Rewriting the Female Narrative

 
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CHINA DAILY

2018-11-02 07:37

(HK Edition)

A strong contingent of women is leading the pack of writers featured in the newest edition of Hong Kong International Literary Festival which opens today. Melanie Ho reports.

When the Hong Kong International Literary Festival (HKILF) opens today at its new permanent home in Tai Kwun Centre for Heritage and Arts, feminism, LGBTQ+ and inclusivity in the arts will be among its major themes. Aiming to facilitate exchange of ideas on the big issues of the moment, festival organizers looked, in part, to the global #MeToo movement.

"We've seen the #MeToo movement continue to gain momentum over the last 12 months as women around the world are speaking out and sharing stories of their lived experiences," festival director Philippa Milne says. "I think it's vital that as a literary festival we provide a platform for these conversations. I am particularly interested in feminism and #MeToo in the context of literature and I look forward to discussing the predictions on the movement's future with some fantastic writers."

The 18th edition of the festival is headlined by female authors such as Cheryl Strayed, Meg Wolitzer (The Female Persuasion) and the psychotherapist Susie Orbach. Strayed will speak about female voices in literature at the festival's gala dinner. The 10-day-long festival will see a host of talks, workshops and panel discussions - including one entitled "#MeToo in the Literary World" with the journalist Leta Hong Fincher, whose new book looks at the feminist consciousness emerging in China, and writers Guadalupe Nettel and Laline Paull.

"There is so much to be said about this enormous topic, and I am very glad some of these important conversations will be taking place at the festival," Wolitzer says ahead of her first visit to Hong Kong.

Hong Kong-born writer Xu Xi is taking part in the festival as a moderator, panelist and workshop leader. Of the festival's feminist theme, she says: "About time! I am and long have been a diehard feminist, so to finally see attention to the issues that have mattered to me all my life at the literary festival of my birthplace is refreshing."

At an event entitled "The Second Shelf", she and Wolitzer will discuss the gender politics at play in putting titles authored by women under "women's fiction" - an example of what Xu Xi calls "the real and continued existence of patriarchal prejudice in the literary publishing world".

Says Wolitzer: "I've written about the ways that men and women literary fiction writers have been treated differently; the notion that a novel should be seen as so-called 'women's fiction' just because it was written by a woman or has a female protagonist can seem so reductive and limiting."

Indonesian writer Intan Paramaditha, whose collection of short stories Apple and Knife was translated and published in English this year, says that feminism was a theme at two literary festivals she attended this year in Sydney and New Zealand. "We need this heightened visibility, but it's also important to acknowledge that women in various parts of the world - not just in the West - have organized themselves for decades, and strong feminist writings have existed before #MeToo and the Women's March," she says. "We need this momentum to amplify our voice, but we also need to put new feminist articulations in a historical context. There are always traces of other women in our shoes."

One of Paramaditha's events is a talk with novelist Jenny Zhang on female bodies and sexuality. "This panel will also delve into the question of the gaze - the question of seeing, which has often been discussed in (the context of) cinema but not so much in literature. What does it mean to see things - bodies, sexuality, politics, nationhood - from the eyes of a woman?"