Culture & Society

Words Exist Beyond The Perishable Matrix of Ink And Paper

Bulgakov라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita바카라 웹사이트inspired 바카라라이브 바카라 recent issue on the politics of identity: “No ID, No Person.” Another popular line from the novel, ‘Manuscripts don’t burn’ resonates with two recent events

Words
info_icon

When Satan asks the Master, a persecuted novelist in Stalin라이브 바카라 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.”
바카라 웹사이트
“Manuscripts don’t burn” — this sentence from Russian novelist Mikhail Bulgakov라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita바카라 웹사이트has 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.바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita, in which Satan and his entourage arrive in a fanatically atheist Bolshevik-ruled Moscow, was never published in Bulgakov라이브 바카라 lifetime.
바카라 웹사이트
Two recent events reminded me of this line and prompted me to find my dog-eared copy of바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita.
바카라 웹사이트
The first was the recent decision of global retail giant Amazon to바카라 웹사이트shut down바카라 웹사이트Indian publishing company Westland, which has sent shockwaves through India라이브 바카라 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.
바카라 웹사이트
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 Westland라이브 바카라 imprints, Context. “Westland has also published, in the last five years, a series of acclaimed, carefully-researched, and hard-hitting books critiquing India라이브 바카라 current regime. No unsupported hatchet jobs these,” Chattaraj바카라 웹사이트writes바카라 웹사이트in her piece, “Author라이브 바카라 lament: Why Amazon closing down Westland feels like we’re living in a Mohsin Hamid novel” for바카라 웹사이트Scroll.in. These include Christophe Jaffrelot라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트Modi라이브 바카라 India, Revati Laul라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트The Anatomy of Hate, KS Komireddi라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트Malevolent Republic, Nalin Mehta라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트The New BJP, and Josy Joseph라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트The Silent Coup, among others.
바카라 웹사이트
Not everyone, however, agrees with this. Novelist and biographer Deepanjana Pal, in a바카라 웹사이트piece바카라 웹사이트on her website titled “Westland/Wasteland” argues: “If the shutdown was on ideological grounds, just getting rid of Context — one of Westland라이브 바카라 imprints — would have done the job. Lose Context라이브 바카라 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 Modi라이브 바카라 government.

info_icon
Writing and censorship | Image credit: Shutterstock

The second event that reminded me of Bulgakov라이브 바카라 novel was news from the US, where a school board in Tennessee had banned Art Spiegelman라이브 바카라 graphic novel바카라 웹사이트Maus, about the Holocaust, from its eighth-grade curriculum. Spiegelman depicts the real experience of his Polish Jew grandparents, who survived imprisonment in the notorious concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, through anthropomorphized animals — Jews as mice and cats as Nazis. (In Nazi propaganda, Jews were often depicted as rats — something Colonel Hans Landa, the “Jew Hunter” in바카라 웹사이트The Inglorious Basterds, also refers to.)
바카라 웹사이트
Viola Burlew, a graduate student of history at the University of Colorado, who is studying 20th-century comics in relation to gender and censorship, tried to explain why censors love targeting comic books in an바카라 웹사이트article바카라 웹사이트for바카라 웹사이트The Washington Post: “Censorship has a long history when it comes to the comics industry, with 20th-century critics of comics claiming to protect young readers by censoring comics on the basis of language and imagery. Yet, buzzwords like ‘obscenity,’ ‘nudity’ and ‘decency’ distract from a more sinister argument driving the censorship of comics: that progressive, accessible storytelling is somehow dangerous in the hands of young readers.”
바카라 웹사이트
The ban has prompted a renewed interest in바카라 웹사이트Maus, with the comic climbing to the top of — ironically for me — Amazon라이브 바카라 bestseller lists, as바카라 웹사이트The Guardian바카라 웹사이트reported.
바카라 웹사이트
What connects the two books in my mind? Surely not Amazon? Or is it the unmistakable stench of censorship?
바카라 웹사이트
Perhaps nothing more than the cats on their covers. The cover of my edition of바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita바카라 웹사이트has a large and sinister black cat —Behemoth, the anthropomorphized feline in Bulgakov라이브 바카라 novel who is part of Satan라이브 바카라 entourage. On the cover of바카라 웹사이트Maus, the cat is unmistakably Hitler, superimposed on a swastika, looking down menacingly upon a couple of terrified mice.
바카라 웹사이트
As I placed the two books beside each other on my table, I was reminded immediately of the first time I read them. It was possibly 2006-07, and the Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led Left Front had won the seventh consecutive election to the West Bengal Assembly. Soon after returning to power, the government initiated land acquisition in Nandigram and Singur, villages not too far from Kolkata. The farmers whose land was being acquired opposed the plan, leading to violence. On March 14, 2007, the police opened fire on protesting farmers, killing 14. Waves of violence would follow.
바카라 웹사이트
I was a second-year student at Jadavpur University라이브 바카라 (JU라이브 바카라) English department. My feelings towards CPM were ambiguous. I had refused an offer to join the Students’ Federation of India, the CPM라이브 바카라 youth wing, and deplored the violence carried out by the party라이브 바카라 feared cadres in the villages. At the same time, I could barely deny the nostalgic appeal of Matryoshka dolls, Progress Publishers books, the hammer-sickle-star graffiti on walls in Kolkata. The Singur-Nandigram incidents — oh, how far away and forgotten they now seem — would frame my political consciousness, and change the political landscape of my home state West Bengal, inalterably.
바카라 웹사이트
But I arrived at Bulgakov through a Bengali writer — Nabarun Bhattacharya. I had read his novels,바카라 웹사이트Herbert바카라 웹사이트(1994) and바카라 웹사이트Kangal Malshat바카라 웹사이트(2003), while I was still in school. In 2005, just after I had been admitted to JU, the former was adapted into a Bengali film by Suman Mukhopadhyay. Depicting the violent Maoist Naxalbari movement of the Sixties and Seventies, the film was바카라 웹사이트described바카라 웹사이트by the바카라 웹사이트New York Times바카라 웹사이트as “a mad, messy and frequently amazing epic from India.” The film also starred theatre actor Joyraj Bhattacharjee in the role of Young Herbert. Joyraj — whom I called Joy-da — was the director of the first amateur play in which I acted.
바카라 웹사이트
Nabarun, as is well known, was deeply inspired by Bulgakov. His novels became immensely popular in the post-Singur-Nandigram era because of critique of the Left Front government라이브 바카라 policies. In바카라 웹사이트Kangal Malshat, a gang of underclass, magical creatures called Fyataru, who can take flight by singing the mantra “fyat fyat shnaai shnaai”, declare war on the West Bengal government. To its credit, the Left Front government had not banned it — though it was not averse to banning books. It had바카라 웹사이트banned바카라 웹사이트Taslima Nasreen라이브 바카라바카라 웹사이트Dwikhandito바카라 웹사이트in 2003 — the same year바카라 웹사이트Kangal Malsat바카라 웹사이트was published.
바카라 웹사이트
My copy of바카라 웹사이트The Master & Margarita바카라 웹사이트was acquired second-hand, from College Street, the famous bookseller라이브 바카라 district in central Kolkata. Over the years, it has travelled with me from Kolkata to Delhi, and now to Sonipat, where I live. It has become dog-eared, its spine bears the marks of a careless reader, and its pages are deeply annotated. I have returned to it over and over again over the past few years, as clouds of censorship and suppression have gathered over us.

