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Jaipur Literature Festival: Thoughts and reflections

Jaipur Literature Festival: Thoughts and reflections

The recently concluded Jaipur Literature Festival in India elicited some humorous and insightful comments from its famous attendees
Jaipur Literature FestivalHer Majesty the Queen Mother Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck, Queen of Bhutan, reads extracts from her book "Treasures of the Thunder Dragon: A Portrait of Bhutan."

A DNA article by G Sampath brings back some interesting thoughts from the last day of the recently concluded Jaipur Literature Festival.

On the festival's fifth day British writer Andrew O’Hagan, speaking on the "the power of literature," said writing is "this business of making marks on the page that has the power to make the world a grander place for the people living in it.” O’Hagan traced all the destructive elements of modern life -- from wars to terrorism to wastage of food in supermarkets -- to one cause: a failure of the imagination. "If a person could actually imagine the life of the secretary on the 102nd floor happily planning her wedding the following week and her new life with her husband, he wouldn’t be able to drive an aeroplane into that building. If a politician could imagine the laughter of a little girl playing in an Afghan village, he wouldn’t send out drones to bomb those villages." So how does one keep this faculty of imagination alive, and nurture it? "It’s easy," said O’Hagan. "You read literature. Literature is the news that stays news."

Take another speaker, Hanif Kureishi, a British author and screenwriter of English, Indian and Pakistani origins who often writes on immigrant identity issues. Sampath reports that when one spectator asked Kureishi, "As a Muslim, do you consider yourself an aberration?” his response was, "That’s a great question." And there was a ripple of laughter as he pondered aloud, "Am I an aberration?" He went on to add, "All my life I have fought against authoritarian systems, and any religion is an authoritarian system. I don’t think of myself as a Muslim." If that was a great question, a greater question followed. An old gentleman in a suit and tie stood up from the back and said, "Mr Kureishi, my grandson was circumcised. It was very painful for him. Did you feel the pain too?"

"It’s been a long time since anyone took an interest in my genitals," Kureishi replied, before he launched into what it means to be a professional writer.

"I’ve never had writer’s block ever since I’ve had kids. Writing is what I do to pay my bills, so I cannot sit around pretending to be an artist. I have to keep writing so that I can buy playstations for my son and alcohol for my older kids." And he added for good measure, "I think of myself as a practical man, as a professional writer. In fact, I don’t give a f**k for reviews. For me, the highest form of criticism is a nice cheque."

Read also, the Business Standard's A-Z of the Jaipur Literarture Festival and our CNNGo feature which includes a guide to Jaipur for when you plan to visit.

Sita Wadhwani is CNNGo City Editor in Mumbai.

 

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