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In India, the ‘Lost Generation' was actually a generation that found its voice
In India, the ‘Lost Generation' was actually a generation that found its voice

Hindustan Times

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Hindustan Times

In India, the ‘Lost Generation' was actually a generation that found its voice

The defining event of the Lost Generation in Europe and the Americas was the Great War. It is harder to pinpoint a single event that served the same function for that cohort in India. Most of the giants who led the freedom movement — Mahatma Gandhi, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Lala Lajpat Rai, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Bipin Chandra Pal, Sarojini Naidu — belonged to previous generations. But their influence on those who followed saw the struggle for independence become truly national, with the Indian equivalent of the Lost Generation eventually becoming the architects of a new, independent nation. The battles of this younger cohort were different from those that shaped Ernest Hemingway, JRR Tolkien and Ezra Pound in the West. Was the new political awareness in India the result of George Curzon's Partition of Bengal and the Swadeshi movement that began in 1905, partly as a result of it? Was it furthered when India's dead soldiers and wounded veterans were met with the thanks of the Rowlatt Act of 1919, which gave the police the continued right to arrest without warrants, hold detainees indefinitely and imprison without trial or judicial review? Was it shaped by the massacre at Jallianwala Bagh (also 1919)? Or the rise of Gandhi as a national leader, after his return to India in 1915? As these events, one after another, reinforced the idea of a new 'India', a generation of young leaders emerged: BR Ambedkar, Rajendra Prasad, Mahadev Desai, Acharya Kripalani, Subhas Chandra Bose and, vitally, Jawaharlal Nehru. In India, this wasn't a Lost Generation at all. It was a generation finding its voice. In the words of the freedom fighter Rambriksh Benipuri, no stranger to the pen: 'When I recall Non-Cooperation era of 1921, the image of a storm confronts my eyes… no other movement upturned the foundations of Indian society to the extent… From the most humble huts to the high places, from villages to cities, everywhere there was a ferment, a loud echo.' When Independence was won, it was this storm of young people that began the business of building the nation. In the fields and hospitals, the offices and transport systems. In the courts beginning to uphold a new Constitution. It was at the hands of this generation that an India as old as the Indus Valley and the Vedas was reborn as a new country, and emerged blinking from the shadow of the Raj and the bloody birthing of Partition. Look at free India's first cabinet and you see them. With the exceptions of Patel and C Rajagopalachari, every minister, starting with Nehru, came from the generation born between 1883 and 1900. A generation, in India, of pathfinders. Dreamers. Doers of the impossible. Looking back, it can be hard to believe what they pulled off. In their gentle way, they shook the world. (K Narayanan writes on films, videogames, books and occasionally technology)

She was derided as a charlatan – but was Gertrude Stein a genius?
She was derided as a charlatan – but was Gertrude Stein a genius?

Telegraph

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

She was derided as a charlatan – but was Gertrude Stein a genius?