info_icon
Books burn | Image credit: Shutterstock


바카라 웹사이트
On the contrary, my copy of바카라 웹사이트Maus바카라 웹사이트remains in mint condition. Not because I haven’t read, but because I have fetishized it a little. I could not buy it for many years because the two-volume edition bears a cover price of바카라 웹사이트£16.99 (about Rs. 1,700 at current exchange rates) — too much for a poor journalist라이브 바카라 salary. I finally acquired a copy from the Daryaganj book market. It was not a second-hand copy, the name of the previous owner was not scribbled on the front pages. Perhaps some bookseller, going out of business, had disposed of it. Perhaps the publisher had consigned this older edition to be pulped.
바카라 웹사이트
After Amazon announced that it was shutting down Westland, there was some speculation that its existing titles would be pulped. There is no confirmation of this yet. I reached out to several friends who have books with various imprints of Westland. Most of them were in a state of shock and sorrow and did not want to be quoted for this article. But, they confirmed that they had been told by their editors that the copyright of their books would revert to them in a few months.
바카라 웹사이트
What will happen to the books themselves? They are likely to go out of circulation, but there are already some efforts to save as many as possible. Novelist Saikat Majumdar, who is also a professor of English and Creative Writing at Ashoka University,바카라 웹사이트announced바카라 웹사이트on social media, that his university라이브 바카라 library will acquire 119 of Westland라이브 바카라 titles.
바카라 웹사이트
Books burn. Of course, they do. Nazis made bonfires out of them. Manuscripts burn as well. But words are a different matter. They exist beyond the perishable matrix of ink and paper. And, though it is impossible to remain hopeful in our undeniably oppressive times, I can end this rambling piece on a hopeful note. Poet Arjun Rajendran, whose book of poems바카라 웹사이트One Man, Two Executions바카라 웹사이트was published by Context in 2020, tells me that The Quarantine Train, an online collective of poets, is soon hosting a reading by writers published by Westland, on Feb. 12.
바카라 웹사이트
Perhaps a supportive community of friends and writers is the only antidote to the vagaries of corporate publishing and defence against the boot of censorship blocking out the sun. 바카라 웹사이트바카라 웹사이트바카라 웹사이트

(Uttaran바카라 웹사이트Das Gupta is a New Delhi-based writer and journalist. He has published a novel (Ritual, 2020) and a book of poems (Visceral Metropolis, 2017), and teaches at O P Jindal Global University, Sonipat. Views expressed in this article are personal and may not necessarily reflect the views of 바카라 Magazine)
바카라 웹사이트

CLOSE