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FM
Former Member
The Guyana Prize for Literature has gone missing
Posted By Stabroek staff On April 25, 2010 @ 5:02 am In Letters | 9 Comments

Dear Editor,
‘Stalin’s greatest crime was the murder of words’ – Eric Hoffer
On February 22, one day before the fortieth anniversary of the Republic, I attended a public symposium on the role of culture in Mashramani. At the sparsely attended event, I listened to a presentation delivered by Al Creighton, part of which dealt with the development of the literary arts over the four decades since 1970.

Granted the summation necessarily dictated by the time constraints, it was somewhat surprising nevertheless when Mr Creighton reached the end of his presentation with no mention made of the Guyana Prize for Literature; surprising particularly due to the presenter’s long tenure as Secretary to the Guyana Prize Management Committee.

My first criticisms of the Guyana Prize were made almost ten years ago. Those criticisms in summary were that the reality of the awarding of the prizes went against a significant aspect of the purpose of the prize, the development and reward of Guyanese writing at home and abroad since the majority of the winners were overseas-based writers, due primarily to better resources for the development and publication of their work, resources denied local writers. I should also add freedom from fear of the consequences of free expression.

The same year in which I won the prize was the same year in which I started working at the Guyana Chronicle, the same year in which I was invited to the first Caribbean-Canadian Literary Expo in Toronto. It was the same year I authored a document on behalf of the editorial department of the Chronicle outlining the objections of the staff to the interference by the Office of the President, including within that document the provisions of the Declaration of Chapultepec against which said interference constituted a contravention, Guyana being a signatory of that declaration. It was the same year that I was denied a place on Guyana’s delegation to Carifesta VIII in Suriname, despite there being a literary contingent.

In 2006, despite being an active part of the initial deliberations for the planning of Guyana’s participation, I was to learn shortly before the event itself that I was not part of the literary contingent of Guyana’s delegation to Carifesta IX in Trinidad and Tobago. Some consultancy work, nevertheless, facilitated my observation of, if not official participation in, that year’s Carifesta.

An interesting anecdote: on arrival at Piarco, I met the late Minister of Education, Desrey Fox. After learning that I was not, unlike her, part of Guyana’s contingent for the event, the Minister was perplexed for a moment before asking, “Well, are you still writing?” In the interest of the continuation of the always cordial relationship I had enjoyed with the Minister, I refrained from asking if the “still writing” qualification was one met by the members of the official literary contingent. We subsequently took a taxi together down to the Carifesta Secretariat in Port of Spain, the organisers not having seen fit to provide an official escort for the foreign dignitary.
In retrospect I should perhaps be grateful that the launching of my collection of short stories, Fictions, Volume One, was included on the official programme of the Carifesta X held in Guyana, although my name was notably absent from any other official literary event during the festival. I am not however holding my breath for inclusion on the literary delegation for Carifesta XI.

My point is that I don’t mind the personal exclusion per se – whatever slight delusional Messianic complex I possess thrives on that sort of individual disenfranchisement. Also it provides more than enough evidence of perennial sycophancy, incompetence and outright idiocy in the administration when I do make some sort of challenge to the powers that be.

For example, I can – as I am doing now – ask the Ministry of Culture to release the names and literary qualifications of the members of the literary contingent for Carifesta VIII and IX, as well as the criteria for selection, and not expect a straight answer from the newly appointed Director of Culture, Dr James Rose, the person whom the Minister will no doubt direct to give a public response, if any. I can say, as I am doing now, that the selection process for the entire Carifesta contingents under question bordered upon corruption, and no proof to effectively negate that charge would be forthcoming.

My problem is what I consider a concerted effort to completely extinguish the already weak flame of literary expression in Guyana as appears to be happening now, and which the local media seems to be blissfully insensitive to. The Guyana Prize for Literature has gone missing for an entire cycle – the last prizes were the 2006 awards, given in 2007, and the subsequent one should have been in 2008. If the Pulitzer Prizes skip a year in America, or the Giller in Canada, or the Booker in the UK, there would be grounds for a national scandal. So far, no public explanation has been given by the Prize Committee for the absence of the awards, not even a peep of interrogation by the Stabroek News which carries a weekly column by the Secretary of the Prize.

The Guyana Prize awards a maximum of US$21,000 in prize money, in addition to the expenses associated with the hosting of the ceremony, and transportation for the overseas based awardees and judges and perhaps miscellaneous administrative expenses which should amount to roughly an additional US$10,000 total.

In contrast, the President’s US$100,000 annual commitment to a regional publishing house seems to have been activated with the recent launch of the Guyana Classics series, by the unceremoniously named Caribbean Publishing House. The books were not edited or printed in the region, much less Guyana, nor are they currently available to local readers. There is no transparency of process, and the annual commitment to the publishing house which does not have any apparent verifiable existence is worth some $20 million.