Gertrude Stein, as Francesca Wade puts it in this masterpiece of biography, was a character of 'bewildering contradictions'. Depending on who you spoke to, she was either a genius or a charlatan. A central figure of the Roaring '20s in Paris, she presided over the artistic salon of 27 rue de Fleurus, the flat she shared for over three decades with her partner Alice B Toklas, and from that room she supported many of the most significant artists and writers of the modern era. Without Gertrude and her brother Leo's patronage, for instance, it's unlikely we'd know the work of Matisse and Picasso: the Steins helped them both early in their careers. She was a mentor to the greatest young expatriate American writers of the 1920s, not least Fitzgerald and Hemingway, for whom she coined the phrase 'the Lost Generation'. Stein was at the cutting edge of the aesthetic revolution. Even the exaggerations around her are telling. When her close friend (and later publisher) Carl Van Vechten claimed he and she were present for the riotous 1913 premiere of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, it was a terrible lie – they only got there on night two. Even casual readers, however, will know the reception Stein's own writing received at the time, and still receives today: some excitement, but plenty of bafflement. The publisher Arthur C Fifield responded to one manuscript with a parody of her repetitive style: 'Only one look, only one look is enough. Hardly one copy would sell here. Hardly one. Hardly one.' When her writing did appear, it was often in fitful serialisation, or self-published, or published by houses beneath Stein's worth. Her great work Tender Buttons came out in 1914 with Claire Marie Press, an operation that Stein's friend and agent Mabel Dodge deplored as 'absolutely third-rate… effete and decadent'. Tender Buttons gives you a good flavour of Stein's style. It's a series of extended, expressionistic prose poems sorted into the categories 'OBJECTS', 'FOOD' and 'ROOMS'. Take this short passage from 'Roastbeef': 'Bargaining for a little, bargain for a touch, a liberty, an estrangement, a characteristic turkey… Cloudiness what is cloudiness, is it a lining, is it a roll, is it melting.' You may feel baffled by the repetitions, the anchorless strangeness: but what helps the wary reader, as Wade explains, is that Stein wanted to do to language what Picasso, who owed her so much, was doing to visual representation in Cubism. Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife is in two substantial halves. The first concerns Stein's life and education. Born in 1874 in Pennsylvania, she was the youngest daughter of an upper-middle class Jewish family. In 1893, she became one of the first female students admitted to Harvard, where she studied medicine and psychology under William James, and rapidly tired of the field. Enter her older brother, Michael Stein. Having achieved quick success in the San Francisco locomotive industry, he sent a generous stipend to Gertrude and Leo so they could live comfortably for the rest of their lives, an act of devotion and responsibility that feels almost unheard of in the 21st century. Her brother Leo moved to Paris in 1902, renting the famed rue de Fleurus apartment. After a brief, unhappy stay in London, Gertrude joined him, and he introduced her to a more vibrant creative scene. Alice Toklas, only three years younger than Stein and also America-born, moved to Paris at the age of 29, some time after the catastrophic San Francisco earthquake in 1906 destroyed her family's business prospects. By this point, Stein had already been a mentor and putative therapist (pre-Freud) to a couple of 'anxious young women', family friends with whom she'd take long walks, trying to understand why they found being alive so difficult. Stein met Toklas on September 8 1907, the day the latter arrived in Paris; she found her initially offputting, if a little intriguing. But soon she was infatuated, both with Toklas and, it seems clear, Toklas's almost immediate devotion to Stein and Stein's prodigious talents. Toklas moved in with Stein and Leo, and the famous salon evolved through a combination of generosity, vision and chance. Gradually, however, the energy of the early years abated. People begin to blame Toklas for Stein freezing people out: Hemingway, not a notable friend to woman, felt this way, but so did Leo, after cohabiting with them for just over a decade. Wade presents these tensions with novelistic subtlety: Leo may have had good reason for resentment as his close and long-standing relationship with his sister was taken from him, but he was also petty and jealous whenever Stein had so much as a poem published in a journal. He made a great show of dismissing her talents. Toklas, already a staunch protector of Stein's genius and legacy, had little desire to keep him around. At this point, Stein's reputation was based mostly on her salons and the unwavering support of other radical artists and writers. Her literary career was marked by one disappointment and frustration after another – bitterly exacerbated by the burgeoning success of writers who largely failed to acknowledge her. Stein and Toklas had already rented a country house near the Swiss border in Bilignin – Stein used some military contacts to have the former occupant, a military man, promoted, so that he would vacate it – and they spent more and more time in this retreat, seeing few people other than their rural neighbours. Stein wrote all day; Toklas knitted, cooked, kept house and typed up Stein's hand-written pages at night. But then came the unlikely Broadway success of Stein's experimental 1927 libretto Four Saints in Three Acts, in which two 16th-century Spanish saints, Ignatius and Teresa, experience a series of wild visions drawn only glancingly from hagiography or history. It was followed by the much greater success, and with a popular readership, of The Autobiography of Alice B Toklas, written in Toklas's voice by Stein: it concerns