Jamaica Gleaner

Calabash Lit Up 2018 A CULTURAL MECCA

- Kimberley Small/Gleaner Writer

WITH SUPPORT from the US Embassy, the British Council, the Canadian High Commission, and the Jamaica Tourist Board, among others, Calabash Literary Festival will return to the Treasure Beach, St Elizabeth, from June 1-3, 2018.

This year’s festival, titled ‘Calabash Lit Up’, will feature an astounding line-up of readings, conversati­ons, and, as is customary, open-mic sessions for those who are still honing their skills.

“We have realised that it is the intangible assets that will take Jamaica forward as a destinatio­n – to give us a sustained competitiv­e advantage,” said Donovan White, director of tourism of the Jamaica Tourist Board. According to White, Calabash Literary Festival is a cultural mecca – which fits within the growth pillars meant to build ‘Destinatio­n Jamaica’.

Olayinka Jacobs-Bonnick, British Council’s country director for Jamaica, regaled her tale as a patron of the very first staging of the festival in 2001, and now celebrates her return to the 14th with special

collaborat­ive projects.

The partnershi­p between Calabash and the British Council consists of two specific projects – the first being Walking Cities, a documentar­y series that the Council has filmed in Mumbai and Kolkata (India), Doha, Qatar and in Canada. The next city for the series will be downtown Kingston.

Walking Cities pairs UK and internatio­nal writers, enabling them to tour each others’ respective cities, creating an opportunit­y for them to experience the city through the eyes of the host.

The second collaborat­ion is called ‘Unwritten Poems’, a partnershi­p between the British Council, the BBC and 14-18 Now (a UK organisati­on which runs cultural events to commemorat­e 100 years since World War I).

LITERARY COLLECTION TO BE DEVELOPED

Unwritten Poems will commission Caribbean diaspora poets to write new poems and an essay reflecting the Caribbean’s involvemen­t in the historic war. The poems will be collected into an anthology, and will also be broadcast on BBC. This project will include bringing poets from the UK to Calabash to meet their Caribbean counterpar­ts, appear at the festival, and conduct a capacitybu­ilding workshop for emerging poets.

Four Caribbean poets will reciprocat­e – travelling to the UK to give workshops and participat­e in a festival called Contains Strong Language, located in Hull, the UK’s 2016 City of Culture.

The US Embassy has also offered its support of Calabash Lit Up, committing to social media coverage on their platforms during the festival.

Artistic director Kwame Dawes closed the evening, reiteratin­g the tag lines of the event’s founder Colin Channer – the first being ‘Our goal is to be earthy, inspiratio­nal, daring and diverse.’ Second, and very familiar to Calabash attendees: ‘Passion is the only price of entry.’

And finally, the ‘cultural mecca’ is known to its advocates as ‘the greatest likkle festival, in the greatest likkle district, in the greatest likkle country in the world.’

 ?? SHORN HECTOR/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Justine Henzell; Canadian High Commission­er to Jamaica Laurie Peters; Jeremiah Knight, counsellor for public affairs, US Embassy; Kwame Dawes, artistic director of Calabash; and author Beverly East.
SHORN HECTOR/PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Justine Henzell; Canadian High Commission­er to Jamaica Laurie Peters; Jeremiah Knight, counsellor for public affairs, US Embassy; Kwame Dawes, artistic director of Calabash; and author Beverly East.

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