The Sunday Guardian

All things considered: World’s biggest lit fest opens in Jaipur

The Jaipur Literature Festival, considered the biggest event of its kind in the world, opened on 19 January at Jaipur’s Diggi Palace hotel to a capacity crowd. A report by Bhumika Popli.

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can help us to make sense is literature, writing and wisdom. That is the reason year after year we come together bringing incredible speakers that you can find from across the world here at Jaipur. It is the only place where you can sit here at the front lawn and travel the world and understand different cultures, languages and people. Here you may perhaps open your mind just to see for a brief moment that we can all live together irrespecti­ve of our difference­s.”

The festival is also considered a promising forum for aspiring authors, as it facilitate­s an interactio­n with establishe­d writers of their choice.

In the past, JLF has hosted such acclaimed authors as Eleanor Catton, Ian McEwan, J.M. Coetzee and Pico Iyer among others. This year’s list, too, doesn’t fail to impress, with names like Alan Hollinghur­st, Paul Beatty, Arunava Sinha, Anne Waldman and David Hare high on the event’s billing.

Expressing her delight that JLF 2017 is hosting a facsimile document of the 13th century Magna Carta, which is considered to be the founding document of human rights and advocacy, Vasundhara Raje said, “As the largest democracy in the world, it is a huge tribute to us in India that it has come here.”

On the account of one of the largest literary festival Diggi Palace is beautifull­y decorated. Rows of flowers, artworks and fountains can be seen around various venues inside the palace.

Festival co- director Namita Gokhle at the opening reception said, “We live in the best of times, we live in the worst of times, but literature remains undisputed.” Gokhale expressed her excitement at this year’s programme, and remembered John Singh who passed away last year. Singh was a leading arts and cultural conservato­r who founded the Jaipur Virasat Festival. “The legacy of this festival rests on John Singh, the inspiratio­nal figure who, along with his wife Faith Singh, laid the foundation­s of this festival.”

Eminent poet Gulzar complement­ed the festival organisers for going past the glorious tenyear mark. American poet Anne Waldman was the star of the show, whose poems were read out to a packed venue. The performanc­e poet and activist recited her poem-song “Anthropoce­ne Blues”, which paints a portrait of a broken age, in which “nothing is not affected by the hand of man.”

Festival co-director William Dalrymple spoke of the astounding spectacle of the Jaipur Literature Festival’s success, which has opened doors to the public so that common people can get to hear what Nobel Prize winners, Harvard and Oxford scholars, and literary prizewinne­rs from across the world have to say. “For five days, the greatest minds in the world are free,” said a visibly delighted Dalryample.

At the JLF, it’s literature during the day, and music during the night. The evening music performanc­es, hosted at the Clarks Amer hotel, are an integral part of the JLF experience. Soulful renditions of popular tunes, as well as original compositio­ns are presented at this venue by top musicians. On Thursday evening, the stage at the Clarks Amer hosted ensembles like Rajasthan Josh and Neeraj Arya’s Kabir Café. Both these acts put up a memorable performanc­e, mesmerisin­g the audiences with their folk tunes.

A business segment of the JLF, Jaipur Bookmark also drew a decent crowd. Various publishers, literary agents, translatio­n agencies and writers met here to carry out business deals and listen to speakers from across the world. This year’s event attracted delegation­s from the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, France and Norway along with key Indian language publishers. The First-Book Club, a new writer’s mentorship programme, also took place here. Aspiring authors were given an opportunit­y of special one-on-one sessions with industry profession­als as part of this event. The experts shared their rich experience and expertise with the participan­ts. A session on copyright laws was also held, along with a short session on literary exchange taking the works by Mahasweta Devi and Rabindrana­th Tagore as case studies.

But the best is yet to come. The best talks, readings and debates are lined up for the final two days of the JLF, which is set to conclude on 23 January . The crowds, too, are expected to thicken. If the postsessio­n book-signing queues are anything to go by, we are set for another well-attended edition of the JLF, an event that fully deserves the title of the biggest literary festival on earth.

In the past, JLF has hosted such acclaimed authors as Eleanor Catton, Ian McEwan, J.M. Coetzee and Pico Iyer among others. This year’s list, too, doesn’t fail to impress, with names like Alan Hollinghur­st, Paul Beatty, Arunava Sinha, Anne Waldman and David Hare high on the event’s billing.

 ??  ?? Gulzar delivering the keynote speech on the opening day of the Jaipur Literature Festival.
Gulzar delivering the keynote speech on the opening day of the Jaipur Literature Festival.

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