Toklas's life rather less than it does the Parisian glamour and energy with which Stein had surrounded her. Suddenly, having retired somewhat from the social whirl, Stein was in more demand than ever. The greatest controversy was yet to come. Stein and Toklas had driven ambulances during the First World War, but they believed that a Second couldn't possibly happen; the couple stayed in France despite repeated entreaties to return to the safety of America. When conflict did break out, Stein expressed admiration for Philippe Pétain, head of state of the collaborationist Vichy government: she believed he was the only man who could bring peace. In reality, Pétain's regime deported over 75,000 Jews to Nazi Germany. Stein's trust in Pétain might be understood, to be extremely kind, as blind hope, knowing how closely she witnessed the First World War, but it has remained a stain on her legacy. Stein and Toklas themselves, both of Jewish heritage, survived in large part thanks to the refusal of their neighbours in Bilignin to shop them to the Nazis. The second half of Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife isn't so much a biography as a reckoning with the biographical form itself. What right does a reader have to the private life of the subject? Wade begins here with Stein's untimely death from stomach cancer in 1946, at the age of 72. The 'afterlife' of the title works on several levels. One was the gargantuan undertaking of publishing her posthumous works and guarding her legacy, which, as stipulated in her will, fell to Toklas and a few trusted editors and supporters such as Van Vechten. Stein's archive, housed to this day at the Beinecke Library at Yale University, was begun in her lifetime, but it contains many intimate drafts, papers and diaries discussed here for the first time (including 39 years' worth of love notes to Toklas). A second sense of 'afterlife' is another person's grief. Toklas survived Stein by some 20 years, largely bereft, silent and still living in the haunted, beautiful rue de Fleures apartment. She was entrusted with finding publishers for all of Stein's posthumous work, which occupied a lot of her time and energy; she attended operas and plays and had an avid support network; but when she received visitors she spoke only of Stein and her memories. (She eventually wrote a successful cookbook.) Towards the end of her life, she converted to Catholicism, principally because a belief in the afterlife provided a small hope that she might see Stein again. Wade is especially good at timing. Things intimated in the first half of this book are disclosed in the second with the judicious arrangement of a great detective novel – Hemingway's account of the end of his and Stein's friendship, for instance, or the souring of her relationship with her brother Leo, who lived with Stein and Toklas for years before storming out over a combination of professional and romantic resentment. Wade is always even-handed, never salacious. Stein, she argues, was driven and tirelessly committed to literature, but 'not averse to setting her enthusiasts against one another'. Toklas, while supportive emotionally and materially, could be controlling and manipulative too. Old friends such as Mabel Weeks felt that Toklas 'created a monster' in catering to Stein's every need. On that theme, one of the most fascinating episodes here is the discovery that The Autobiography of Alice B Toklas was an act of reparation Stein made in 1932 to a furiously jealous Toklas. Toklas had discovered a manuscript of Stein's first novel QED (1903) and found out, for the first time, about May Bookstaver, with whom a youthful Stein was embroiled in a years-long love triangle. (One reason for Stein's move to Paris had been to escape the mess and the heartbreak.) Toklas was so angry that she changed the word 'may' for something else in everything she typed up afterwards. Stein is less read and celebrated in Britain than in the US and on the Continent. It often feels as though even those willing to try are unable, quite, to place her. She preceded many of the writers we know as 'modernists' by a decade, yet her writing could be more radical and experimental than theirs. One reason, as Wade convincingly shows, is that Stein was a repeated target of misogyny, homophobia and anti-Semitism. Few of the leading lights of canonical literature emerge well in their dismissals. Wyndham Lewis called her an 'arch-fraud', James Joyce an 'eyebold earbig noseknaving gutthroat'; TS Eliot averred that if future writers came under her influence it might bring about 'a new barbarian age of literature'. Stein the writer remains misunderstood, with a less-than-stable place in the canon and the same divided public opinion she had when she was alive. In a contemporary literary climate that persists as if her innovations never happened, I agree with Wade's implicit argument: she's ripe for a revival. Wade shows a great sensitivity to the morality of biography writing, and the tendency to sensationalism, historical or contemporary. She's an exceptional writer, able to draw out the legend, the contradictions and the reality in a fully coherent, dizzyingly comprehensive triptych: Stein was a genius, imprimatur and also a real and often quite difficult person, in life and after. She at one point expressed in interview what might be the lament of any modern-day artist or celebrity: 'It always did bother me that the American public were more interested in me than in my work… And after all there is no sense in it because if it were not for my work they would not be interested in me so why should they not be more interested in my work than in me.' If this is a warning shot across the bows for any would-be future biographer, Wade is undeterred. She cares as much about the work as she does the complex, brilliant and contradictory person who created it. Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife, exhaustively researched and beautifully written, will become the definitive biography.

