Future belongs to the big imperial language, says Coetzee
January 24th, 2011 - 10:50 pm ICT by IANSBy Madhusree Chatterjee
Jaipur, Jan 24 (IANS) Nobel Laureate J.M. Coetzee Monday said the future belonged to the imperial and the big languages of the world.”The stand I adopt is that the language is a tool of communication. The more command one has over a language, the more it becomes your language,” Coetzee told a packed audience at the sixth DSC Jaipur Literature Festival.
“The future belongs to the big language, the imperial languages,” Coetzee said.
The 70–year-old South Africa-born writer is known for masterpieces like “Disgrace”, “Dusklands”, “Elizabeth Costello” and “Waiting for the Barbarians”.
Coetzee was addressing a session on “Imperial English”, which dwelt of the dual lives of non-English writers who used the “imperial language of English” for writing.
The writer in the smaller languages could be made accessible through translations, the author said.
Citing examples, Coetzee said: “A Zulu or Afrikan writer, who speaks his mother tongue at home, has an advantage over Anglo-phones (western English speaking people).”
“They grasp the lesson early in life that the world is not simply as it is - but it is framed by the language we see it in. The dual language can either be a handicap to write in or an alien language which they can master,” Coetzee said.
He said the “Jaipur Literature Festival was pre-indisposed to dual linguistic life”.
“Several writers here are not in command of the imperial language,” he said, adding that observation could trigger arguments.
Recalling his own childhood, Coetzee said, “As a child in South Africa, I went to an English medium school because my parents thought English is the way of the future. In the university, I went to study English, I taught English, I speak English fluently and I write in English. Yet, I cannot say I am at home in English,” he said.
The writer said when he writes in English, he feels that he is “writing in someone else’s mother tongue.”
Coetzee, who now lives in Australia, was awarded the Booker Prize twice - for “Life and Times of Michael” in 1983 and for “Disgrace” in 1999. He received the Nobel Prize for literature in 2003.
Coetzee turned out to be the show-stopper Sunday, holding the audience in thrall for 45 minutes when he read out an excerpt from his work, “The Old Woman and the Cats” - a philosophical essay that explores the journey of souls.
He signed at least 1,000 copies of his books later for audience comprising old and young readers and even the odd lay man.
Commenting on the popularity of Coetzee in India, writer and television presenter Sunil Sethi of Just Books, a popular literature capsule on television, told IANS: “Coetzee’s books are so universal and powerful. His “Disgrace” captures the degeneration of life on the campus with such poignance. He also talks of discrimination and colour bar. People relate to it a great deal in India.”
Actress-musician Ila Arun, who heard Coetzee for the first time at the Jaipur Literature Festival, told IANS: “I was moved”.
“I loved his reading from the ‘Old Woman and the Cats’. It was like getting to know Coetzee. I am going to buy ‘Disgrace’ for my daughter,” Arun said.
- Jaipur lit fest to focus on Indian languages - Dec 27, 2010
- Growing concern over vernacular, classical literature at Jaipur fest - Jan 22, 2011
- An eclectic mix, Jaipur Literature fest sees spirited start - Jan 21, 2011
- Indian languages fest ends - Dec 18, 2011
- Rajasthan's 'Shakespeare' elated over Nobel chance - Oct 05, 2011
- Women's writing power coming into own in Africa - Feb 14, 2011
- Wish Rushdie was in Jaipur fest: Lebanese writer - Jan 22, 2012
- Literature fest to light up Jaipur - Dec 18, 2010
- English mass-market books tap Hindi speakers (Feature) - Aug 10, 2012
- Indian language literature goes to Frankfurt Book Fair - Oct 10, 2011
- Commonwealth English must assimilate: Hay Fest founder - Oct 21, 2011
- 'Essential Tagore' nominated best book of year - Nov 29, 2011
- Indian literary scene saw fests, awards, strong publishing (2010 in Retrospect) - Dec 24, 2010
- Mumbai gets its first open literature festival - Nov 11, 2010
- Collage, memory & many voices inspire novelist Michael Ondaatje - Jan 20, 2012
Tags: alien language, born writer, chatterjee, disgrace, dsc, dual language, dual lives, elizabeth costello, english medium school, english writers, j m coetzee, jan 24, languages of the world, literature festival, masterpieces, mother tongue, nobel laureate, waiting for the barbarians, waiting for the barbarians coetzee, zulu