Amit Chaudhuri, Tabish Khair, Ashwin Sanghi and Roswitha Joshi share their views on the three issues that were of concern to them as authors during 2015.
According to Chaudhuri, one of the issues was the "lack, even as of today, of robust and active citizens' organisations that have a thorough knowledge of, and clarity on, the legal and constitutional frameworks for the freedom of expression, which could begin countering the suppression of dissent and of our civil liberties on the basis of this knowledge".
"The decimation of what's most architecturally important about our modern cities, and the pursuit of 'development' without a vision. The outcome and untenability of this pursuit, in Mumbai and more recently in Chennai, are now very apparent," the Kolkata-born author told PTI.
One of the issues that were of primary concern in 2015 to
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Khair was xenophobia.
The Denmark-based and Bihar-born author explores this subject in his new book "The New Xenophobia" and to which he also relates war, the treatment of refugees, religious extremism, and many aspects of neoliberalism).
During the year he was also worried about the "growing economic disparity in the world, and a general decline in the intellectual content of ordinary life, which is reflected in such different matters as an increasingly inane media culture, attacks on intellectuals, religious fundamentalism, lack of environmental awareness, shallow literary circles and the 'market' trimming of universities, especially in the humanities".
The three issues that moved most in Joshi's head as a writer and from head to page were child labour, the role of the electronic media and what constitutes rape. The German writer, who is based in Delhi, is the author of books like "Life is Peculiar", "On the Rocks and Other Stories", "Once More!", "Fool's Paradise" and "Indian Dreams".