International Women’s Day Lecture 2023

0
155

International Women’s Day Lecture

MEENA KANDASAMY
(Activist, Poet, Novelist, and Translator)
speaks on

“Resistance, Writing and the Voice of Women”

Chair: SUNEETHA BALAKRISHNAN
(Writer, Translator, and Reviewer)

8 March 2023, 07:00 PM India

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81850251673?pwd=dFlTV2ZyY0ZJTFhuZ1o0UG5IL2pHUT09

Meeting ID: 818 5025 1673
Passcode: vmmrc1873

or Watch LIVE on YouTube
https://youtube.com/live/yHTL7VL8ocI?feature=share

MEENA KANDASAMY

MEENA KANDASAMY is an anti-caste activist, poet, novelist and translator. Her writing aims to deconstruct trauma and violence, while spotlighting the militant resistance against caste, gender, and ethnic oppressions. She explores this in her poetry and prose, most notably in her books of poems such as Touch (2006) and Ms. Militancy (2010), as well as her three novels, The Gypsy Goddess (2014), When I Hit You (2017), and Exquisite Cadavers (2019). Her latest work is a collection of essays, The Orders Were to Rape You: Tamil Tigresses in the Eelam Struggle (2021). Her novels have been shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the International Dylan Thomas Prize, the Jhalak Prize and the Hindu Lit Prize. She has been a fellow of the University of Iowa’s International Writing Program (2009), a Charles Wallace India Trust Fellow at the University of Kent (2011) and a fellow of the Berlin-based Junge Akademie (AdK). In 2022, she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL), United Kingdom. Activism is at the heart of her literary work; she has translated several political texts from Tamil to English, and previously held an editorial role at The Dalit, an alternative magazine. She holds a PhD in sociolinguistics. Her op-eds and essays have appeared in The White Review, Guernica, The Guardian and The New York Times, among other places.


SUNEETHA BALAKRISHNAN
SUNEETHA BALAKRISHNAN is an author writing in English and Malayalam languages. She is also an editor and translator of fiction and news features. She secured the Creative Writing Trainer given by British Council following her writings in The Guardian, The Hindu, The Caravan and Tehelka.