In Black And White
Publication
blues, sometimes gender issues and sometimes innate censorship — Nisha da
Cunha says Indian women are a hindrance to themselves as they have a natural
censor in them — and yet the creative flow continues unabated. So what
makes them write?
Anita Nair says that she always wanted to write,
“I wrote fiction even as a child. Fiction is a great playing field for the
imagination. It allows me to slip into the skin of so many characters. It lets
me create imaginary lands and beings. It let me play God and control destinies.
All of which calls for restraint and passion at the same time and it is this
that drew me to fiction and continues to make it my first love,” says
Anita Nair.
Sagarika Ghose decided to try writing fiction because
someone asked her to try her hand at a book and she discovered that she really
enjoyed it. Margaret Mascarenhas began writing fiction as past time about 10
years ago and never considered it seriously as a career option but, “I had
such a good time researching and writing ‘Skin’ that I
mightreconsider my options if the book does well.”
For Jaishree
Misra, “Writing is the best job in the world.” She, however,
confesses that she took to it “by accident or because of joblessness, both
of which are true in their own way.” After teaching for 25 years at St
Xavier’s College, Mumbai, Nisha da Cunha was at a loss when she lost her
job: “I didn’t have anything to do. That’s when my husband and
a friend suggested that I take up writing, and I did.”
With
commendable results indeed!
Indian Diaspora and Women
Writers
Across the world, women writers from the Indian Diaspora have
carved their distinct niche. Bharati Mukherjee, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni,
Anjana Appachana, Kiran Desai, Indira Ganesan, Bharti Kirchner, Sujata Massey,
Shauna Singh Baldwin and of course, the Pulitzer winner, Jhumpa Lahiri.
In the last half decade, writers of Indian origin have been
appearing with clockwork regularity on the literary horizon. And leaving
impressive marks too! Interestingly women writers from the Indian Diaspora far
outnumber the male writers. Does that mean that women writers are doing better
than their male counterparts? That may be up to the publishers and booksellers
to answer, but there is no disputing that in numbers and output, women writers
have taken the lead.
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