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MEMBER BLOG TAG: india

Tuesday, January 31, 2012 7:14AM
 
Voices Around the World
Tags: Freedom of Expression, PEN, writers, China, Ethiopia, Mexico, Myanmar, Uzbekistan, the Cameroons, India, Liu Xiaobo, Zhu Yufu, Chen Wei, Chen Xi, , Salman Rushdie, , Aung San Sui, Kyi, Joanne Leedom-Ackerman
 

Each month notices of writers under threat come across my desk. I find myself studying the pictures of the writers when there are pictures, writing down their names, and when available, reading some of their work to make them real in my own mind and imagination and later to share their work, which governments hope to silence. Along with other members of PEN I write appeals on their behalf with no definitive measure of how effective these are, but over time the accumulation of protests from writers and others around the world does push open consciousness and prison doors.


In the past month, writers have been imprisoned with long sentences in China,...

 
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Tuesday, July 26, 2011 5:48AM
 
Born with a Penis--Killing Chapter1
Tags: literary biography, autobiography, writers and dreams, Richard Crasta, Indian writers,
 
Going to the Movies
           
Sitting on a thin gray-pink mat on the train platform, the children are waiting for us. We make our way over stones and past garbage, through a chain-link fence to what looks like an abandoned station. Along the tracks shanty houses and rows of laundry line the route a few feet from where the trains will come whizzing by.  Some of the children, ages 5-15, live here,...
 
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Friday, October 16, 2009 12:15PM
 
The Curse of the Monkey God
Tags: Katmandu, prayer, Ganges, India, Nepal, clean, Buddha
 
In Katmandu prayers fly like flags, twirl like wheels, ring like bells. In the outskirts one of the holiest Buddhist sites in Nepal includes a monastery where monks spin an enormous floor to ceiling prayer cylinder 24 hours a day. The monks invite tourists to spin their own prayers. In Katmandu, prayer never ceases. While in India, although a dead and bloated cow floated thirty feet away, I had washed my hands in the Ganges as a sign of unity with all seekers so I took a couple of turns with the prayer wheel. My wife did not wash her hands in the Ganges and would not touch me until I returned to the hotel and showered with enough soap, shampoo and hot water to qualify...
 
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Monday, May 4, 2009 3:14PM
 
Flavor of the Month Taboos at PEN
Tags: Taboos, Arab sexual writing, gay writing, gay indian writing, Western taboos, Publishing Taboos, Taboos for Writers, Literary Guide to Taboos, Taboo Update, Boo to Taboos
 
Forbidden Flavors of the Month Taboos
On the “What’s Taboo?” PEN panel with Salwa Al Neimi, Zsofia Ban, Nicole Brossard, Rakesh Satyal, and Victoria Redel.

    There are social, political, religious, literary, and publishing taboos, Western and Eastern taboos, Taboos that it is taboo to write about and acknowledge, even in PEN, and but for some startlingly illuminating contributions by Nicole Brossard and Salwa Al Neimi, the PEN World Voices panel seemed fixated mainly with the Forbidden Flavor of the Month taboo, that is, Taboos Permissible and Fashionable, and Long Untaboo Western Taboos: the taboo against writing about homosexuality, male or female, or about Sexual Perversity in Saudi Arabia. And for this reason, something was lost.
    But first,...
 
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Thursday, April 30, 2009 5:45PM
 
Literary Film Feast
Tags: Instituto Cervantes, Rattapallax, Ram Devineni, DJ Kadagian, Pablo Neruda, Bob Holman, Allaen Ginsberg, India
 
In 1991, the government of Spain opened the Instituto Cervantes in New York to promote the language and culture of the Spanish-speaking world. The institute has a gallery for shows by Spanish artists, offers classes in Spanish language, film, literature, wine and gastronomy, has a library with 83,000 Spanish books, magazines, DVDs and films and an extensive music collection. Outside the library is a small courtyard for readers on a pleasant day. The Amster Yard is believed to be the terminal stop of the Boston stagecoach on the Eastern Post Road. The gallery was once the studio of the sculptor Isamo Noguichi. It’s a great place to spend days or evenings but we’re here for the Rattapallax/PEN Literary film feast. (Disclosure: I’ve always thought film...
 
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