Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
India

Writers Should Stay Away From Activism: Booker Winner Marlon James

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Jan, 2016 11:43 AM
    Writers run the risk of didacticism if they turn into activists, says Marlon James, the first Jamacian to win the Booker Prize in 2015.
     
    "I think the writer enters a dangerous zone by becoming an activist. Didacticism will destroy a book. Writers should try to do their job and let activists do theirs," he told IANS on the sidelines of the the ninth edition of Jaipur Literature festival.
     
    James, a professor of English at Minnesota's Macalester College, feels writers need to strike a balance when it comes to dealing with social issues. 
     
    He won the Booker Prize for "A Brief History of Seven Killings". The novel, set in the 1970s and 1980s, is based on the story of an assassination attempt on reggae star Bob Marley. The book explores the turbulent political situation in Jamaica and the West during that period,
     
    "It's not really about Marley. It's about what happened to the man who tried to kill him and all the people whose life got affected by the assassination attempt," says James.
     
    The book is told through fifteen characters including gunmen, dons, and politicians. Interestingly, the author hasn't mentioned Marley by name. But what led to the book?
     
    "I was curious about the assassination attempt on the singer in 1976. Nobody talked about it. Being a writer, I was attracted to the holes in the story, to the unanswered questions and to fill in the gaps," he said.
     
    James says his literary sensibilities were formed in Jamaica though he moved to the US later for work. And he is not quite sure how his book would be accepted in India as it had explicit scenes of sex and gore.
     
    "I have noticed that in India, writers face censorship. My book is quite explicit. I don't know how it will be accepted," he adds.
     
    Though there is no direct censorship in Jamaica, he feels that the country still harboured an outdated Victorian sense of morality.
     
    "Writers keep writing without caring much about consequences. It's our hope. The balancing of freedom and censorship is a very slippery slope," he feels.
     
    How has life changed after Booker? "People give importance to what I say now. If I put something on Facebook, it becomes the headline of The Guardian," he chuckles.
     
    His next book, will be an 'African Game of Thrones', set within the continent.
     
    "I was sick of arguing about whether there should be a black hobbit in the 'Lord of the Rings'. The book will be drawn from the African folklore that is rich and diverse," he said.
     
    A big fan of Salman Rushdie, he loves many Indian authors. "I have too many favourite Indian writers. I am a fan of Amitav Ghosh, Amitava Kumar and Jeet Thayil among many others," said James adding that he admired Anuradha Roy's book, the Indian contender in the Booker race.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Meeting most of the world - Modi government's foreign policy overdrive

    Meeting most of the world - Modi government's foreign policy overdrive
    Barring most of the African Union countries, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will have met leaders of most countries of the world by the end of December 2014...

    Meeting most of the world - Modi government's foreign policy overdrive

    Modi vows to bring back black money

    Modi vows to bring back black money
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledged in his radio address Sunday to bring back "every bit" of unaccounted wealth stashed abroad and said his...

    Modi vows to bring back black money

    Hafeez Saeed asks LeT to recruit flood-affected Kashmiri youths

    Hafeez Saeed asks LeT to recruit flood-affected Kashmiri youths
    Pakistani terrorist and 26/11 Mumbai attack mastermind Hafeez Saeed has asked the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group to recruit youth in Kashmir who...

    Hafeez Saeed asks LeT to recruit flood-affected Kashmiri youths

    Online campaign seeks reopening of 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases

    Online campaign seeks reopening of 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases
    The central government was Saturday asked to reopen all closed cases and re-investigate the 1984 massacre of over 3,000 Sikhs following the assassination...

    Online campaign seeks reopening of 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases

    Punjab seeks punishment for Sikh riots perpetrators

    Punjab seeks punishment for Sikh riots perpetrators
    The Punjab government Friday said it would mount pressure on the central government to seek punishment for those who were involved in the killing of...

    Punjab seeks punishment for Sikh riots perpetrators

    1984 riots a dagger through India's chest: Modi

    1984 riots a dagger through India's chest: Modi
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Friday said the 1984 anti-Sikh riots was "like a dagger pierced through India's chest"....

    1984 riots a dagger through India's chest: Modi