Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Friday, May 25, 2007 ePaper |
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Life
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Gender Variety - Events It's her word... Deepti Priya Mehrotra
Many publishers today want women writers because women's writing has become a saleable commodity. But we do not know which publishers want the serious women writers!
Pakistani writer Feryal Ali Gauhar.
Major themes during the colloquium included challenges posed by the market and imperialistic forces. Have internal divisions and conflicts, exacerbated by external forces, led to a shrinking of space for the creative artiste? Fahmida Riaz, an eminent Urdu poet from Pakistan, said, "There is no need to give in to despair. Space is closing up, but we must respond by creating alternatives. Having been chairperson of the National Book Council of Pakistan, I can say with authority that what we need is coordinated efforts for book publishing and book selling. Rather than whining about all the problems we face, we must work to get our act together."
Write on cue: Bengali writer Nabaneeta Dev Sen
Nabaneeta Dev Sen, eminent Bengali writer and academic, noted that the maximum number of Bengali books sell locally at book fairs. Approximately 150 book fairs are held each year in different corners of Bengal. However, as soon as neo-literates gain mastery over English, they abandon the regional tongue in its favour. Pratibha Nandkumar from Karnataka said regional writers actually know their audiences, whereas writers in English write for unknown, faceless readers. But as Vaidehi, also from Karnataka put it, a writer should not ask the question `For whom are we writing?' Theatre artistes can ask for whom they are performing, singers can ask for whom they are singing, but a writer must not ask this question. "I write with the confidence that one day someone will read me." Volga, noted Telugu writer, disagreed: "I cannot write if I do not know whom I am writing for. In the 1980s and 1990s, I wrote for middle-class women who eagerly read my novels and short stories. Now I want to write for the younger generation but they are not reading Telugu! I want to go to the rural communities and write about them, for them." From Bangladesh, Niaz Zaman traced the changes in her consciousness as she grew from a tomboyish girl climbing trees and chewing unripe guavas, to a woman experiencing discrimination in society, and writing about it. She said, "The discrimination is sometimes subtle, at other times not so subtle." Mandrakanta Sen, Bangladeshi poet, noted, "Often men want to see women as sex dolls, rather than as mature, thinking human beings. The globalised market also wants to see us in the same way." A. Mangai from Tamil Nadu commented: "Many publishers today want women writers because women's writing has become a saleable commodity. But we do not know which publishers want the serious women writers!" Well-known Hindi writer Geetanjalishree insisted that writers have to stop seeking validation from the same markets and the same forces that have `commodified' women. Pakistan's Feryal Ali Gauhar was in complete agreement. Sri Lanka's Ameena Hussein expressed innate confidence when she said, "I write for myself. But there is a resonance that other people feel. This could happen with a reader far away from my setting. So actually, I write for everybody." Esther David, whose books have documented the social history of Bene Israelite Jews in India, presented a similar perspective when she said, "I am my first reader.... One does not write for financial returns, which, in any case, are minimal. It is a myth that the writer in the English language is handsomely paid. After 10-15 years of being published, I earn barely enough from my writing just enough to eat one meal a week!" Arunachal Pradesh's Temsulo Ao traced discriminatory practices against women in the Ao community exclusion from village councils, church priesthood, cultural performances, and property ownership although there is no explicit physical violence. She analysed, "Many women are reconciled to their passivity. Rebellion might break the network of family bonding and emotional attachments. Writing is my way of saying I want to break free of these shackles." Faustina Bama from Tamil Nadu asserted that caste, class and gender are markers of social exclusion. She said, "I am a dalit woman writer. The challenge for a writer is to remain rooted. I have experienced pain, hunger and contempt. My story is my people's story. I teach Class IV in my village primary school. There are 60 children, first-generation learners. As a single woman, I look after my own household. Sometimes there is no energy left for writing! "For me, writing is not a hobby. Through my writing, I allow the militancy of the victimised persons to emerge. I believe the life experiences of people can be conveyed only in their own language. My writing has been called bawdy and immoral. It has broken a lot of taboos. I did not write for publication; my first book, I wrote for my own healing. Some friends saw it and liked it.... After publication, my parents and I were attacked. But I feel satisfaction when ripples of consciousness surface in my community due to my writing. Writing has helped me break down a thousand barriers." Sunethra Rajakarunanayake from Sri Lanka spoke of her mother's strong political consciousness, which was suppressed and drove her to a mental breakdown. Even today, she said, women face discrimination if they speak or write on certain issues, such as different sexual preferences. She said, "My first books were rejected by the custodians of cultural orthodoxy. But 25 books later, I find the army of cultural guardians shrinking. Anyway, I did not wait for their `character certificates'! I kept writing. Now my books have been accepted in the curriculum and reading lists of colleges. That is a victory." Anita Thampi, a poet from Kerala, spoke of `deceptive exclusions'. She said whereas there is no explicit exclusion in Kerala, women writers are barely acknowledged in the critics' galleries and the writers' platforms. The exclusions are fluid and undefined. "Writing," she noted, "is an assertion of the individual. Clearly, the path is easier for a male." Both family and workplace instil a feeling of guilt in the woman writer. Feminist icon Gloria Steinem and Meredith Tax from the US, Nadia Azhigikhina and Olga Lipovskkaya from Russia, and Mariella Sala from Peru confirmed the difficulties women face when speaking in their own voices, due to inner and outer censorship, imposed by culture and by the globalised marketplace. The three-day colloquium provided space for vibrant discussion on some vital issues. Such forums need to be rendered increasingly open and broad-based, including the voices of many more women writers in order to make its deliberations even more grounded, meaningful and forward-looking. Women's Feature Service
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