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Writers Under Siege: Voices of Freedom from Around the World (Pen Anthology)
 
 
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Writers Under Siege: Voices of Freedom from Around the World (Pen Anthology) [Paperback]

Lucy Popescu (Editor), Carole Seymour-Jones (Editor), Tom Stoppard (Foreword)

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Book Description

0814767435 978-0814767436 September 1, 2007

The freedom to write is under threat today throughout the world, with more than 1,000 writers, journalists, and publishers known to be imprisoned or persecuted in more than 100 countries. Writers Under Siege bears witness to the power and danger of the pen, and to the powerful longing for the right to use it without fear. Collected here are fifty contributions by writers who have paid dearly for the privilege of writing. Some have been tortured; some have been killed. All understand the cost of speaking up and speaking out.

This book was prepared by PEN, which is both the world's oldest human rights organization and the oldest international literary organization. It commemorates PEN’s eighty-fifth anniversary and celebrates PEN’s work by giving voice to persecuted writers from around the globe. The contributors come from more than twenty countries, from Belarus to Zimbabwe. Many are well-known in the English-speaking world, including Orhan Pamuk, from Turkey, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature; Harold Pinter, from England, winner of the 2005 Nobel Prize for Literature; Aung San Suu Kyi, from Burma, winner of the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize; and Anna Politkovskaya, from Russia, the noted journalist and author who was murdered in 2006, shortly after writing the piece that appears in this collection. Other contributors are less famous, perhaps, but their contributions are no less compelling. In prose and poetry, in fiction and non-fiction, they reveal the personal consequences of war, conflict, terrorism, and authoritarianism.

While the pieces collected here differ in their settings and their subjects, all are riveting. Grouped into four sections — Prison, Death, Asylum, and The Freedom to Write — they call our attention to the fundamental humanity we share and highlight the inhumanity we can so easily condone.

Contributors include: Chris Abani, Angel Cuadra Landrove, Asiye Guzel, Augusto Ernesto Llosa Giraldo, Mamadali Makhmudov, Orhan Pamuk, Harold Pinter, Anna Politkovskaya, Aung San Suu Kyi, Thich Tue Sy, Gai Tho, and Ken Saro-Wiwa.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

To mark 85 years of work assuring that oppressed writers are heard in their home countries and around the world, the literary and human rights organization PEN presents a collection of essays from some 50 writers; their one common trait, as noted by Michael Palin in a blurb, is that "they have all been coerced into not writing." Designed to demonstrate the major ways in which writers are silenced, shocking and sobering lessons in author suppression are broken up into sections on prison, death and exile, though the distinction seems arbitrary; the central theme of oppression weighs much more heavily on writers' stories than the specific methods employed. It's important, both thematically and practically, to note that PEN does not differentiate between the talents and skills of persecuted writers; as such, not every piece succeeds, and the similarity of the subject matter can make them difficult to distinguish. But grace notes abound, such as Zimbabwean poet, novelist and columnist Chenjerai Hove explaining, "every new word and metaphor I create is a little muscle in the act of pushing the dictatorship away." As an act of commemoration, as well as a sobering reminder of a world in which writers are frequently-and all too easily-silenced, this is an exceptional anthology.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

“A sobering look at what happens when freedom of speech completely disintegrates.”
-Feminist Review

,

“Some of the prose is sparse, testifying to the economy of writers hurried by the threat of discovery; other pieces are rich with the care of dazzling minds left with no company but words.”
-Utne Reader

,

“The selections make clear that many countries not ordinarily thought of as authoritarian are nevertheless not really safe for free expression. A compelling and worthwhile purchase; recommended for all libraries.”
-Library Journal

,

“PEN acts as the voice and conscience of everyone who cares about literature. In telling their stories, the incredible writers in this collection uncover some of the world's darker corners. This extraordinary book shows us once again why literature matters.”
-Antonia Fraser,author of Marie Antoinette: The Journey



“A compendium of documents attesting to the brutal reality of state censorship around hte world and hte valiant efforts of many journalists, novelists, poets and playwrights to combat it.”
-Jonathan Brent,Springer Science and Business Media


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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Writers Under Siege, Chen Ming, Bayram Khan, Scar Wang, June Massacre, Sa'id Emami, Ken Saro-Wiwa, Faraj Ahmad Bayrakdar, Intelligence Ministry, Abu Mansur, Red Cross, Jiang Qisheng, Hari Kunzru, Hwang Dae-Kwon, Suu Kyi, Shi Tao, Yury Bandazhevsky, Port Harcourt, Orhan Pamuk, Cheikh Kone, Reza Baraheni, Tiananmen Square, United States, Ivory Coast, Communist Party
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