The Socialist

The Socialist 7 July 2009

Action now to defend public sector

Action now to defend public sector


Jobs not dole


Brown's dead duck government

Postal workers need a national fightback


National Express goes off the rails

First Bus - no to pay freeze

Demanding justice for Shrewsbury 24

News in brief


Why women don't have real equality


Police trigger ethnic clashes in Xinjiang

Honduras coup - a warning to workers in Latin America

Sri Lanka: Protest over DfID role


Stalin's Nemesis: The Exile and Murder of Leon Trotsky

Arundhati Roy - politics and literature


Higher fees in higher education

Drama students enter the stage of struggle

Teachers' MOTs

First strike against Trust schools

Strike against BSF proposals


RMT Annual General Meeting: "If provoked - Will strike"

Save jobs at Vestas wind turbine plant

Private companies caught in jobcentre scam

South West Wales Media: Fight for jobs, defend conditions

Oilc - fighting for decent working conditions in the North Sea

 
 
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London Literature Festival review

Arundhati Roy - politics and literature

The London Literature Festival 2009 opened on 2 July at the Southbank Centre, with Arundhati Roy, introducing her new book Listening to grasshoppers: field notes on democracy. Introduced by Shami Chakrabarti from civil rights group Liberty, Arundhati spoke to a packed auditorium.

She attacked the idea that India is the 'biggest democracy' in the world and explained how the poor are left out of development. The poor have been robbed of the language of fightback, with terms such as 'progress', 'unity' and 'democracy' used by the establishment when attacking rights. She has called this a "language heist".

The Indian judiciary and the rotten role of non-government organisations did not escape her criticism, making Shami Chakrabarti, who previously worked as a lawyer and now for an NGO, uncomfortable. Someone from the audience accused Chakrabarti of taking the side of the establishment.

Since winning a Booker prize for The god of small things, Arundhati has published a series of political non-fiction books. She wanted to write fiction, but the conditions of the poor in India forced her to concentrate on politics. Her criticisms of the Indian ruling class even led to her being sentenced to prison in 2002.

This was an unconventional start to a 'literature festival'. The discussion was more about politics than literature. Arundhati spelled out her opposition to capitalism, and the horrific poverty it engenders.

Diane Abbott, Labour MP for Hackney where poverty is on the increase and black youth are robbed of their rights, was in the audience. Such was her eagerness to be associated with Roy that she literally (and embarrassingly) threw herself onto the stage.

However, once there she was only able to ask a question about the connection between literature and politics.

Arundhati Roy is certainly further to the left and cares more about the world around her than the majority of her contemporary writers, and some so-called left MPs.

Senan

In this issue

Action now to defend public sector


Youth fight for jobs

Jobs not dole


Socialist Party editorial

Brown's dead duck government

Postal workers need a national fightback


Socialist Party news and analysis

National Express goes off the rails

First Bus - no to pay freeze

Demanding justice for Shrewsbury 24

News in brief


Socialist Party women

Why women don't have real equality


International socialist news and analysis

Police trigger ethnic clashes in Xinjiang

Honduras coup - a warning to workers in Latin America

Sri Lanka: Protest over DfID role


Socialist Party reviews

Stalin's Nemesis: The Exile and Murder of Leon Trotsky

Arundhati Roy - politics and literature


Education

Higher fees in higher education

Drama students enter the stage of struggle

Teachers' MOTs

First strike against Trust schools

Strike against BSF proposals


Socialist Party workplace news

RMT Annual General Meeting: "If provoked - Will strike"

Save jobs at Vestas wind turbine plant

Private companies caught in jobcentre scam

South West Wales Media: Fight for jobs, defend conditions

Oilc - fighting for decent working conditions in the North Sea


 

Home   |   The Socialist 7 July 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

India:

triangleTamil Solidarity: Gearing up for 2012

triangleFast news

triangleIndian high commission protest over Tamil death sentences

triangleUN report on Sri Lanka war crimes

triangleIndia - no voice for Kashmiri struggle

triangleKashmir: An eyewitness to oppression in the valley

Democracy:

triangleEgypt: Millions cast their votes in the first post-Mubarak elections

triangleRiot cops assault Occupy protesters

triangleTake over Murdoch's press!

triangleNHS "listening events" - Flip chart 'democracy'

Poverty:

triangleThem & Us

triangle2012: Millions face poverty and homelessness

triangleThe Tory solution to pensioner poverty?