Literature, Live
Susan Chacko on the recent NETSAP south asian literary festival in Washington DC
The tidal wave of diasporic Southasian writing is no longer news. What a surprising is that the first literary event bringing together a host of south asian writers took place in 2000. in November, about a dozen authors and acedemics and an excited audience of about 200 thronged the South Asian Literary festival organised by the network of south Asian Professionals (NETSAP) in washigton DC. While the authors were well known from their books, many in the audience also got their first taste of the academic approach to literature. The introductory panel included three professors: Sara Suleri of Yale, Ambreen Hai from Smith College and Sangeeta Ray from the University of Maryland.
Post-colonial literature is the writing in English that emerged out of the former European colonies, and Suleri is one of the cornerstones of the "po-co" academic world. Her memoir, Meatless Days, was first published in 1987 and blends a description of the Pakistan in which she grew up with her own reflections and interpretation. It was novel in that it made no attempt to 'explain' the culture or society to a non-subcontinental audience. Its importance to the recent wave of South Asian writers is evident from the fact that three of the authors at this festival named Suleri and her book as their primary influence.