Girish Karnad |
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Indian playwright Girish Karnad in Toronto for South Asian literary meet
GirishKarnad, the legendary Indian playwright, will be the star attraction at the
Festival of South Asian Literature and the Arts (FSALA-11) to be held in
Toronto from September 30, 2011 to October 2, 2011.
Karnad
will be reading from his recently published autobiography at the Robert Gill
Theatre, University of Toronto on October 1, 2011 (7:00 pm – 9:15 pm). His
reading will be followed by a dance ballet Fallen
Rain by inDANCE under maestro Hari Krishnan.
Septuagenarian
Girish Karnad is a Kannada language playwright, poet, director, actor, critic
and a cultural administrator.
Karnad
is the recipient of innumerable awards including the prestigious Jnanpith Award
– the highest literary award in India, similar to Canada’s Governor General’s Literary
Award.
Along
with Mohan Rakesh (Hindi), Badal Sircar (Bengali) and Vijay Tendulkar
(Marathi), Karnad is credited for creating a national theatre movement in India.
His
plays such as Yayati, Tughlaq,
Nagamandala changed the course of Indian theater. Karnad earned encomiums
for using Indian legends, fables and history to depict the social realities of
20th century India. He has had an equally illustrious career in
films.
Born
in a Konkani (an Indian dialect) speaking family in 1938, Karnad’s ambition was
to become known as an English poet. After his initial education in Karnataka,
he went to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar.
He
won his first award for his play Yayati
– published in 1961, when he was 23-years-old.
Yayati is story of a king who is cursed to old-age in the prime of his
life but deflects the curse by asking his son Puru to sacrifice his youth for
him.
It
was followed by Tughlaq – the play
which earned Karnad international and lasting fame. It is named after Sultan
Muhammad bin Tughluq, one of the medieval kings of Delhi, and is a metaphorical
depiction of the initial idealism of and subsequent disillusionment with the
post-Independence India’s Nehruvian era.
Nagamandala,
a story of a neglected wife’s affair with a cobra who transforms into her
husband, is considered a classic. The English translation of the play was
staged at the Guthrie Theatre (Minneapolis, USA) as part of its 30th
anniversary in 1993.
In
1970, Karnad directed and acted in his first film Samsakara which is based on U.R. Ananthamurthy’s Kannada novel. His
foray into films also brought him accolades. He is remembered for his role as
Dr. Rao in Shyam Benegal’s Manthan
(1976), where he co-stared Smita Patil, and as Swami’s father in the television
serial Malgudi Days (1987), based on
the works of R.K. Narayan.
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Celebrating Canadian South Asian literature
The
Toronto Festival of South Asian Literature and the Arts 2011 (FSALA-11) will
bring renowned Indian playwright Girish Karnad and other literary stalwarts to
Toronto
Toronto:
The second Toronto Festival of South Asian Literature and Arts (FSALA-11) will
be held between September 30 and October 2, 2011.
GirishKarnad – one of India’s foremost playwrights of the 20th century, renowned
for his plays such as Yayati, Tughlak
and Naga-Mandala among several others
– will be the main attraction at the festival where over 25 Canadian writers
will participate.
Several
writers from the subcontinent and the United States will also read and participate
in several discussions. These include Meena Alexander (US), Kamini Dandapani
(US), Mahesh Dattani (India), Asif Farrukhi (Pakistan), Neerav Patel (India),
and Harish Narang (India).
FSALA-11
is a Canadian arts festival, whose purpose is to present to the public the
works of writers, musicians, and other artists. The panels and lectures will
discuss vital topics on Canadian and South Asian arts. It is as well a forum
for the public to meet artists from across the country and for the artists to
meet each other.
Special
readings and recitals from the works of Rabindranath Tagore and Faiz Ahmed Faiz
will also be held at the inaugural session of the festival. 2011 is Tagore’s
sesquicentennial and Faiz’s centenary; former Governor General the Right
Honourable Adrienne Clarkson will give a short welcome address.
