Sunday 29 April 2012

Norwich Showcase, Reading/Discussion


On March 10th I attended an event for the Norwich Showcase, which is an international showcase of the best literature in the United Kingdom sponsored by the Writers Centre Norwich and the British Council. Todays event was held in the University of East Anglia Drama Studio and was a discussion and reading of the works of three female authors: Samantha Harvey, Anjali Joseph, and Evie Wyld. It was free for students. I believe outside parties had to pay a small fee if they wanted to attend.

When I first walked into the Drama Studio, I saw two large signs with the names of the Writers Centre Norwich and the British Council on them. Right nearby was a stand set up with pamphlets advertising upcoming events in the arts, such as a production of Spring Awakening and the University of East Anglia Literary Festival, with two Writers Centre workers standing just to the left. Also on the stand was a Writers Center bag filled with more materials supporting the arts. There was also a book inside all about the Showcase and its events as well as information about Norwich as a literary city and why the Writers Centre believes it is so. After skimming through the book, I noticed that it was written for a select audience. It kept saying the word you and had a list of a schedule of events, many of which were not listed online to the public. It also mentioned accommodation provided, so I believe this book was meant to be for the international people that were attending the events. At the end of the book it had a list of delegates with images, many of which whom I saw in the audience of the event. The room to my right was filled with people and, after listening in on a conversation, I found that the people in the room were visitors from abroad who came for all of the Showcase events. Based on skimming through the book in the Norwich bag, I assume these people were selected to attend the Showcase. They are from different countries, including Ireland, Palestine, and England. At exactly eleven, we were allowed to enter the room where the event was being held. The room set-up reminded me of a talk show: there was a panel of four women, one host and three authors, sitting behind a table with books on the table. The host was the oldest of the four, looking in her sixties, while the other three looked to be around middle age. Three women were white, and one author, Anjali Joseph, was Indian and studied at UEA. All three authors had won awards for their novels and two were flown in from Turkey and one was from Bath, though all were British. 

The audience was filled with a variety of people, unlike the event for International Womens Day. There was about an even split of men and women.  Everyone, aside from myself, looked to be middle aged and in the middle class, dressed in business casual attire.  I believe I was the only student, despite the fact this event was free for students. This audience was much more diverse than the other one, filled with Caucasians, African-Americans, and Indians, among others. The room was about four-fifths filled, and I believe the great majority of this audience were the visitors from abroad. Before the event began, the host addressed the audience as literary experts so I assume all of the people from abroad were asked to attend the Showcase based on their experience and skill with literature. Throughout most of the event, the audience seemed to be engaged and interested in the discussion of the novels. However, very little attention was given when the three authors read excerpts from their novels. I noticed people reading, using their laptops, or even sleeping during the readings, which greatly surprised me. Even the host looked like she was about to fall asleep at some points. The most attention was paid when the authors and host were discussing the more mechanical aspects of their work, like how they wrote their stories and why they wrote them as they did. This made it seem to me that the audience was mainly there to pick up tips on writing instead of to learn more about the actual work of the authors. Despite the fact the audience seemed to all be professionals and therefore may not necessarily need to pick up tips, there is always room for improvement and suggestion with writing. This notion was affirmed for me during the two periods in this event where the audience was permitted to ask questions. The only questions asked were about writing style and technique, aside from questions about how they take criticism asked by a critic and what they expect to get out of participating, which was asked by a woman who is running the Manchester Showcase. Again, this supported my observations that everyone there was attending for their own personal agenda as opposed to celebrating the work of the three authors.  The most attention was paid to the Indian author. I am not sure if this is because she is Indian, and therefore different from the other two authors, or if her novel was the most interesting. She was the least boring to listen to. She seemed down to Earth and had a sense of humor when she spoke, whereas the other two authors were very straightforward and bland.

This event was considerably more formal than the International Womens Day event. Before the event started, an introduction was given describing the event, the authors and their works. I am not sure why these authors were selection other than the fact that all of their work had received awards, therefore indicating they are clearly successful and good at what they do. The event was being filmed. It was very quiet in the room. The panel of women were equipped with small microphones, so it was easy to hear what they were saying. Some people did come late to the event, but because of its formal nature, these people were noticed by the entire audience and were disruptive and distracting to the event. At the end of the event, a man spoke and said that there would be lunch served and the audience would have a chance to speak with the three authors during that time. However, after leaving, I noticed there were two Writers Centre workers standing outside of the door where lunch was being served, guarding it almost. This made it seem to me that the comments made by the man were directed only towards the abroad literary specialists, not the audience as a whole. This, along with the reading of the book I picked up on the Norwich Showcase, makes it seem that the events in the Showcase are made more for these literature specialists and professionals instead of a general audience. Also, I believe the people running the Showcase assume that the attendees, specifically the visitors from abroad, will be attending every single event as a poetry reading from the night before was mentioned. Based on the fact that there was a schedule in the book I picked up, I believe this is true. Unlike the International Womens Day event, I felt as though this event for the Norwich Showcase was supposed to be more for the elite people in literature. 

