‘I wrote The Colour Purple so that voices of colour are not forgotten’: Alice Walker
1 year, 11 months ago

‘I wrote The Colour Purple so that voices of colour are not forgotten’: Alice Walker

The Hindu  

One of the highlights of day two of the Apeejay Kolkata Literary Festival, 2023 was a session with Alice Walker of The Colour Purple fame. The author, feminist and activist who has written extensively on women’s rights and empowerment, race relations and gender, joined writer Urvashi Butalia and AKLF director Anjum Katyal from her home in Mexico on Saturday morning. We have our own traditions, our own beliefs and activity, and I wanted to write about that.” Ms. Walker spoke about Sojourner Truth, an African American activist, a “monumental figure” for women of colour all over the planet and particularly Black American women. Truth, she said, would often talk about the fact that “our mothers and grandmothers have lifted heavy weights, struggled over muddy roads, see children sold away….” Ms. Walker wanted to write these stories. Art and creative fiction is important, said Ms. Walker, “As long as you have artists you will not be completely in the dark; art will provide the cultural nutrition and vitamins to help the planet grow in a better direction on every sphere, from nature to patriarchy to a robotic future.” In other sessions on Saturday, Nilanjana Roy and Anuja Chauhan discussed whodunnits; moderated by translator Arunava Sinha, two other translators Arshia Sattar and Syeda Hameed talked about how they bring languages like Sanskrit and Urdu to the modern reader; and transgender and activist Akkai Padmashali spoke about her memoir, A Small Step in a Long Journey.

History of this topic

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