On
October 1, dance maestro Hari Krishnan’s dance troupe will perform Fallen Rain, following a reading by
Girish Karnad from his recent autobiography. This is the only ticketed event of
the festival and the tickets for the event are available on FSALA-11 website: www.fsala11.com
Readers and
participants include:
Canadian:
Navtej
Bharati (Windsor), Nandi Bhatia (London), Rana Bose (Montreal), Cheran
(Toronto), Cyril Dabydeen (Ottawa), Ramabai Espinet (Toronto), Andrea Gunraj
(Toronto), Sheniz Janmohamed (Toronto), Sally Jones (Toronto), Shaista Justin
(Toronto), Surjeet Kalsey (Vancouver), Chelva Kanaganayakam (Toronto), Kwai Li
(Toronto), Anand Mahadevan (Toronto), Rabindra Maharaj (Toronto), Ashok Mathur
(Vancouver), Julie Mehta (Toronto), Ameen Merchant (Vancouver), Ananya
Mukherjee (Toronto), Arun Mukherjee (Toronto), Uma Parameswaran (Winnipeg),
Sase Persaud (Toronto, Florida), Ajmer Rode (Vancouver), Nuzhat Siddiqui
(Toronto), Dalbir Singh (Toronto), Suwanda Sugunasiri (Toronto), Priscila Uppal
(Toronto), Rahul Varma (Montreal), Padma Viswanathan (Toronto/US), Nalini
Warriar (Quebec City), John van Burek (Toronto)
International:
Meena
Alexander (New York), Kamini Dandapani (New York), Mahesh Dattani (India), Asif
Farrukhi (Pakistan), Girish Karnad (India), Harish Narang (India), Neerav Patel
(India)
Scotiabank
is the main sponsor of the event. The Canada Council for the Arts and the
Writers’ Union of Canada have provided additional financial assistance to the
festival. Other sponsors include Munk School of Global Affairs, University of
Toronto, Random House of Canada, The Writers Forum, Sheridan College and the
Humber School for Creative and Performing Arts. FSALA also acknowledges the
following sponsors – Anil Balolia, Chandaria Family, Iqbal and Zinnat Dewji,
Azim Jeraj, Atul Tolia, and Anonymous Donors.
The
festival will be held at The Munk School of Global Affairs and Trinity College
are next to each other and centrally located in Toronto.
The three-day
festival’s program is:
Friday,
September 30:
Inaugural,
readings and recitals from Tagore & Faiz
Afternoon
|
|
Discussion: Whither South Asian
Drama in Canada?
Time:
3:00 to 4:00 PM
Venue:
Combination Room, Trinity College
Participants:
Nandi Bhatia, Sally Jones, John van Burek, Rahul Varma
Chair:
Julie Mehta
|
Lecture: Mahesh Dattani
Time:
4:15 – 5:30 PM
Venue:
Combination Room, Trinity College
Lecture:
Mahesh Dattani
|
Evening
|
|
Formal Welcome
Time:
7:00 to 9:00 PM
Venue:
Seeley Hall, Trinity College
Reading
1. Rabindra Maharaj
Reading
2. Kwai Li
Break
Faiz
Ahmad Faiz Centennial: Recital
Tariq
Hameed, accompanied by Nadeem Shah at Tabla
Rabindranath
Tagore Sesquicentennial: Poetry Reading: Ananya Mukherjee
|
Saturday, October 1
Literary
Sessions, Readings & Discussions, Art Exhibit
Morning
|
|
Readings
Time:
10:00 – 11:30 AM
Venue:
Combination Room, Trinity College
Participants:
Priscila Uppal, Sheniz Janmohamed, Uma Parameswaran, Ashok Mathur, Nalini
Warriar
Chair:
Suwanda Sugunasiri
|
Panel: The Problems of Translation
and Audience
Time:
10:00 – 11:30 AM
Venue:
Campbell Room, Munk School of Global Affairs
Participants:
Ajmer Rode, Baidar Bakht, Neerav Patel, Harish Narang, Asif Farrukhi
Chair:
Chelva Kanaganayakam
|
Discussion: Is there a case for a
Canadian South Asian literary identity? Or does one think of a national or
secular literary identity. Whither Multiculturalism?
