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Jaipur Literature Festival: Goodbye Mr Shakeseare 2010.

sam.co | 27.01.2010 06:18 | Culture

In literature, as in cinema, the audience is mesmerized by celebrities rather then quality or art. Readers buy books promoted by critics who are in the majority friends of the writer or publisher. In India, where books are amazingly cheap, the 'literate' prefer to buy two cups of coffee rather then a new book....

JAIPUR LITERATURE FESTIVAL: GOODBYE MR SHAKESPEARE 2010.



January 26, 2010.



By Uli Schmetzer
www.u-schmetzer.com



JAIPUR, India - In literature, as in cinema, the audience is mesmerized by celebrities rather then quality or art. Readers buy books promoted by critics who are in the majority friends of the writer or publisher. In India, where books are amazingly cheap, the 'literate' prefer to buy two cups of coffee rather then a new book......

…....At least that was the message, if there was a message, from the 5th Jaipur Literature Festival grandly advertised as “the greatest literature show on earth” but as expected mainly a promo for established authors to show their face, promote their books and be celebrated.

Much of the talking was around the table, in a college debate atmosphere. The panelists, all in the entertainment industry where the motto is ‘live and let live’, supported each other just like film directors never knock down another director’s creation, perhaps for fear he or she might strike back. Little literary criticism was practiced in a country which remains one of the few in the world where the media continues its original role of holding to account the government – apparently to no avail.

What became quickly clear is that writing these days is firmly in the hands of the literary establishment which, in India at least and probably elsewhere, means the uper classes with one foot abroad and one foot in India, with an Oxford- Cambridge or Harvard-MIT education. Well, that's at least how it looked in Jaipur, the reality might be somewhat different.

If you have a friend like Salmon Rushdie who writes two paragraphs to say your book is great you are assured of a best seller even if a survey finds no one likes the book or considers it meritorious.

In many ways the 'democratic' festival, which allows free entry to anyone though not the slum dwellers and vagabonds at the fringe of the Diggi Palace where the festivities took place, is a bit of a hoot: Like when Tina Brown talks about Princess Diana stalking her lovers and complaining husband Prince Charles likes playing 'rocking horse' with his mistress and current wife Camille but knew nothing about Diana's own 'geography.' Then there was the roarious laughters into microphones by William Dalrymple, director of the festival, celebrating the convivial jesting. And some moderators obviously had not done their homework.

Who was not puzzled when young writers hardly out of school complained from the podium about suffering ' writers block' and told a spellbound audience (gawking at these new godesses of yet to be discovered literature) that making money was among their priorities. Naturally all of them had been educated in the best schools abroad and lounged on the podium with the cross-legged ease of ladies of leasure in India, looking for something glamorous to do, except playing in Bollywood movies.

One also puzzled at the admission of dynamic Indian magazine editor Tarun Tejpal that the written word has no longer any clout. He said the establishment simply ignores it. His magazine published eye witness acounts of rape victims brutalized by police. The police were never charged or investigated. Crime and the underworld, the festival heard from author Vikram Chandra, have become so much part of daily life they are no longer underworld but real world and all around us. And both readers and public have simply accepted our freedom has been sold (without a fight) just as John Kampfner writes in his excellent book 'Freedom for Sale'.

Still the Festival never intended to make a political statement, otherwise Arunthati Roy would have been present. Kampfner must have been an accident. He was quickly and unsuccessfully doused by Niall Ferguson, a Scotsman, a historian with a stentorian voice who defended our successful neo-liberal societies, free market enterprise and privatisation as the core of our freedoms. Not surpringly his intervention 'the ascent of money' was sponsored by investment bankers Goldman Sachs.

If anything the festival left the impression, supported by the survey, the possibility of a new Shakespeare appearing in print is virtually zilch in the near future because one, publishers are profit driven and two, the old boys clubs sticks together and if necessary can call for backup by a bit of corporate muscle – or shall we say – funds.

In fact, so the Tehelka survey found, readers want favorite authors to be glamorous, young, celebrated and easily readable. Bad news for balding scribes threadbare with age and hiding their rising paunches inside far too tight designer jeans.

Of course the fault for this lack of new talent is not all with the greedy publishing houses but also with readers, many of whom only buy books to keep on shelves. The magazine Tehelka found only four per cent of readers take a chance on a book not critically acclaimed or made fashionable by some celebrity's praise.

This prompted a panel of publishers on the last days of the festival to admit profit (and risk) conscious publishers will simply not imperil their investment for such a small percentage of readers willing to try something new.

Goodbye Mr Shakespeare 2010.

.

Uli Schmetzer is the author of 'Times of Terror' and 'Gaza' both

available on Amazonbooks.com

sam.co

Comments

Display the following 2 comments

  1. Do you know anything about Shakespeare at all? — Norvello
  2. Remove this bollocks! — and that twat Norvello