ZEE JLF At The British Library Returns To London

The fifth edition of the ZEE JLF at the British Library will include nearly 70 eminent authors and thinkers, gathered to showcase South Asia’s unique multilingual literary heritage

Stephen Frears spoke at the 2017 edition
ZEE JLF At The British Library Returns To London
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Come June 8, 2018, London’s iconic British Library will be transformed for two days as the fifth edition of the ZEE JLF at The British Library fills its halls to showcase South Asia’s literary heritage, oral traditions, performing arts, books and ideas. Don’t miss out on the dialogues and debates from across the region highlighting the cultural and social diversity found within it.

The event from June 8-10, co-directed by Namita Gokhale and William Dalrymple, is often referred to as  ‘the greatest literary show on Earth’ to UK audiences. The speakers included in this year’s programme include Shashi Tharoor, who discusses his new book Why I Am a Hindu; John Zubryczki talks about his latest work Empire of Enchantment; Robin Jeffrey, author of Waste of a Nation, one of India’s most acclaimed young poets Tishani Doshi, South Korean author Suki Kim, American investigative journalist Katherine Boo, railway historian Christian Wolmar, the Indian film industry’s power couple Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar, economist Lord Meghnad Desai and Islamic historian Faisal Devji.

The weekend features sessions that highlight the centenary of the start of the British women’s suffragette movement and its progress since, and traverse the life and legacy of Winston Churchill, one of history’s most complex and divisive figures. 

Contemporary political issues are debated across a range of sessions. ‘Exile and Insurgency’ questions the actions of those who take up arms against established governments while ‘Why I Am A Hindu’ considers the vital contribution of religion to a plural and secular democracy. Discussions on the geopolitical jigsaws of the Himalayan region sit alongside debates around the issue of waste and sanitation in India. Other sessions provide a gripping and rare first-hand account of an undercover writer in North Korea and get to the bottom of the mystery around one of the heroes of India’s independence movement.

The programme’s literary discussions look at a variety of subjects such as poetry, ranging from the pre-modern Sufi genre to contemporary legends such as Jan Nisar and Kaifi and Doshi. ‘Translations…An Equal Music’ delves into translation and how it impacts access to and understanding of individual and national narratives, highlighting the process and practice of translation along with the discipline and aesthetics of voice, interpretation and technique across source and target languages. ‘The Fictional Leap’ explores the reconstruction of the past, the axis between truth and fiction and the leap of faith into historical fiction.

There are also discussions on the impact of the British Empire through sessions on Lady Edwina Mountbatten as the charismatic ‘Last Vicereine’ in the context of Indian Independence, Partition and the legacy of British rule and one on the ‘Railways and the Raj’, which explores the fascinating transformative role of the Indian railway network, a creation of the British Raj.

Other sessions examine the diversity of artistic heritage in South Asia, including Islamic calligraphy, Indian classical music (with a focus on the sarod), two brilliant painters from 18th century India (Nainsukh and Manaku), songs from Sufi saints Bulleh Shah and Shah Abdul Latif and the untold stories of Indian magic.

More information: ZEE JLF at The British Library