Friday 27 April 2012

International Women's Day


On March 8th I attended my first literary event in Norwich. It consisted of five-to-ten minute readings of works by Norfolk women authors in honor of International Women’s Day, including Lynn Bryan, Hannah Walker, Kate Moorhead-Kuhn, Beth Settle, Laura Elliot, Clare Jarrett, Deborah Arnanda, Helen Ivory, Kate Foley. I am not sure why these women were chosen. I arrived a few minutes late and there were not pamphlets left with more information about the event.

This was a very informal affair. When I first walked into the Millennium Library, where the event was held, I was very surprised as there were no signs promoting the event or stating where the event was being held in the library. The only way I found the event was overhearing some women speaking into a microphone in a nearby room. The event was very informal: people kept coming in and out throughout the event and everyone was dressed in casual, everyday attire. Everyone seemed to be in the middle class, based on the type of clothes they were wearing --- nice, but not too nice, and definitely not raggedy or worn. Everyone in the audience was Caucasian. There were not enough seats for everyone, and it seemed that people had just grabbed random chairs and moved them over to the area where the readings were being held as they were not set up in any particular way. There were under 100 people in the audience, which it was made up of mainly middle age women, with some elderly and some teenage women as well.  A few middle age men were also there, most likely there with their wives. The lack of male attendance in the audience could be attributed to the fact that it was International Women’s Day. The only children that were there were brought by their mother and they actually were very quiet and attentive during the event. Everyone looked like they really wanted to be there, with exception of the man sitting next to me who, oddly enough, came alone and spent the whole time reading his book. Other than that one man, the audience was very attentive throughout the event and seemed very engaged with the works that were read. The event was not advertised very well, only being listed on a couple websites. In the advertisements there was very little information about the event, just stating the location, that it was free, and a few names of some of the authors that would be in attendance. The event was free, however, at the end, they asked people to give donations to a fund dedicated to helping women.

Except for one African woman from Zimbabwe, all of the authors reading excerpts of their work were white. They ranged in age from late 20s to early 60s. Except for the African woman, all of the readings were either poems or excerpts from a novel, and, weirdly enough, almost every piece read related to death, disease, rape or trauma, or losing something in their lives. For example, one author read an excerpt about when a girl witnessed her mother being raped by the “pea man.” This intrigued me. I am not sure if this theme of loss and suffering was planned, but I doubt it would be on a day that is supposed to celebrate women; I assumed most of the readings would be uplifting or about women empowerment. Most of the women spoke in monotone, only showing a trace of emotion when reading any dialogue their pieces had.  They either seemed like they did not really want to be there and were just going through the motions, or that they were very nervous. The African woman was definitely the outlier out of this group of women, not only in terms of race, but also in terms of her performance. Instead of reading her work, she sang music, most of which was in her native language instead of English. She played a musical instrument similar to a keyboard. Though I am not entirely sure what her songs were about because I could not understand the language, based on the upbeat, happy tune of the music, I could only assume the songs were uplifting and positive as opposed to the darker works the other women read.  I am not sure if the African-American was selected purely for her work or in order to have at least a bit of diversity in the women authors.

I was also intrigued at the way the event was run. There was little, if any, introduction to the women authors and to their work. Many authors did not state their name before they read their pieces. Except for one woman, there was no background given to what their works were about. It was also very hard for me to pay attention and hear the women speak. The event took place on the bottom library floor in the audio visual section near the entrance of the library, so all of the noise being made by people in the Forum outside of the library was carried inside, which was distracting. On top of that, either the microphone was not working or the women were speaking very quietly because it was extremely difficult to hear most of what they were saying. This poor sound system and set-up of the event makes it seem that the people running the event were inexperienced and had a lack of funds delegated to the event. I also noticed that most of the audience members that came in late knew the people that were in charge of the event, as they came over and hugged them as soon as they arrived. This makes me wonder if many of the audience members were there because they were truly interested in the work of these women or if they were there as a favor to their friend. 

A Brief Introduction

Hello all!

For those of you who do not know me, I am a Junior at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania studying American Studies. Currently I am studying abroad at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England for the year and it has been one of the best experiences of my life. Anyways, for the Spring 2012 semester, Dickinson required I take a class titled, "Humanities 311," which takes a closer look at British culture. Part of this class was composed of each student doing an independent project of their choice in order to allow them to explore a specific aspect of British culture more closely. This independent project was compiled of a minimum of twenty hours of fieldwork, journal entries, along with a final essay to tie everything together. In case you could not tell by the title of this blog, I chose to take a look at Norwich and its relationship to literature, as Norwich as known as a literary city and recently sent in a bid to be a UNESCO City of Literature. As part of my fieldwork I attended a series of literary events, which varied from poetry readings to literary competitions to writing workshops on how to improve one's writing skills. For the majority of the events I attended, I had to write a journal entry about the event: what I observed, any questions I had, and how it related to other events as I continued to attend more and more around the city. In this blog I will be posting the journal entries I have written about each event in chronological order. Each one gets more in depth, and I found through attending these events how fascinating the world of literature really is. I hope through my journal entries you become fascinated, too.

Enjoy!

Ashley Davis