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PEN World Voices Title
2005 festival
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Saturday
Sunday, April 17
Monday, April 18
Tuesday, April 19
Wednesday, April 20
Thursday, April 21
Friday, April 22
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Home > World Voices 2005 > Thursday, April 21

THURSDAY, APRIL 21

11:00–12:00
Virtual Forum
Moderated by Esther Allen

Where: www.wordswithoutborders.org


12:00–1:30
Conversation: Bei Dao and Shan Sa with Gish Jen

Where: Strand Book Store (Rare Book Room): 828 Broadway

Co-sponsored by the Strand Book Store

Free


2:00–4:00
The Post-National Writer
Lilian Faschinger, Francisco Goldman, Jose Manuel Prieto, Yuri Rytkheu, Salman Rushdie, Yoko Tawada, Eliot Weinberger, Adam Zagajewski

Literary writers work as individuals, expressing an individual and entirely unique perspective; much great literature is about the clash between the individual and the collective. Nevertheless, we seem perpetually unable to keep from reading writers as representatives of their nations. The writers assembled for this panel each test the limits of nationalist definitions of literature in his or her own way, and they will discuss the issues of identity and nationalism they confront in their work and their lives.

Where: The New School: 66 West 12th St.

Co-sponsored by The New School Graduate Writing Program and internationales literaturfestival berlin

Free


4:00–6:00
Voices from the New Europe
Rafael Chirbes, Victor Erofeyev, Andrei Makine, Cees Nooteboom; moderated by James Miller 

Europe has undergone significant transformations since the so-called “Eastern enlargement,” in which 10 additional member states entered the European Union last year. Both Eastern and Western Europe are experiencing struggles of national identity, currently most apparent in the Ukraine. Literature plays a part in these processes, the precise shape of which remains to be seen. This panel focuses on the author’s role and responsibility in reshaping Europe and redefining its national identities; it poses the question of the writer’s commitment today. In the face of the overpowering cultural influence of television and other visual media, do writers have an actual chance of making their voices heard?  

Where: The New School: 66 West 12th St.

Co-sponsored by The New School Graduate Writing Program and internationales literaturfestival berlin

Free


6:00–7:00
“Strange Times, My Dear”: The PEN Anthology of Contemporary Iranian Literature
Ahmad Karimi Hakkak, Nassim Khaksar, Nahid Mozaffari, Azar Nafisi, Shahrnush ParsipurNiloufar Talebi, Goli Taraghi, Sholeh Wolpe

Azar Nafisi joins editors Nahid Mozaffari and Ahmad Karimi Hakkak, and publisher Richard Seaver, in presenting selections of contemporary Iranian poetry and fiction in celebration of the Anthology’s publication. This book was published despite U.S. Treasury Department regulations restricting the publication of materials from countries under United States trade embargo.   

Where: The New School: 66 West 12th St.

Co-sponsored by The New School Graduate Writing Program and The International Freedom to Publish Committee of the Association of American Publishers, and Persian Cultural Foundation

Free

7:00–9:00
The Way We Love Now
Antoine Audouard, Hanif Kureishi, Natsuo Kirino, Meir Shalev, Elif Shafak, Peter Stamm; moderated by Wayne Koestenbaum

Eroticism, intimacy, amorousness: how does “sex”—that ancient game—function in the contemporary world? What new or old paradigms dominate modern love? How, in our different cultures and social contexts, does eroticism bewilder, enchain, and embolden its practitioners and victims? Love—Circean and protean—may acquire new forms in a new age, and threaten to become unrecognizable. These novelists, who have written eloquently about love’s trials, will speak to the roles eroticism plays in their works and in their worlds.

Where: The New School: 66 West 12th St.

Co-sponsored by The New School Graduate Writing Program and internationales literaturfestival berlin

Ticketing:  $10, free for New School students and faculty.  For more info: (212) 229-5488

This event is free for Festival Pass holders.


7:00
Durs Grünbein and Uwe Timm: New Translations
Reading in German with selections in English from Ashes for Breakfast and In My Brother’s Shadow, read by Michael Hofmann and Ayesha Pande; in cooperation with Farrar, Straus and Giroux, the Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany, and the German Book Office.

Where: Goethe-Institut New York: 1014 Fifth Avenue

Free


9:00–10:30
UniVerse: World Literary Voices
Fadhil al-Azzawi, Bei Dao, Breyten  Breytenbach, Martín Espada, John Godfrey, Joan Margarit Consarnau, Dunya Mikhail, Elena Poniatowska, Elif Shafak
Where: St. Mark’s Church: 131 East 10th St.

Co-sponsored by Rattapallax and the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church

Free
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