Time: 11.30 AM – 1:00 PM
Participants:
Priscila Uppal, Sheniz Janmohamed, Uma Parameswaran, Ashok Mathur, Nalini
Warriar
Chair:
Suwanda Sugunasiri
Chair:
Rana Bose
|
Readings in Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi,
and Tamil
Time:
11:30 AM – 1:00 PM
Participants:
Nuzhat
Siddiqui, Navtej Bharati, Cheran, Arun Mukherjee
Chair:
Harish Narang
|
Afternoon
|
|
Readings
Time:
2:00 – 3:15 PM
Venue:
Campbell Room Munk School of Global Affairs
Participants:
Meena Alexander, Asif Farrukhi, Neerav Patel
|
|
Readings & Discussion: South
Asian Canadian Literature: Concerns of a New Generation
Time:
4:00 – 5:30 PM
Venue:
Combination Room, Trinity College
Participants:
Padma Viswanathan, Anand Mahadevan, Ameen Merchant
Chair:
Shaista Justin
|
Readings & Discussion: The
Indo-Caribbean Phenomenon
Time:
4:00 – 5:30 PM
Venue:
Campbell Room, Munk School of Global Affairs
Ramabai
Espinet, Cyril Dabydeen, Andrea Gunraj, Sase Persaud
Chair:
Rabindra Maharaj
|
Evening
(ticketed) event
|
|
Lecture & Presentation: Girish
Karnad
Dance recital: Fallen Rain, inDANCE
under maestro Hari Krishnan
Time:
7:00 – 9:15 PM
Venue:
Robert Gill Theatre, University of Toronto
|
Sunday, October 2
Readings,
interviews, music, book launch
Afternoon
Venue
for all events: Campbell Room, Munk School of Global Affairs
|
On-stage interview & classical
vocal concert
Time:
12:00 – 1:00 PM
Participants:
Girish Karnad, Mahesh Dattani, interviewed by Dalbir Singh
Refreshments
Classical
vocal concert: Kamini Dandapani
|
On-stage interview
Time:
2:00 – 3:00 PM
Participants:
Meena Alexander, Neerav Patel
|
Book launch
Time: 3:00 PM
Cheran:
You Cannot Turn Away
(bilingual
Tamil/English poetry);
Sasenarine
Persaud: Lantana Strangling Ixora (poetry);
Surjeet
Kalsey: Colours of My Heart
(poetry in English);
Suwanda
Sugunasiri: Untouchable Woman's Odyssey
(novel)
|
For more information:
Saturday, September 10, 2011
3-Day Novel Contest - 2011
Yes, I participated in the 3-Day Novel Contest again this
year. My third year. And for the first
time I enjoyed the experience.
Image: http://www.3daynovel.com/
When I participated for the first time, I was tensed because
I tried to get as many words in as possible.
In the process, I just didn’t know
what to do with a few of my characters, and they were abandoned – lost in needless
verbiage - when I ran out of time.
Nevertheless, I enjoyed turning around a novel in just
three days.
The novel was set in the backdrop of the outbreak of plague
in Surat (the western Indian city in the state of Gujarat) in 1994.
The second year wasn’t particularly productive because my
experiment of weaving several ghost stories into a short novel didn’t work out
particularly well.
The editor of the contest wrote a small note to me saying she
liked the ghost stories (which, I guess, meant she didn’t like the main novel).
This year – fresh from a visit to India, which was both
exhilarating and disturbing – I wrote a story about a star-crossed couple who
marry clandestinely but commit suicide when they can’t fight caste rigidities
and orthodoxies.
Adopted Daughter is a story is about the man who gets the
couple married and his accidental encounter with the couple’s daughter, more
than two decades later while on a trip to India from Canada.
My writing pace was even – clocking close to 6,000 words
each day. After some severe editing, I managed about 17,000 + words which I
uploaded in the afternoon of September 9.
It may not win my any prize, but I enjoyed the experience and am feeling good
about my effort. Image: http://www.3daynovel.com/
Reading in a church
Pratap Reddy, Jessica Westhead & Mayank Bhatt at Brockton Writers Series (September 2011) |
I had the privilege of reading at a session where award
winning authors Pratap Reddy and Jessica Westhead also read.
Pratap’s book of short stories is ready. Jessica’s third book (a collection of short stories) And AlsoSharks was published recently by Coromorant Books.
The reading was followed by a Q&A session and that was
deeply introspective.
Jessica will be reading at The Word on the Streets (TWOTS) on September 25. Generally About Books has “adopted” Jessica for this annual celebration of books at Queen’s Park.
When you’re there please drop by. Jessica will be reading from her collection
and also join short fiction writers Julie Booker and Matthew J Trafford in a
discussion on YOSS (Year Of the Short Story).
“YOSS aims to unite fellow writers and readers everywhere in
one cause—to bring short fiction the larger audience it deserves.”
Farzana Doctor, novelists and activist, curates the series
which celebrates its second anniversary next month.
The next session of Brockton Writers Series is on October 5
at St. Anne’s Church, 270 Gladstone Ave, just north of Dundas. Patrick Connors,
Ann Shin and Aisha Sasha John will be reading.
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