And of course, there was not even an attempt at sourcing contemporary writing for publication or republication, particularly from local writers, with some vague commitment towards this end slated for when the current cycle of Guyana classics is through, some three years from now.

So instead of sending US$21,000 (often less) of taxpayer money biennially overseas, the administration has committed to send US$100,000 overseas annually, in the name of the further development of Guyanese literature. And somehow this makes sense to, or does not register any concern with, the independent media, civil society, cultural activists and the political opposition.

At the end of the presentations, I asked Mr Creighton about the Guyana Prize and was told, along with the rest of the audience, that an announcement would be made “soon.” This was two months ago. To be fair to the academic, the Guyana Prize Committee does not control the purse strings, but a principled stand should be taken in light of what is tantamount to the erasure of the national prize for literature, particularly in light of the fact that every other area of the arts receives significant attention while there is absolutely no mechanism to support the development of creative writing. But a mouth, to quote Martin Carter, is always muzzled by the soup* it eats to live.

Derek Walcott, in Codicil wrote of his experience in Trinidad, noting “the best minds root like dogs for scraps of favour.” It is a sad realisation for me to watch the same thing happen here. This sort of absurdity thrives on two things, ignorance and silence. Those who don’t know can’t do anything, and those who know are silenced by fear or self-interest or both. Unless something is said about it, unless we protest against the systematic murder of words, this necrotic silence is going to spread throughout the entire society until it stifles all of us.

Yours faithfully,
Ruel Johnson

Article printed from Stabroek News: http://www.stabroeknews.com

URL to article: http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...re-has-gone-missing/

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Every aspect of the administration’s engagements with the arts and culture has been based on ad hoc spectacle
Posted By Stabroek staff On September 22, 2011 @ 5:08 am In Letters | No Comments

Dear Editor,

I had the great privilege of reading the ‘Appreciation’ magazine, ‘Forged By Fire: The Jagdeo Presidency.‘ Of all the forgeries presented therein, I’d like to focus on just one.

There is no greater betrayal of the public trust than that committed by the man of letters. We expect the politician to be corrupt; we expect the people to be corruptible; and priests, as the good Juan Edghill has of recent ably proven, have long been known to subsume their theological commitments to more temporal ones – but from the academic, we expect a higher standard.

With knowledge comes power comes responsibility, particularly the responsibility to the dissemination of evidentiary or empirical truth. This is a responsibility that Mr Al Creighton seems to have cast off with reckless abandon in his ‘Appreciation’ article, ‘Playing an active role in the arts and culture.‘

First and arguably least of all, in his unabashed hagiography of Mr Jagdeo’s cultural policy, Mr Creighton casually cites the “publication of a Carifesta Anthology of Poetry.”

The learned academic seems confused with regard to the etymological connotation of the word “publication,” so let me humbly remind him:

‘Publication’ means “the preparation and issuing of a book, journal, piece of music, or other work for public sale… (2) the action of making something generally known.” It stands to reason, since its Latin origin, publicare, means ‘to make public.’

As a contributor to what I was told would be a “Carifesta Anthology of Poetry,” I am yet to receive an invitation to the launch, a courtesy copy of the ‘publication,’ nor have I seen it anywhere one would expect to see a ‘publication,’ ie, in the public, three years after Carifesta X has come and gone.

In fact, I believe I can say without fear of contradiction that there has been not a single publication of contemporary literary work that the 12-year Jagdeo administration has either originated or been closely associated with. Indeed, successive PPP administrations from 1992 to 2008 have not published or caused to publish anything literary, in stark and ironic contrast to the plethora of government funded or supported literary publications between 1972 and 1992.

Mr Creighton cites the 2009 establishment of Caribbean Press as proof of Jagdeo’s commitment to the development of literature. The administration of the press exists outside the Caribbean, the editorial board is not based in the region, and the books are not printed here – the Ministry of Culture, under which aegis the press is said to operate, does not have a Caribbean Press office or even liaison. The Caribbean Press is in fact run out of the University of Warwick, and notably not out of the University of Guyana. If this is not illustrative of the President’s perception of the competence of local academia, including Mr Creighton – the most public face of the administration’s literary development policy – I have no idea what is; ditto for the composition of the advisory board.

The 24-page full colour supplement praising the President is 24 pages more than the PPP’s total involvement in local literary publication in 20 years. The government is free to respond to prove me wrong.

Mr Creighton cites, as an “objective measure of the president’s contribution to the arts and culture,” Mr Jagdeo’s “ready support for the Guyana Prize, which has been consistent during his tenure.” Either Mr Creighton is suffering from a severe case of receptive aphasia or he is being completely disingenuous. The Guyana Prize is a biennial prize, meaning that it is supposed to be held every two years. Mr Jagdeo had a twelve-year presidency, under which the Prize was held four times. Mr Creighton needs to check his maths, and then research the meaning of the word ‘consistent.’

