Join Anar, Hari Rajaledchumy and Fran Lock for readings from Anar’s new collection ‘Leaving’ in the Tamil and English translation, followed by a discussion with Minoli Salgado,

Monday 25 October 2021

1:00 – 2:00 pm

Online

*Past Event*

Free

Join Anar (Issath Rehana Mohammed Azeem), Hari Rajaledchumy and Fran Lock for readings from Anar’s new collection ‘Leaving’ in the original Tamil and English translation. This will be followed by a discussion with Minoli Salgado, Professor of International Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University.

Anar is one of Sri Lanka’s most celebrated poets. Urgent, embodied and shockingly direct, her work presses into service classical Tamil landscapes, contemporary feminist thought and Koranic imagery to explore the aftermath of the civil war and the subtle terrors of living as a woman in Sri Lanka today. Leaving draws from Anar’s five award-winning collections to present a devastating poetic voice for our times. The collection is translated by Hari Rajaledchumy with Fran Lock.

From the harrowing aftermath of the civil war to the subtle terrors of societal expectation, the Anar chronicles female experiences in Sri Lanka today. Her poems avoid neat classifications such as narrative, allegory or lyric, instead, she combines genre and traditions as she sees fit to say whatever needs saying. Her poems draw on a diverse field of reference from classical Tamil mythic landscapes to contemporary feminist thought, from Koranic imagery to personal history.

This event is being held in partnership with the Poetry Translation Centre, the Centre of Migration and Postcolonial Studies (MAPS) and Manchester Poetry Library at Manchester Metropolitan.

Anar (Issath Rehana Mohammed Azeem) is a distinguished voice in the Sri Lankan Tamil poetry scene with five critically acclaimed collections to her name. She has been contributing her poems and articles to literary magazines and national media since the early 90s. Several of her poems have been translated into English and have appeared in anthologies and journals. Her books have won several awards, most notably the Government of Sri Lanka’s National Literature Award, the Tamil Literary Garden’s Poetry Award (Canada), the Aaathmanam Award (India), the SPARROW Award (India), and the Vijay Award for Excellence in the Field of Literature (India).

Hari Rajaledchumy is an artist/writer currently based in London. Her recent writings have appeared in Manalveedu (India) and Aaakkaddi (France). She worked as a translator on Kim Longinotto’s 2013 documentary film Salma, based on the life and works of the Indian Tamil poet. In 2021, she co-curated the inaugural edition of the QCSL study programme that strengthens queer cultural production within Sri Lanka.

Fran Lock is the author of numerous poetry collections, most recently Hyena! Jackal! Dog! (Pamenar Press, 2021) and Contains Mild Peril (Out-Spoken, 2019). She earned her Ph.D. from Birkbeck College, University of London, focusing on ‘Impossible Telling and the Epistolary Form: Contemporary Poetry, Mourning and Trauma’.

Minoli Salgado is a writer and Professor of International Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University. She has written four books on Sri Lanka: the critically acclaimed study, Writing Sri Lanka; a novel, A Little Dust on the Eyes (winner of the first SI Leeds Literary Prize); a short story collection, Broken Jaw (short-listed for the Republic of Consciousness Prize); and a forthcoming book of witness literature, Twelve Cries from Home: In Search of Sri Lanka’s Disappeared (Repeater, 2022).

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