Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / GBA focus

Time to write a new chapter

By Elizabeth Kerr | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2020-11-06 18:20
Share
Share - WeChat

In keeping with the demands of the new normal, the 20th Hong Kong International Literary Festival, which kicked off yesterday, is now a hybrid of live and online events. Elizabeth Kerr reports.

As COVID-19 became a global phenomenon in March, the BBC stated book sales were surging (children's books in particular spiked 234 percent). A month later tech magazine Wired noted online book sales rose across the board. In October international trade journal Publishers Weekly reported we were reading while in lockdown: Book sales are up 6.4 per cent this year.

That's good news for the Hong Kong International Literary Festival, which kicked off yesterday and features over 120 writers from around the world, including Kevin Kwan (Crazy Rich Asians), Jhumpa Lahiri (The Lowland), and local authors Dorothy Tse (Snow and Shadow), and Chan Koonchung (The Fat Years). Fittingly the festival's theme is "Present Tense, Future Perfect" — interrogating how the world is responding to political, health, environmental and social upheaval triggered by the pandemic and making projections as to what lies ahead.

Travel writer Cameron Dueck welcomes e-books, audio books and 30-second videos and indeed any other form of competition to the physical book. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]

For some years the publishing industry has been wrestling with disruptive technologies and rising demands for better representation. With an eye to responding to such concerns, HKILF handed the reins to new Executive Director Catherine Platt in 2020. Originally from the United Kingdom, Platt co-founded New Jersey's Montclair Literary Festival after four years running the Chengdu chapter of China's Bookworm Literary Festival, where she was tasked with widening the audience base. She is trying to pull off a similar feat at HKILF.

"One of my goals is to make HKILF more accessible, more representative, more inclusive and more flexible. In some ways the situation this year has helped with that."

The situation, of course, is COVID-19, which has compelled the switch from live to digital in many performance-based cultural programs. This year the 75-event festival is a hybrid of live and online shows, part of an effort to increase its digital footprint and boost engagement. Nominal ticket prices, free events, events in multiple languages with simultaneous interpretation at some and subtitled versions of online events made available 24 hours after livestreaming are initiatives designed to "enable more people to hear authors they love and engage with new books, ideas and conversations," says Platt.

Hong Kong International Literary Festival director Catherine Platt says she is trying to include more local authors and widen the audience base. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]

Digital reads

The highly mixed nature of this year's HKILF — including the multiplicity of platforms on which it could be accessed — reflects the changing face of publishing. Today e-books, audio books and Instagram-style short form storytelling are accepted, often preferred, ways of consuming literature.

"The more the merrier," says Hong Kong-based writer Cameron Dueck, whose travel books (Menno Moto) are as much anthropological tomes as travelogues. "I think new formats bring in more new readers rather than dilute the existing market. Certainly that's the case for audio books."

Platt agrees, seeing new formats and outlets as not only democratizing, but as a big part of the future of publishing. "There are so many alternatives to the book these days. There are multiple formats and ways to share content, so people are reading more, even if it isn't literature in the traditional sense," she says. Taiwanese-American author Tiffany Huang's Spill Stories — a digital repository of personal accounts contributed by more than 100 women of color — is a good example. It will be in the spotlight at a session titled "Zines, Memes and Books in the Digital Age" in HKILF.

The threat to books is even more marginal in Asia, which is ahead of the digitalization and tech adoption curve, according to Sri Lankan-born, Hong Kong-bred journalist, author and HKILF co-founder Nury Vittachi (The Witchunters). "By 2006, the most popular stories in China and Japan were digital tales — and this was before the iPhone or Kindle were released."

Dueck, who is part of an HKILF panel called "The Future of Travel Writing", is not too worried about competition from the 30-second TikTok story either.

"They're different things. The Instagram or TikTok imagery may have a sexy appeal that is harder to showcase in a long article or book, but it can't capture the nuances, stories, emotions and history of a place in the same way as long-form writing," he argues. Since people are likely to travel less frequently post-COVID-19, it "might make the instant imagery of social media less relevant, as more people pick up a good book that describes the culture of the place they're heading to."