And let me save Mr Creighton the trouble of falling on his own sword verbally but not in action. He has taken the line of taking personal blame for the failure of the Prize being held between 2006 and 2011: the Prize has a Management Committee which as far as I know does not consist of solely of Mr Creighton, who is in fact simply the Secretary, not the Chair. A President that is “consistent in his ready support” for the Guyana Prize for Literature would have – providing of course that his Cabinet had made the requisite funds readily available – fired the entire Management Committee for their incompetence. It is telling that Mr Jagdeo’s self-acknowledged propensity for micromanaging did not extend to this eminently manageable scenario.

I refuse to touch on the incompetence and discrimination involved in the government’s involvement in cultural festivals, something which Mr Creighton has predictably high praise for. The Minister of Culture’s silence on a tiny aspect of accountability in this regard speaks volumes in itself about the government’s execution of its engagement in cultural festivals, and contradicts Mr Creighton’s shamelessly adulatory prose.

Every single aspect of the Jagdeo administration’s engagement with arts and culture – from the Guyana Prize to the President’s Film Endowment – has been based not on a coherent cultural development policy but on ad hoc spectacle and show with little substance or sustainability.

The only thing that I find irrefutable in Mr Creighton’s article is his assessment of the President’s speech at the Guyana Prize for Literature awards earlier this month. It’s an expertly written piece, eloquent, well-crafted, inspiring. Indeed, in light of how diametrically the sentiments expressed differ from the President’s actions, had Mr Jagdeo submitted it to the Guyana Prize this year, the Best First Book of Fiction category would not have remained vacant and the President would have added another trophy to his collection of well-deserved awards.

Yours faithfully,
Ruel Johnson
Advisor on Cultural Policy
Alliance For Change

Article printed from Stabroek News: http://www.stabroeknews.com

URL to article: http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...on-ad-hoc-spectacle/
FM
So, my Facebook postings are ripe for 'debate' in a Political Discussion forum but my criticisms of the government's poor cultural policy are not?

Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...
FM
quote:
Originally posted by D2:
quote:
Originally posted by raymond:
dem fellas aint wake up yet Big Grin
Misir does not pay overtime


He does pay himself overtime and Randolfe just not these chaps like Jason etc.
J
Ruel,

Welcome my brother! Look how the AFC people are transparent, decent and fair. The man Ruel is here under his own identity. Prem Misir and crew are just not confident enough to come here using their real identity.
T
quote:
Originally posted by TK_REDUX:
Ruel,

Welcome my brother! Look how the AFC people are transparent, decent and fair. The man Ruel is here under his own identity. Prem Misir and crew are just not confident enough to come here using their real identity.
flag
FM
quote:
Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...


Ruel those are some ignars from OP, Robb Street and Brampton. Don't tek dem seriously.
T
What I don't get is the mental mechanism that makes OP Bloggers convince themselves that have to be anonymous in posting about the policy of a government that they believe to be honest, fair and good for the country it governs.

The AFC people here are the ones who should have been afraid to post their identities. When you have to hide, even though your party has all power, it shows how completely bankrupt your position is - no one with a righteous cause and with nothing to fear hides and attacks from the shadows.
FM
So what you fellas feel that this is something you have to be proud of how many people you have here using your own names tell me? we know gerald is not real who else rass all yuh gat here using your own names?
J
quote:
Originally posted by Janus:
So, my Facebook postings are ripe for 'debate' in a Political Discussion forum but my criticisms of the government's poor cultural policy are not?

Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...


How de ras you can lump me wid dem PPP craps.

Is this how you gon start CONFUSED
Pointblank
quote:
Originally posted by Pointblank:
quote:
Originally posted by Janus:
So, my Facebook postings are ripe for 'debate' in a Political Discussion forum but my criticisms of the government's poor cultural policy are not?

Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...


How de ras you can lump me wid dem PPP craps.

Is this how you gon start CONFUSED


Oh shucks Pointblank. I am just seeing that. My sincere apology. You don't belong there.
T
quote:
Originally posted by TK_REDUX:
quote:
Originally posted by Pointblank:
quote:
Originally posted by Janus:
So, my Facebook postings are ripe for 'debate' in a Political Discussion forum but my criticisms of the government's poor cultural policy are not?

Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...


How de ras you can lump me wid dem PPP craps.

Is this how you gon start CONFUSED


Oh shucks Pointblank. I am just seeing that. My sincere apology. You don't belong there.
Sarry PB, I missed that too - sarry bro.
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Pointblank:
quote:
Originally posted by Janus:
So, my Facebook postings are ripe for 'debate' in a Political Discussion forum but my criticisms of the government's poor cultural policy are not?

Albert, Ramakhant, SJ4321, Pointblank, Ferris Bueller, anyone, Bueller, Bueller, Bueller...


How de ras you can lump me wid dem PPP craps.

Is this how you gon start CONFUSED


My apologies PointBlank. In all fairness, I did spend the morning directly transcribing the lyrics of the PPP party jingle and I may actually need therapy.
FM

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