Burning bright Arundhati Roy talks forcefully about India's 'mad pathology', the self-absorbed west and globalisation
The Guardian Weekly|June 21, 2024
By 2001, when this collection of 12 interviews with US writer and broadcaster David Barsamian begins, Arundhati Roy was already under fire. Leftwing critics, among them Aijaz Ahmad, had attacked her Booker prize-winning The God of Small Things (1997) for its anti-communism. In Kerala, where it was set, she was charged with "corrupting public morality".
Sukhdev Sandhu
Burning bright Arundhati Roy talks forcefully about India's 'mad pathology', the self-absorbed west and globalisation

The End of Imagination (1998), an essay collection in which she railed against India's turn to nuclear nationalism and the growing number of mega-dam projects harming the country's environment and rural population, led to charges that she was antiprogress, anti-patriotic, unladylike.

This story is from the June 21, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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This story is from the June 21, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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