Pramod Kumar, director, Jaipur Virasat Foundation, is exhausted but this is the pleasantest kind of exhaustion. The first edition of the literature festival conceived by Kumar as an addition to the foundation's annual heritage fest has just come to an end, and it's been a satisfying experience for all concerned. |
But his mind is already ticking over as he looks ahead to next year. "The event needs to be made more expansive in future," he says. "We also hope to spread it over a week in subsequent editions." |
While the 5th Annual Jaipur Heritage International Festival was held between January 14-23 in 28 venues across the city, the literary fest took place on only the last three days and was restricted to the Diggi Palace. Naturally, some of the programmes clashed. |
"We are considering organising it separately from the rest of the festival so that there's no overlapping," says Kumar. The other principal ground for improvement, he feels, is that there could have been greater publisher participation, "and we would also have liked to see interactions between writers in other languages". Later, author-diplomat Pavan Varma echoes this last point. "I did feel a little bad that most of the events were for an English-speaking audience," Varma says. |
On the whole, however, given that the festival was put together on a small budget and that some last-minute cancellations briefly threw the schedule out of gear, it was a noteworthy effort. You wouldn't call it a lavish event, but this in a sense was its great charm since it translated into small but enthusiastic audiences, and a merciful lack of mediapersons running about with cameras and microphones in search of "celebrity authors" "" which meant it was possible for writers like Hari Kunzru, Shobhaa De, Namita Gokhale and William Dalrymple to mingle with the crowd and discuss their work rather than switch into P3P mode. This gave the festival a flavour that is usually missing from, say, the ostentatious book events held in big cities like Delhi. |
The nature of the talks and discussions varied with the individual speakers. William Dalrymple moved about the stage as he revisited some of the territory covered in his last book "" White Mughals "" drawing the audience in with the style familiar to those of us who have seen his gifts as a raconteur up close. |
Namita Gokhale on the other hand preferred to remain seated on the elevated platform, an ornate lamp by her side, reading excerpts from her books "" but beneath this static approach was a vivacity, and a piquant sense of humour. (When asked why she always writes in the first person, she replies, "That way I can pretend a mistake is the narrator's, not mine!") |
Little wonder that the authors themselves were generous in their endorsements. Dalrymple was particularly effusive, calling it "one of the best fests I've been to, an amazing achievement on a shoestring budget". And Kunzru felt Jaipur was a wonderful place for such events """the right atmosphere, enthusiastic people and venues scattered over a relatively small area".
VIGNETTES |
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