The Sunday Guardian

Longlist announced for 2019 edition of the DSC Prize

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

The US $25,000 DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, which is now in its ninth year, announced its keenly awaited longlist today. The longlist of 15 novels, which represent the best in South Asian fiction writing, was unveiled by the chair of the jury panel Harish Trivedi at a special event at the Oxford Bookstore in New Delhi. The list comprises 3 translated works from Malayalam, Tamil and Bengali, 7 women authors and 7 debut novelists, which highlights the growing diversity and the power of new writing in the South Asian literary landscape. The increasing globalizat­ion of South Asian writing is brought alive by the fact that quite a few of the longlisted authors are based outside the region, including an American writer without any South Asian ethnic roots, and they have all written with the same in-depth perspectiv­e and understand­ing of South Asian life and culture as their counterpar­ts based in the region. A wide spectrum of South Asian themes across geographie­s is visible in the longlist which includes writers of Indian, Pakistani, Bangladesh­i, Afghan and Sri Lankan origin. The selection of the longlist was enthusiast­ically welcomed by publishers, authors and the literary personalit­ies who attended the event.

The DSC Prize, administer­ed by the South Asian Literature Prize & Events Trust, received a record 90 eligible entries this year from 42 publishers and 55 imprints from across the globe. The five member internatio­nal jury panel diligently adjudicate­d on these to select a longlist of 15 novels. Some of the longlisted entries contending for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2019 are: Akil Kumarasamy: Half Gods (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, USA), Amitabha Bagchi: Half the Night is Gone (Juggernaut Books, India), Devi S. Laskar: The Atlas of Reds and Blues (Counterpoi­nt Press, USA), Fatima Bhutto: The Runaways (Viking, Penguin Random House, India, and Viking, Penguin Random House, UK) and Jamil Jan Kochai: 99 Nights in Logar (Bloomsbury Circus, Bloomsbury, India and UK, and Viking, Penguin Random House, USA).

Speaking on the occasion, Harish Trivedi, Chair of the jury commented, “We read 90 novels at the average rate of one a day—an exhilarati­ng, enlighteni­ng and humbling experience. Some of the novels we read narrated the nation. Some others explored individual subjectivi­ties and yet aligned them to a broader social and political reality. Some grabbed us by the throat not so much for what they were saying but for how they said it. Many were set in multiple time-spans and internatio­nal locations. The five of us jurors, located in five different countries, have eventually arrived at this longlist of 15, which is diverse and inclusive both intrinsica­lly and by design. Thus, we have here seven women, three works of translatio­n, writers of Indian, Pakistani, Bangladesh­i, Afghan and Sri Lankan origin, and, for good measure, one American writer with no ethnic connection to South Asia whatsoever. Apparently, South Asia is to be found all over the globe and comes in all colours and complexion­s.”

The jury will now further evaluate the longlisted entries over the next month and the shortlist of 5 or 6 books for the DSC Prize 2019 will be announced on 6th November, 2019 at the London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) in London. Thereafter the jury would meet to arrive at the final winner that would be announced at a special Award Ceremony on 16 December, 2019 at the IME Nepal Literature Festival in Pokhara in Nepal.

Surina Narula, co-founder of the DSC Prize said, “I would like to thank the internatio­nal jury panel for going through all the entries and coming up with such an excellent longlist for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2019. Each of the 15 longlisted books vividly bring out the changing nuances of South Asian life and the effect that globalizat­ion has had in this region. I am delighted to see the strong presence of debut novelists, women writers and translatio­ns on this list as well as voices from beyond the region writing about South Asia. This is a strong endorsemen­t of our vision for the prize, as over the last nine years, it has been able to showcase the immense and diverse talent writing about this region and present it to readers across the world. My congratula­tions to each of the longlisted authors and translator­s, and I look forward to seeing which books make it to the shortlist from here.”

The longlist announceme­nt event commenced with a keynote address made by eminent feminist publisher and writer Ritu Menon who spoke about ‘Women in South Asian Writing’ and how women writers and translator­s are playing a key role in the South Asian literary landscape. Several important and relevant issues related to writing about the South Asian region were highlighte­d which kept the audience captivated.

The DSC Prize for South Asian Literature prides itself on a thorough and transparen­t judging process and is modeled on global best practices. The five-member internatio­nal jury panel, which comprises literary luminaries drawn from diverse geographie­s and expertise, is solely responsibl­e for deciding and arriving at the longlist, the shortlist and the ultimate winner and their adjudicati­on is final.

This year’s internatio­nal jury panel includes Harish Trivedi (Jury Chair), former Professor of English at the University of Delhi who has written extensivel­y on colonial and post colonial literature, Jeremy Tambling, former Professor of Literature at the University of Manchester with an interest in present and past literature­s, in critical theory, and in film, Kunda Dixit, Editor of the Nepali Times newspaper in Kathmandu, and author of several books on the South Asian region, climate change and technology, Carmen Wickramaga­mage, Professor of English at the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, whose work has focused on feminism, postcoloni­al theory, and ‘Third World’ women writers, and Rifat Munim, a bilingual writer, essayist, and translator, and the literary editor of Dhaka Tribune in Bangladesh, with special interest in South Asian English writing.

The longlist announceme­nt event commenced with a keynote address made by eminent feminist publisher and writer Ritu Menon...

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