Subhoranjan Dasgupta: Your first book Jhansir Rani (The Queen ofJhansi) was published in1956. Itsformat was conventional -- that of a biographical novel. Since then you havebeen ceaselessly productive and have broken new ground with novels like Araneyer Adhikar (The Right to the Forest) and Titu Mir where your political and human commitmenthas found eloquent expression. How would you describe this evolution, thisprogress?
Mahasweta Devi: I do not believe in describing the evolution myself.But first Ishould say that Jhansir Rani was not a novel in the accepted sense of theterm. It was my feeble attempt to write a biography based on historicalresearch. Moreover, for the first time, I utilized oral tradition here assource-material of history and this I have been doing ever since. In fact,in order to write Jhansir Rani, I went to the people of the region, Icollected the local ballads and folklore. After this first attempt, myother texts came where I tried to trace -- what you might say -- the 'man-graph'.This was an unbroken process. My interest in human history deepenedthough it was different from the interest professed by conventionalhistorians. I tried to examine the impact of history on human beings.Awareness of history leads to the enquiry of moving human patterns,documentation of time, struggles and revolts. All these constitute historyand I am a part of it.