Priya Basil

Priya Basil

Basil at a reading in Berlin, August 2012
Born (1977-03-27) 27 March 1977
London, United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist
Nationality British
Period 2007–present
Literary movement Realism

Priya Basil (born 1977 in London, England) is a British author.

Her first novel, Ishq and Mushq, was published in 2007.[1] Ishq and Mushq is a family saga which illuminates the problem of cultural identity for immigrants over several generations, and raises questions of memory, exile and self-rediscovery. Ishq and Mushq came second in the World Book Day "Book to Talk About 2008"[2] competition. The novel was also short-listed for a Commonwealth Writers' Prize,[3] and long-listed for the Dylan Thomas Prize[4] and the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.[5]

Her second novel, The Obscure Logic of the Heart,[6] was published in June 2010. It tells the love story between the Muslim Lina and the secular Kenyan architecture student, Anil. The characters are caught in the maelstrom of socio-political problems as they try to negotiate between different loyalties – to family, faith, society and themselves.

Priya's novella Strangers on the 16:02 is published on 17 February 2011.

Basil’s work has been translated into Italian,[7] German,[8] Russian,[9] Bulgarian,[10] Brazilian Portuguese,[11] Dutch,[12] Croatian,[13] and Serbian.[14]

In autumn 2014, Priya Basil took up the prestigious Writers' Lectureship at the University of Tübingen. She shared the honour with Chika Unigwe. Taiye Selasi, and Nii Ayikwei Parkes also gave supporting lectures.

Basil's other writings have been published in The Guardian, the Asia Literary Review and Lettre International.

Political work

In 2010, Priya co-founded Authors for Peace.[15] with the journalist Matthias Fredrich-Auf der Horst. It is intended to be a platform from which writers can actively use literature in different ways to promote peace. The first event by Authors for Peace took place on 21 September 2010, the UN's International Day of Peace. With the support of the International Literature Festival Berlin,[16] Priya hosted a 24hour-live-online-reading by 80 authors[17] from all over the world. The authors read from their work in a gesture of solidarity with those who are oppressed or caught in conflict.

In September 2013, Basil signed the German novelist Juli Zeh's Open Letter to Angela Merkel.[18] The letter criticizes Merkel's poor reaction to the Snowden revelations and demands a more robust response. Priya Basil read this letter aloud in public on the opening day of the International Literature Festival Berlin, as part of the festival's 'Berlin Liest' (Berlin Reads) initiative. Later, she helped organize, and took part in the anti-surveillance protest action 'March on the Chancellory', led by Zeh on 18 September 2013.[19]

Basil is also one of the initiators of 'Writers Against Mass Surveillance',[20] a worldwide movement against mass surveillance that was launched on 10 December 2013. Basil is one of the group of seven international writers who wrote the appeal, gathered the first 560 signatures from world-famous writers, and organized the global launch of the appeal.[21] The other initiators are Juli Zeh, Ilija Trojanow, Eva Menasse, Janne Teller, Isabel Cole and Josef Haslinger. The appeal was published through exclusive deals with leading newspapers in more than thirty countries worldwide, for example in Germany the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,[22] and is also an online pledge at Change.org which the general public can sign.

Basil continues to be active against mass surveillance. She spoke at Re:publica Berlin 2014, and has published essays and articles about the threat mass surveillance poses to democracy and individual freedom, including in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Der Tagesspiegel and the Danish newspaper Politiken.

BücherFrauen,[23] a co-operation of 800 Women from the German Publishing Industry, puts forward an annual list of female candidates for the prestigious Peace Prize of the German Book Trade. In 2013, 2014 and 2015 Priya Basil was one of the 20-odd recommended writers on a list which included Hannah Arendt, Arundhati Roy, Nawal El Saadawi, Herta Müller and Juli Zeh.

Personal life

Priya grew up in Kenya, returning to the UK to study English Literature at the University of Bristol. She had a brief career in advertising before becoming a full-time writer.[24]

Basil now lives in Berlin. Wired called her "a British, Kenyan, Indian, German-resident fiction-writer. Priya is another of those contemporary novelists whose life wouldn't do within a novel, because it's simply too implausible".[25]

Bibliography

External links

Videos

Reviews

Articles

[47]

Notes

  1. Transworld (Publisher)
  2. Book to Talk About 2008
  3. Commonwealth Writers' Prize 2008
  4. Dylan Thomas Award 2008
  5. IMPAC Award 2009
  6. Transworld (Publisher)
  7. Edizioni Piemme (Publisher)
  8. Schöffling & Co. (Publisher)
  9. ACT (Publisher)
  10. ICU (Publisher)
  11. Nova Fronteira (Publisher)
  12. Arena (Publisher)
  13. Mozaik / Svijet Knjige (Publisher)
  14. Books & Marso (Publisher)
  15. Authors for Peace
  16. International Literature Festival Berlin
  17. List of Peace Day authors
  18. The Guardian, 20 September 2013
  19. "Aufmarsch der Autoren", Die Zeit online, 18 September 2013
  20. 10 December 2013
  21. The Guardian, 11 December 2013
  22. F.A.Z., Demokratie im digitalen Zeitalter, 10 December 2013
  23. BücherFrauen
  24. Short Biography (International Literature Festival Berlin)
  25. Wired.com: Organizers of the Petition Against Mass Surveillance: Priya Basil, 14 January 2014
  26. PriyaBasilChannel, YouTube, 21 February 2010
  27. PriyaBasilChannel, YouTube, 10 May 2010 etc.
  28. PriyaBasilChannel, YouTube, January 2011
  29. Women for Women International, March 2011
  30. womenforwomenuk, YouTube, March 2011
  31. India Today, 26 March 2007
  32. Financial Times, 8 July 2011
  33. ExBerliner, June 2010
  34. The Asian Writer, July 2010
  35. Tales From The Reading Room, 10 August 2010
  36. India Today, 7 August 2010
  37. Shanghai City Magazine, 8 March 2008
  38. Crossing Border Festival, November 2007
  39. Spotlight Magazine, June 2008
  40. ALR, Spring 2008, No. 7, Page 171-178, Hong Kong
  41. Heat 22, Spring 2010, Sydney
  42. The Asian Writer, July 2010
  43. ALR, Autumn 2010, Vol. 17, Page 131-142, Hong Kong
  44. The Guardian, 11 September 2010
  45. View From Here Magazine, 16 September 2010
  46. The Guardian, 2 July 2011
  47. The Guardian, 16 September 2013
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