SOURCE- NYTIMES
The PEN World Voices Festival will bring together hundreds of writers, among them Abdulrazak Gurnah, Alejandro Zambra and Gary Shteyngart, and will include an address by Andrey Kurkov, a Ukrainian novelist.
In 1939, the American journalist Dorothy Thompson, who was
expelled from Germany after reporting on the rise of the Nazi movement,
convened an emergency summit of writers in response to the violence unfolding
in Europe. As the leader of PEN America, a literary and free speech
organization, Thompson called on writers to unite against fascism and threats
to free expression. The
event drew 500 writers from 30 countries.
“In much of the world today the word itself has been made
captive,” Thompson told the assembled writers. “Those who would free it do so
at the risk of their lives.”
This spring, in response to the war in Ukraine, PEN America
is holding another “Emergency World Voices Congress of Writers” inspired by
that first gathering to explore how literature and literary figures can help
bridge geographic and cultural rifts, encourage dialogue and protect free
speech in times of turmoil and brutality.
The emergency summit — which is expected to include more
than 100 writers, among them Salman Rushdie, Gary Shteyngart, Ayad Akhtar and
Jennifer Egan — is part of PEN’s annual
World Voices Festival, a series of literary events scheduled to take place
from May 11 to May 14 in New York City and Los Angeles.
“In this moment of chaos and violence, we can address what
the role of the writer is, as we face down the rise of authoritarianism,
disinformation run amok, social fissures that are widening here in this
country, and a surge
in book banning and threats against free speech,” Suzanne Nossel,
chief executive of PEN America, said in an interview.
On the same day as the summit, the Ukrainian novelist Andrey Kurkov, who is the president of PEN Ukraine and has
been documenting the grim toll of Russia’s invasion, will deliver a speech that
will address threats to democracy and free expression.
The World Voices Festival was created in 2005 with the aim
of fostering dialogue between authors from around the world to counter
isolationism and xenophobia in the United States after the Sept. 11 attacks.
In the years since, the annual event has drawn hundreds of
international and American authors to discuss themes such as gender and power,
political unrest and resistance, and threats to privacy and free speech.
Panels at this year’s festival will address how literature
can confront issues like climate change, immigration, gender equality,
nationalism and the future of democracy. More than 80 writers are expected to
participate, including Sheila Heti, Leïla Slimani, Mieko Kawakami, Nadifa
Mohamed and Abdulrazak
Gurnah, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature last year.
The festival will conclude with an event highlighting the
dramatic rise in book bans in schools and libraries across the country,
featuring readings from banned and controversial books by literary icons like
Toni Morrison, Art Spiegelman, Kurt Vonnegut and others.
This year’s gathering marks the first time since the start
of the pandemic that the festival will take place in person, after PEN held it
online in the spring of 2020 and 2021.
“Isolationism took on a new meaning during Covid,” Nossel
said. “It’s extremely important to bring people together face to face and
consider, amid all the questions we’re grappling with now, how literature can
play its role as a bridge across geography, ideology and cultures.”