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Writing for the market not a sin: Satchidanandan

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Does poetry seem impossible in an age grabbling with terrorism and wars? Can poetry resist the temptations of the market? How has our poetry fared in the contemporary time marked with the internet revolution?

"The biggest challenges faced by poetry today is the challenge of freedom. No way of writing is sancrosanct. The challenge lies in remaining true to yourself and create something original, rather than to contrive, a practise that is usually seen in contemporaray poems," eminent poet, K Satchidananadan said.

He was part of a distinguished panel of poets from different cultural backgrounds who discussed and debated the theats faced by the form of poetry at the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) Poetry Festival at a just concluded event at the Sahitya Akademi here.
 

Satchidanandan, a seven time recipient of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award and a widely translated poet in several langauages, talked about the increasing pressure on the poets to write for market" and "to write in times of violence".

"Writing for the market is not a sin. But a poet should never commit the suicidal compromise of lowering one's standards for fear of ambiguity or have the dread that no publisher will be ready to accept one's work," Satchidanandan said.

"Violence leads to death of poetry sources. An act of violence that believes in homogenisation kills the nature, people and the vibrant culture of our land; entities on whom poems are based," he added.

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First Published: Mar 03 2014 | 12:16 PM IST

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