Provincetown hosts inaugural Outsiders Festival
Provincetown hosts inaugural Outsiders Festival

Boston Globe

time01-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Provincetown hosts inaugural Outsiders Festival

It was Harry Kemp, the 'hobo poet,' who coined the phrase 'the Art of Spectacularism,' which the organizers have taken as their mantra, says the festival's primary instigator, Chuck White. He is the chief archivist at the Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'The whole thing is a big improv stunt on one level,' explains White, who began working in a Provincetown T-shirt shop as a teenager from Quincy. Advertisement The makers and doers behind the Outsiders Festival are carrying on a long tradition of willful eccentricity in the town, White says. 'We're a collective of misfits, even in a misfit town.' Kemp, who died in Provincetown at age 76 in 1960, was a notorious scalawag. He hung out with the Lost Generation in Paris, ran off with Upton Sinclair's wife, and wrote the memoir 'Tramping on Life' (1922). Advertisement Kemp is one of several largely forgotten Provincetown characters whose lives and work will be celebrated at the festival. Another, the late Al Hansen, ran local art galleries for several years in the early 1960s. An early member of the experimental art collective known as Fluxus, he once pushed a piano off a building in Germany while serving in the US military during World War II. That stunt inspired Yoko Ono, John Cage, and possibly the annual Hansen — the grandfather of the musician Beck — lived by an 'anything goes' ethos that inspired the planning for the Outsiders Festival's opening night. On the Provincetown Commons, several dozen artists will be creating live work as part of a spectacle called HERESY: The Happening. In the centerpiece, participants will dismantle an old upright piano, creating new art and sound sculptures in the process. An intrepid group of locals has convened to stage the town's inaugural Outsiders Festival, from May 8-11, to honor Provincetown's history as a magnet for artists. Courtesy photos Works representing the 'modern Provincetown Collagist movement' will be on display through May 12 in the community room at the Commons. That show is also called 'Heresy,' a variation on Hansen's own Karen Cappotto, who first met White decades ago at the Rat, is a Provincetown-based visual artist who has been curating an annual show of locally produced collage art for years. 'For some of the artists, it's their first time doing collage,' she says. 'I kind of tease it out of them.' Recent generations of Provincetown artists have embraced the medium because it's a more modern form of art than, say, plein-air painting, she believes: 'Collage wasn't, like, [painting] sailboats.' Advertisement The Outsiders Festival honors Provincetown's history as a magnet for artists. Courtesy photos On Friday, a Provincetown cast will stage a reading of 'Vain Victory: The Vicissitudes of the Damned' (1971), an outrageous off-off-Broadway musical written by the late Warhol 'superstar' Jackie Curtis. The cast has been coached by Lary Chaplan, the show's original composer, who lives on Cape Cod. At Provincetown Town Hall on Saturday, the town's In that old edition of Newsweek, Hansen is critical of the Art Association, calling their advocacy work 'a great case of arteriosclerosis.' Once White stumbled on that article, he went down a rabbit hole on Hansen's life, he says. A decade after Hansen's time in Provincetown, he cofounded the Los Angeles nightclub the Masque and managed some of the city's earliest punk bands. 'He started the punk movement in LA,' White says. 'It's the best story, but it's untold.' James Sullivan can be reached at .

The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu: The Next Pride and Prejudice and Zombies—or Something Bigger?
The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu: The Next Pride and Prejudice and Zombies—or Something Bigger?

Associated Press

time24-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Associated Press

The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu: The Next Pride and Prejudice and Zombies—or Something Bigger?

