When Satan asks the Master, a persecuted novelist in Stalin’s USSR, to show him the manuscript of his novel on Pontius Pilate, the latter replies that he has burnt it. “Forgive me, I can’t believe it,” Satan replies. “It can’t be so. Manuscripts don’t burn.”
“Manuscripts don’t burn” — this sentence from Russian novelist Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master & Margarita has gained wide circulation as an anti-censorship slogan since a truncated version of the novel was first published in Moscow in 1966-67. The line has deep autobiographical resonances for Bulgakov, who had in fact consigned to flames an early draft of his novel. The Master & Margarita, in which Satan and his entourage arrive in a fanatically atheist Bolshevik-ruled Moscow, was never published in Bulgakov’s lifetime.
Two recent events reminded me of this line and prompted me to find my dog-eared copy of The Master & Margarita.
The first was the recent decision of global retail giant Amazon to shut down Indian publishing company Westland, which has sent shockwaves through India’s literary community and sparked much speculation about the reason for this sudden decision. The absence of any explanation from Amazon, which acquired Westland from the Tata group in 2016, has fed the wildfires of speculation, especially on social media.
Some, like Durba Chattaraj, teacher of writing and anthropology at Ashoka University, have suggested that it might have something to do with the list of titles put out in recent years by one of Westland’s imprints, Context. “Westland has also published, in the last five years, a series of acclaimed, carefully-researched, and hard-hitting books critiquing India’s current regime. No unsupported hatchet jobs these,” Chattaraj writes in her piece, “Author’s lament: Why Amazon closing down Westland feels like we’re living in a Mohsin Hamid novel” for Scroll.in. These include Christophe Jaffrelot’s Modi’s India, Revati Laul’s The Anatomy of Hate, KS Komireddi’s Malevolent Republic, Nalin Mehta’s The New BJP, and Josy Joseph’s The Silent Coup, among others.
Not everyone, however, agrees with this. Novelist and biographer Deepanjana Pal, in a piece on her website titled “Westland/Wasteland” argues: “If the shutdown was on ideological grounds, just getting rid of Context — one of Westland’s imprints — would have done the job. Lose Context’s list and Westland comes across as a vanilla-saffron confectionery, filled with genres and authors that are 24k commercial.” Besides popular writers such as Chetan Bhagat, Anuja Chauhan, Ashwin Sanghi, Westland had also recently published the debut novel of Smriti Irani, the former TV star and current minister of women and child development in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.