At the end of November the shortlist for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature was revealed at LSE. Sonali Campion conducted interviews at the event with the prize’s co-founder Surina Narula MBE, shortlisted author Romesh Gunesekera and chair of the judging panel Keki Daruwalla. On the eve of the Jaipur Literature Festival where the DSC Prize winner will be announced, India at LSE shares their reflections on the prize, the shortlist and writing about South Asia
As nominations for this year’s prize open, Madawi Al-Rasheed reflects on the experience of judging t...
Sunjeev Sahota is one of the leading lights of contemporary British literature. Although he writes i...
Shashi Deshpande was born in 1938 in Karnataka. She and her husband now live in Bangalore, a thrivin...
On 26 November, the DSC Prize for South Asian literature shortlist was announced at LSE for the thir...
On 27th November the shortlist for the fifth annual DSC Prize for South Asian Literature was announc...
Last weekend, the Jaipur Literature Festival at Southbank was held for the second year running. Megh...
It’s always very dicey to speak anything about a multifarious country like India for sure. And from ...
Lisa Lau interviews Manju Kapur, author of five novels (Difficult Daughters, 1998; A Married Woman, ...
Daya Dissanayake - three times winner of the State Literary Award, given by the Ministry of Cultural...
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, novelist, poet and University of Houston professor of creative writing, ...
Chetan Bhagat, Mohsin Hamid, and Arundhati Roy join the ranks of south Asian novelists who also writ...
This introduction to the 2017 Annual Conference of the British Association for South Asian Studies o...
Elleke Boehmer, Professor of World Literature in English at the University of Oxford, is both a nove...
44th Annual Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) March 21-24, 2013, Boston, Mas...
Githa Hariharan grew up in Bombay and Manila, and has lived in the USA. She now lives in New Delhi, ...
As nominations for this year’s prize open, Madawi Al-Rasheed reflects on the experience of judging t...
Sunjeev Sahota is one of the leading lights of contemporary British literature. Although he writes i...
Shashi Deshpande was born in 1938 in Karnataka. She and her husband now live in Bangalore, a thrivin...
On 26 November, the DSC Prize for South Asian literature shortlist was announced at LSE for the thir...
On 27th November the shortlist for the fifth annual DSC Prize for South Asian Literature was announc...
Last weekend, the Jaipur Literature Festival at Southbank was held for the second year running. Megh...
It’s always very dicey to speak anything about a multifarious country like India for sure. And from ...
Lisa Lau interviews Manju Kapur, author of five novels (Difficult Daughters, 1998; A Married Woman, ...
Daya Dissanayake - three times winner of the State Literary Award, given by the Ministry of Cultural...
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, novelist, poet and University of Houston professor of creative writing, ...
Chetan Bhagat, Mohsin Hamid, and Arundhati Roy join the ranks of south Asian novelists who also writ...
This introduction to the 2017 Annual Conference of the British Association for South Asian Studies o...
Elleke Boehmer, Professor of World Literature in English at the University of Oxford, is both a nove...
44th Annual Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) March 21-24, 2013, Boston, Mas...
Githa Hariharan grew up in Bombay and Manila, and has lived in the USA. She now lives in New Delhi, ...
As nominations for this year’s prize open, Madawi Al-Rasheed reflects on the experience of judging t...
Sunjeev Sahota is one of the leading lights of contemporary British literature. Although he writes i...
Shashi Deshpande was born in 1938 in Karnataka. She and her husband now live in Bangalore, a thrivin...