Canelo / Arts Council England |
35
Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction
Carty-Williams from 4th Estate said of the award: ‘It’s increasingly
important that we run initiatives like this, both for prospective authors,
and for the industry. We are constantly looking to broaden the scope
of voices that we publish.’ BAME writers have launched a new literary
prize, the Jhalak Prize for Book of the Year by a Writer of Colour, worth
£1,000. Started by Sunny Singh and Nikesh Shukla, it takes in a wide
variety of entrants from graphic novels to big non-fiction. Supported
by The Authors Club, the prize aims to promote diversity in publishing.
Meanwhile movements such as BAME in Publishing, founded in 2016,
raised the profile of the issue and campaigned for greater diversity
within publishing houses, and initiatives such as the bestselling The
Good Immigrant anthology emphatically make the case for the audience
for BAME writing.
And there are still of course plenty of prominent BAME writers – from
Hari Kunzru and Zadie Smith, to Salman Rushdie and Ben Okri, to more
commercial writers such as Dorothy Koomson or the crime writer A.A.
Dhand. Other recent examples of big auctions in the area include those
for Sunjeev Sahota, NoViolet Bulawayo and Taiye Selasi. Out of the
20 writers on the prestigious 2013 Granta Best Of Young British 20
under 40 list, 8 were from a BAME background and included writers of
Bangladeshi, Chinese, Somali, Ghanaian, Nigerian, Pakistani, Indian and
Jamaican heritages. Everyone we spoke to was acutely conscious of
the sector’s lack of diversity and was very keen to change it.
But beyond the question of race is the more general question of
marginalised writing. Not just race but class, gender and geography are
all factors. Stefan Tobler, Publisher and Founder of And Other Stories,
reminded us that there is ‘also an issue of the respect and importance
given to women writers’, which is why And Other Stories have joined
a Year of Publishing Women in 2018, though others have argued that
women are well represented in terms of literary books and publishing
staff; or that such an initiative is not the best way to gain equality
even if we accept women writers are disadvantaged with regards
to recognition. More significant and widespread was the awareness
that class and geography create serious obstacles for authors seeking
publication. Novelist Kit de Waal talked about this and is worth quoting
at length:
Class and race play into this – it’s never been more difficult to be
working class in writing. Both of my parents were immigrants and
came from a background in poverty. Certainly the subject matter of
what I write about is about sub class or working class people. There
is zero chance of taking two years out of life to concentrate on writing
for many people. All the big questions for writers from my background
are about writing in your spare time. If you have to take time to write,
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