A bold new novel, The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu, reimagines Hemingway's classic by merging literary mastery with cosmic horror, releasing April 1, 2025. 'Hemingway explored a lost generation's existential crisis. Lovecraft delved into humanity's insignificance in an indifferent universe. This novel blends both, revealing, maybe, it's the same story.' — Jorah Kai ATLANTA, GA, UNITED STATES, March 24, 2025 / / -- As Hollywood continues to mine familiar IPs and franchise fatigue sets in, The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu offers something truly rare: a high-concept literary mashup that balances artistic prestige with mass appeal. This genre-bending novel merges Ernest Hemingway's seminal classic The Sun Also Rises with the mythic terror of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythos—two of the most influential literary voices of the 20th century. Releasing April 1, 2025—a century after the original publication—this chilling reimagining has already caught the attention of a top Hollywood agent, with whispers of major star power and global adaptation buzz surrounding a potential feature film or prestige streaming series. A Story Made for Hollywood In 2009, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith surprised readers and filmgoers alike, blending Austen's timeless romance with a zombie apocalypse. The book sold over 1.5 million copies, and the film grossed $25 million worldwide—ultimately finding long-tail success through streaming and digital rentals. It proved audiences crave fresh, genre-blending takes on the classics. The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu is poised to follow a similar path. This mashup merges Hemingway's spare, haunting prose with Lovecraft's cosmic dread, reintroducing the Lost Generation—Jack Schitt, Ro'brt Ctholh'en, Brett Ashley, and Creepy Bill—as they drift through postwar Europe, stalked not only by existential malaise but by an ancient terror on the verge of awakening. A Visually and Sonically Immersive Novel Beyond its genre-bending narrative, The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu features stunning chapter illustrations and a beautifully painted cover that vividly bring the world to life. The book is paired with Sad Songs from an Old Goth in a Tree and three immersive music albums—The Book Soundtrack, Voidwalker, and Sad Songs—created by the author, an existential detective and veteran of global dance music culture, from Burning Man to the Olympics. The result is a multisensory experience steeped in beauty, dread, and catharsis—crafted to captivate fans of art, music, and story alike. Hollywood Eyes the Prize The novel has already piqued the interest of a top Hollywood agent. While details remain confidential, insiders are buzzing over the project's blockbuster potential—as either a prestige streaming series or a $100M feature film. With Cthulhu—one of horror's most iconic and globally beloved characters—at the center, the adaptation carries a built-in fanbase spanning film, games, literature, and comics. The combination of literary prestige and mythic horror could position The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu as the next Pride and Prejudice and Zombies—a genre-bending breakout with both artistic edge and box office potential. Buzz from Major Outlets The book has already earned coverage from Yahoo News, The Associated Press, and a growing number of prominent outlets, highlighting its ambitious concept and cultural relevance. Early reviews are glowing—praising the seamless fusion of Hemingway and Lovecraft, the striking artwork, and the novel's emotional resonance. Critics and horror fans alike are calling it 'deeply creative,' 'visually arresting,' and 'an unforgettable reading experience.' With momentum growing, The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu is fast becoming one of the most anticipated releases of 2025. About the Author The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu is co-authored by Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winner Ernest Hemingway and Jorah Kai, the modern minstrel of the macabre. Kai brings a bold, horror-infused lens to Hemingway's classic. Though still emerging in the Western literary landscape, he has a long history in underground and artistic circles and recent cultural impact in China, where he has appeared on national television and reached millions of viewers in his cultural and solarpunk environmental documentary shows. Kai's Diary, his pandemic nonfiction epistolary tale, was an international bestseller and one of the top books in China for 2020. His novel Amos the Amazing, another bestseller in children's steampunk literature, was recently acquired by CQPG—the powerhouse publisher behind Liu Cixin's The Three-Body Problem, now a global Netflix sensation. With China's growing fascination with Cthulhu and Kai's cross-cultural reach, this book is poised to captivate readers across continents and languages. The Sun Also Rises on Cthulhu launches April 1, 2025, and is now available for pre-order in eBook, paperback, and hardcover formats. To request a review copy or explore the book, soundtrack, or upcoming events, please contact More Publishing or visit Garrett H. Jones, Jorah Kai 224-858-8521 X YouTube Other Legal Disclaimer:

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