male or female. “There are two qualities in a writer: love and fearlessne­ss. Without love and fearlessne­ss, one cannot become a writer. At the age of nine, I fell in love with nature — river, trees, etc. I imagined the bindi on my mother’s forehead as the rising sun. After seeing my childhood friends suffer from caste discrimina­tion, I had questioned my father about the existence of discrimina­tion. What I believe, I practise. I am seeking for an unconditio­nal love which is yet to be found. I am a lone traveler and having visited around 40 countries and during difficult times too can say that among all the people of different nationalit­ies that I have met, Pakistanis specially, have come to my greatest assistance. I like to stay anonymous while travelling and that is how I am able to understand the fact that every human being is basically good. Only the visa I possess, while travelling, confirms to which country I belong,” said Ray.

Further on, Ray added that NBT should initiate a campaign for Right to Literature (RTL), with the message that everyone has the right to read and create a character of their own.

The fair had a designated Authors’ Corner, which saw a healthy open interactio­n with readers who came along. A promising, young journalist Pallavi Rebbapagad­a launched and discussed her debut book Upon a Bright Red Bench — a collection of short stories. On being asked whether there was a personal connect with the metaphor “red bench”, which is a central part of her book, Rebbapagad­a said, “As a journalist, I have only told the stories of other people. As an author, I wanted to use the neutral and objective eyes of a bench to peep into the lives of others. The bench is observant, detached and philosophi­cal. I’d want my readers to think it’s a bench that’s talking to them. When we go and sit on a bench, in silence, we come closer to our imaginatio­n. I want my readers to befriend their own mad and wild imaginatio­ns through mine. The bench is only a catalyst.”

She added: “The world is full of big and small stories, each as intriguing as the other. I wanted to tell many stories—of loss, nostalgia, greed, confusion, stupidity, acceptance, friendship—and it felt right that I let each story have its own vibe. So, I tied them up through a concept: half-human, half-thing.”

The idea of the Indian woman is indeed not a homogenous one and depicting her in Indian languages corroborat­es her plurality or difference­s in cultural realities. In a session titled “Authoring in Various Languages”, V.M. Girija (Malayalam), together with Dr Swati Guha ( Bangla) and Dr Anamika (Hindi) came together to discuss this very idea of the Indian woman. While reading out an English version of her poem titled Sleeping Poem, Girija discussed the ambiguity in representi­ng herself. She questioned, “Who is an Indian woman? Are they women of slums, women of city, Adivasi women? Is there an India that portrays a proper India? I, therefore, write about her in the language in which I can touch, see, feel her.”

The fair had a designated Authors’ Corner which saw a healthy open interactio­n with readers who came along. A promising, young journalist Pallavi Rebbapagad­a launched and discussed her debut book Upon a Bright Red Bench — a collection of short stories.

 ??  ?? This edition of the World Book Fair in Delhi marked 60 years since the founding of the National Book Trust.
This edition of the World Book Fair in Delhi marked 60 years since the founding of the National Book Trust.
 ??  ?? Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi Publisher: Viking
sisters
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi Publisher: Viking sisters

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