Keane on the title race

March 23, 2008

The former United captain and Sunderland manager comments on the title race -

Get your money on United, it’s their title without a shadow of a doubt. They won’t let it go now. They are like an animal – they sniff blood. I’m not saying the Liverpool game is going to be easy or even that United are going to win, but if you are talking about the title, the United players will be sleeping like babies.

Chelsea are playing catch-up, Arsenal had the opportunity to pull away and missed it, United are in pole position and they won’t let that go. No chance. I’ve been there with them and I know the feeling in the camp.

Shipwrecked Sailors

March 18, 2008

Gabriel Garcia Marquez, in a fabulous interview, says -
In fact, I believe writers are always alone, like shipwrecked sailors in the middle of the ocean. It’s the loneliest profession in the world. No one can help you write what you are writing.

 

Later he’s asked about the magical element in his fiction, and he responds -

There’s not a single line in my novels which is not based on reality.  

On Sexual Harassment

March 15, 2008

The Literary Society, Ramjas College held a discussion on Gender and Sexual Harassment in collaboration with The Blank Noise Project on November 5, 2007.

The following is a piece I wrote about it, published in a university journal.

Why have so many cases of sexual harassment come up in Delhi University in the past year?

Surely, sexual harassment is not something that is peculiar to DU. It has been established beyond doubt that there is no demographic to harassers and they may come from anywhere in the social strata. My guess is, the big difference is due to the awareness about the issue created through active public discourse.

The major reason behind inviting The Blank Noise Project to Ramjas College was to continue this process of change. Blank Noise, being a public-participatory art initiative, tried to take it beyond the annals of discourse. We discussed strategies for shifting the power balance in a public domain which remains largely male-dominated. This reclaiming of the public space is an important step if we aspire to gender equality. The abdication of the public space to men is nothing but abject surrender. For it is clear, more powerful than harassment is the threat of harassment, the internalization of fear and potential aggression.

In the light of what happened at Ramjas recently, the discussion with Blank Noise acquired a new context. We had planned it a month before the issue engulfed Ramjas, which only showed how pertinent it is. Blank Noise’s emphasis was largely female-centric sexual harassment, but the interaction also went beyond gender. More than girls, we had boys speaking about experiences of sexual harassment. I thought, the unique part was that people felt comfortable enough to speak about difficult things in an audience of about a hundred people. For once, there was no shame attached to being harassed. Maybe it was a small occurrence, but also a powerful step in the process. When we find the courage to speak about it, we make it more and more evident that there is a problem. And the fight against it must go on.