In search of an Author

Jacob Nielsen
In search of an Author

A travelling, curious and irregular podcast, interviewing some of the bravest and most influential writers of our times. Supported by the #danishartsfoundation

Episodes

  1. 12/07/2023

    Shahrnūsh Pārsīʹpūr: On being distanced from the place and people of your books

    “It’s been four to five years that I cannot write. My mind is empty. All things about Iran I have written. But I didn’t touch the life of the Americans. But I am in the United States. It’s difficult to be in another world, and write about an another world… I also wrote a lot. But I think it’s enough. It’s enough. I wrote all the things I knew.” This is the Iranian writer, Shahrnush Parsipur, speaking of the potential end of her writing life. Born in 1946, she has been writing since the late 1960s. Although her early works enjoyed popularity during the time of the Shah, it became increasingly harder for her to write after The Iranian Revolution of 1979: Her books were banned, changed, and she herself spent almost five years in prison on four separate occasions, at least one of them because of the book “Women Without Men”, who was accused for being anti-islam. In 1994 she emigrated to California, where she has been living ever since. This distance from Iran and her readers had a very determining effect on her writing career. Interviewing her in the danish city of Aarhus, where she has been invited to talk about her works, I feel curious how it is to be a writer, whose books are mostly banned in the country that reads them; whose books are distributed in Iran mainly in the black marked; whose masterpieces are admired and read all over the world, but not recognized in the country they take place; how it is to be a writer exiled from the universe of her literature.

    39 min
  2. 31/05/2023

    Mohamed Mbougar Sarr: On the power dynamics surrounding literature

    Senegalese writer Mohamed Mbougar Sarr took the literary world by storm with the publication of his fourth novel, “The Most Secret Memory of Men” from 2021, which won the french Prix Concourt of that same year. It is the thrilling story of the young senegalese writer Diégane who gets his hand on an old book from the 1930s called “The Labyrint of the Inhuman”, written by the long forgotten senegalese writer T. C. Elimane. The book changes his view not only on himself and what literature can be, but makes him obsessed about learning more about the mysterious author. A search that transports him from Paris to Amsterdam, via stories to South America, before he ends up home in Senegal. Why the violent obsession? In many ways Elimanes story mirrors Diégane own life, being a writer from Senegal living in Paris, who is being read and judged by a french literary community. His search makes him reflect on what it means to be an african writer in Europe, on who has the right to write about what, and on the complicated history of colonialism whose power dynamics still influences literature today. “The whole literary history is one big playful plundering”, says Diégane in the book, anticipating this talk with Sarr, where we to him about plagiarism; about Léopold Sédar Senghor, the poet who became the first president of Senegal; about Bulgakov, Borges and Bolaño; Sarrs own sources of inspiration; and whether or not poems are still helpfull when trying to seduce a romantic partner.

    41 min

About

A travelling, curious and irregular podcast, interviewing some of the bravest and most influential writers of our times. Supported by the #danishartsfoundation

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