Would he ever think of moving back to America? "In six years in the US, I managed to publish one book of poems, English (Penguin/Rattapallax, 2004). In a year-and-a-half in India, I’ve completed two books, and will finish my first prose book by the end of the year. I would be insane to go back."
Novelist Rana Dasgupta always visited Kolkata when he and his family came to India, since that’s where his father’s family is from. But having lived in London and New York, he decided to live in what was for him a more ‘neutral’ place, without the comforts and the frustrations of family networks.
"When I arrived here in December 2002, my initial reaction was one of complete terror. I remember taking an auto from Patparganj to CP and thinking what the hell am I doing here? It was a moonscape—the whole place seemed like one big construction site, and I was sitting in the auto, sweating, not with heat but with the decision to come and live here. And at that point I was only planning to stay for six months or so."
Over four years, and one highly acclaimed novel later, Dasgupta feels his work—and his life—is considerably enriched by the experience."Tokyo Cancelled would have been a much poorer book had it not been written here. There is a kind of ethic of sharing one’s work which seems specific to this place, and a community of filmmakers, artists, and writers, who have a sense of engagement with each other. If I’d written the book in New York, it would have been a much more solitary and sterile experience."
For Dasgupta, living in Delhi is stimulating because of its openness to new ideas, different perspectives. "Here you are constantly coming up against people in every walk of life who are imagining what the future might look like. Every possible political debate, from Maoism to neo-liberal capitalism, is alive in the political sphere—and that is simply not the case in the West."
On the negative side, he senses a lack of a ‘counter-culture’—unlike in China, for example, where "one of the legacies of both the Communist Revolution and the anti-communist movement has been a sense that culture should have some kind of revolutionary force." With a few exceptions, that radical edge is missing here.
For Dasgupta, the streets are full of not just people but also their stories: "People’s aggression, their intimacy, their affection, their tragedy... it can be very overpowering for a newcomer. But when I return to Europe, I miss that stream of life bombarding you."
Being out there on the streets is something that young women in Delhi often feel less than excited about. First-time author Payal Dhar would do anything to move away. "I feel unsafe here—on the streets, in certain situations, even in my own home, and that’s something that has not improved. On the contrary, it just seems to be getting worse."