Scene from a previous edition of Hong Kong International Literary Festival, featuring the Australian-German writer Markus Zusak. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]

Diversity matters

Representation is the watchword these days, be it in the film industry or publishing. For example, young adult fiction has been slammed for its dearth of characters and writers of color. As recently as 2015, 85 percent of American YA and kid lit featured white protagonists according to research in The Journal of Language Arts. It's 90 percent in the UK.

"I don't think you have to look that hard for other voices. So many people are writing in English now so there's plenty to choose from. But you have to be conscious in your programing," says Platt. "One of the things I am trying to do … is to gradually bring more local authors into the festival. It has always been a predominantly English-language festival, but we would like to expand our audience locally and regionally to reach more Chinese speakers."

Of HKILF's 120-plus speakers this year, over 50 are Hong Kong natives or residents — from Southeast Asia, India, Democratic Republic of Congo, the Chinese Mainland, Taiwan and Nigeria. They come from across the sexuality spectrum.

Spill Stories contributor and DRC-born Harmony Ilunga, who sits on the "How to Talk about Race" panel, sees representation as important to empathy, something she was hard-pressed to find as a refugee in Hong Kong.

"Even local people have an issue with diversity," she says, citing the lack of understanding she had faced upon arrival to Hong Kong as a 10-year-old. Better representation can take the edge off adherance to rigid beauty standards and fetishization of blackness, she feels. "I'm glad people are willing to have a conversation about diversity now, instead of rejecting it outright."

Sri Lankan-born Hong Kong writer Nury Vittachi says the onus is on writers from Asia to produce work worthy of the world's attention. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]

Vittachi says Asian writers themselves should take part of the blame for their low visibility on the world stage. "It's our job to write stuff that people will read around the world. But there are many reasons why we find it difficult, from our education systems, to our lack of editors and literary agents." Editors and agents are considered the gatekeepers to getting published, and the majority is white (admittedly, no one keeps official statistics). Vittachi, who will run a workshop entitled "How to Get Published", singles out sci-fi and the genre's overwhelmingly white male future as particularly grating.

Dueck, however, feels better representation has become smart business. "It seems to me that stories written by people of color, minorities and indigenous peoples are in high demand now."

It's a welcome trend, for ultimately representation underscores the fundamental reason we still read.

If you go

Hong Kong International Literary Festival

Dates: Until Nov 15

Various venues in Hong Kong and online events

Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
 
主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美怡红院免费全部视频| 色妞妞www精品视频| 女人被男人躁的女爽免费视频| 久草免费福利资源站| 波多野结衣在线看片| 和阿同居的日子hd中字| 国产三级毛片视频| 国内精品伊人久久久久影院对白| 又色又爽又黄的视频女女高清| 福利网址在线观看| 天天看天天射天天碰| 久久久婷婷五月亚洲97号色 | 美国十次狠狠色综合av| 国产欧美日韩中文字幕| 99久久精品费精品国产| 欧美va亚洲va在线观看| 伊人青青草视频| 老熟女高潮一区二区三区| 国产猛男猛女超爽免费视频| 99精品一区二区三区无码吞精| 成全高清视频免费观看| 久久精品国产亚洲AV无码麻豆| 欧美日韩视频免费播放| 凹凸在线无码免费视频| 蜜柚在线观看免费高清| 国产欧美精品午夜在线播放| 97视频免费在线| 孪生兄弟3ph尴尬| 中日韩欧美经典电影大全免费看| 明星女友开挂吧电视剧在线观看| 亚洲欧美日韩天堂一区二区| 白嫩光屁股bbbbbbbbb| 四虎永久成人免费影院域名| 鬼作动漫1~6集在线观看| 国产精品一区二区av| 91视频啊啊啊| 天天射天天干天天舔| 一级做a爰全过程免费视频| 日日操夜夜操狠狠操| 亚洲第一黄色网址| 韩国免费一级成人毛片|