HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesJaipur Literature Festival 2022 | Correcting history and helping the world

Jaipur Literature Festival 2022 | Correcting history and helping the world

Women writers at the 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival make sense of the world by changing beliefs and a centuries-old male-centric written narrative of the society.

March 12, 2022 / 15:43 IST
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The 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival is being held from March 4-14, 2022; and (right) Oslo-born British bioarchaeologist Cat Jarman is the author of 'River Kings The Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Roads'.
The 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival is being held from March 4-14, 2022; and (right) Oslo-born British bioarchaeologist Cat Jarman is the author of 'River Kings The Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Roads'.

Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson's daily life is a mix of writing about nature and walking in a nearby forest. The Norwegian author's new book is a cry for help on behalf of the millions of species in the world nobody cares about. "The forest is one of my favourite places. There is so much secret life hidden there," says Sverdrup-Thygeson, whose Tapestries of Life: Uncovering the Lifesaving Secrets of the Natural World is a manifesto for saving the earth's rich biodiversity.

Cat Jarman spends the working days analyzing ancient skeletons in her university's laboratory to understand the history of humans that existed long before us. The bioarchaeologist stepped out of the lab three years ago to travel to Gujarat to investigate where the Vikings were buying their colourful carnelian beads from. Jarman's new book, River Kings: The Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Roads, explains that the Vikings were smart entrepreneurs with trade links with the East, not mere plunderers of wealth.

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Sverdrup-Thygeson and Jarman, both speakers at the 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival (JLF), represent a new generation of writers who are redefining the way words are written and read. Along with many other fellow women writers who are pushing the boundaries of books, research and academic work, they make it clear to the world that literature and literary festivals benefit when women tell the stories.

"I love insects," says Sverdrup-Thygeson, who talked about her book in an online session at the JLF, being held this year from March 4 to 14 in a hybrid format. Tapestries of Life, which contains chapters like 'drugs from bugs' and 'sea is the last healthy part of a sick world', explains why. For her, termites are not destroyers, but builders who hold up life in many parts of the world. "Things that are a nuisance in the house are vital in nature," she writes. "In the semi-desert and savannah environment, termites can be crucial organisms, contributing to both fertilisation and irrigation."