Alison Flood
The Guardian - Monday 19 May 2014
Pulitzer-prize winning author's comments that 'the default position of reading and writing ... was white, straight and male' are backed by writers including Aminatta Forna and Daljit Nagra
Pulitzer prize winner Junot Díaz's blistering attack on the
"unbearable too-whiteness" of creative writing courses in the US has
been echoed by experts in the UK, with author and professor Aminatta
Forna pointing to a "backlash" as the "centre in literature begins to
shift away from the Anglo-American writer towards writers with different
backgrounds".
The award-winning poet Daljit Nagra,
meanwhile, has issued a similarly damning indictment of British poetry,
saying that "too often editors use a euphemism such as 'taste' as an
excuse for rejecting black authors because they actually mean 'I am not
interested in minority writing'", and that "when 'race' is written about
by black or Asian poets it is too often dismissed as something that has
been 'done before', a criticism which is not generally targeted at
those writing about 'love' or 'snow'".
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