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JLF Houston

Schedule

Friday, September 9, 2022
7–10 p.m.

Saturday, September 10, 2022
10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Jump to: Friday Schedule | Saturday Schedule | Speaker Biographies


Health and Safety

The “greatest literary show on Earth” returns to Houston — live and in-person! At JLF Houston, internationally acclaimed authors and thinkers will take part in a range of provocative panels and debates alongside Houston’s best local writers on the thoughts and issues that resonate with our times.

The iconic Jaipur Literature Festival, held annually at the Pink City of Jaipur in India’s Rajasthan state, has always believed in the spirit of community and the hope, strength, and vitality that literature gives. Join us for the fifth annual JLF Houston, where the Bayou City’s unique culture, diversity, and energy fuse with the festival’s camaraderie, caravan of ideas, and magical flow of conversations.


Friday, September 9, 2022

Check back later for a detailed schedule!


Saturday, September 10, 2022

Opening Music
10–10:45 a.m., Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater
• Featuring Shubhendra Rao and Saskia Rao

The Writer’s Life
11–11:45 a.m., Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater
• Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni in conversation with Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan
Explore the intangibles of memory and the texture of lived life through the writing of Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, award-winning author writer, activist, and teacher, and author of books such as Mistress of SpicesSister of My HeartBefore We Visit the GoddessPalace of IllusionsThe Forest of Enchantments, and most recently, The Last Queen. In conversation with academic and writer Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan, Divakaruni gives us a peek into the many words, legacies, and memories that have formed her writing practice.

Intersections: Searching Equity
1–1:45 p.m., Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater
• Guru Prakash Paswan in conversation with Sunanda Vashisht
In this important conversation, Dalit activist Guru Prakash Paswan discusses the wounds of history and the processes of restorative justice. His coauthored book, Makers of Modern Dalit History, features the inspiring accounts of individuals who battled the divisive, discriminatory force of caste — their forms of protest, activism, social reform, and legacy — in contemporary India. Paswan is in conversation with political commentator and writer Sunanda Vashisht.

Points of Departure
1–1:45 p.m., Allen Education Center
• Naheed Phiroze Patel and Sonal Kohli in conversation with Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan
Two writers examine literary journeys, involving both their motherland, India, and other worlds. Naheed Phiroze Patel’s latest book, Mirror Made of Rain, is a devastating coming-of-age novel about the wounds of inherited trauma. Sonal Kohli’s book, The House Next to the Factory, charts three decades of a “rising” India. In conversation with Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan, they take us on a journey through the stories, memories, and histories through which their work navigates.

The Big Bang of Numbers
2–2:45 p.m., Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater
• Manil Suri in conversation with Maya Kanwal
Mathematician and novelist Manil Suri’s latest book, The Big Bang of Numbers: How to Build the Universe Using Only Math, embarks on a mathematical origin story spanning the universe. An inspired and insightful journey through the fundamental mathematical concepts that form the cornerstones of our existence, Suri’s visionary work takes us on a riveting journey to infinity in beyond. In conversation with Maya Kanwal.

Points of View: An Archival Gaze of Photography in India
4–4:45 p.m., Brown Foundation Performing Arts Theater
• Gayatri Sinha and Steven Evans in conversation
Celebrated art critic and curator Gayatri Sinha’s latest edited books Points of Vie: Defining Moment of Photography in India 1840s–2020 take a deep dive into the technological changes and aesthetic movements in photography across the Indian subcontinent. Focusing on archival and visual elements, the collections provide a much-needed kaleidoscopic lens on photography in colonial and post-colonial India. Artist, writer, and curator Steven Evans is the Executive Director of FotoFest International.

Inner Aesthetics: The Spirit and Culture of Creativity
4–4:45 p.m., Allen Education Center
• Roberto Tejada and Arundhathi Subramaniam in conversation with Rich Levy
Two celebrated poets take us on a journey through their work in a session of reading, poetry, and prose. Award-winning poet, translator, and art historian Roberto Tejada’s powerful poetry collection, Why the Assembly Disbanded, pushes the boundaries of Latinx literature and masterfully relates the ravages of white supremacy with immigrant precarity and the question of home. Celebrated Indian poet and author Arundhathi Subramaniam’s peotry collection, Love Without a Story, celebrates an expanding kinship of passion and friendship, mythic quest, and modern-day longing in a world animated by dialogue and dissent, delirium, and silence.


About the Speakers

Jump to: Anita Jaisinghani | Arundhathi Subramaniam | Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni | Gayatri Sinha | Guru Prakash Paswan | Manil Suri | Maya Kanwal | Naheed Phiroze Patel | Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan | Rich Levy | Roberto Tejada | Sanjoy K. Roy | Seema Sirohi | Sonal Kohli | Sunanda Vashisht | Michael Pelletier | Zachary Zwald

Anita Jaisinghani is the chef & co-owner of the restaurant Pondicheri. She developed a love for food early on in her life, even though she trained and practiced as a microbiologist. Transitioning as a stay-at-home mother for her two children in Canada first and then in Houston, she developed her love of food into a career, beginning with an out-of-home catering business through Whole Foods. Anita portrays Indian food in a new light and combines its complexities with her leanings towards the wisdom of Ayurveda and the goodness of fresh, local ingredients. She has five James Beard award nominations.

Described as “one of the finest poets writing in India today” (The Hindu, 2010) and “a unique poet of our times…in a league all by herself” (Indian Literature, 2020), Arundhathi Subramaniam is a leading Indian poet and writer on spirituality. Her 13 books of poetry and prose include the recent poetry volume, Love Without a Story, and a book of conversations with female sacred travelers, Women Who Wear Only Themselves. Subramaniam’s other works include the well-loved anthology of sacred poetry, Eating God, and the bestselling biography of a contemporary mystic, Sadhguru: More Than a Life. She is the recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Award, the Khushwant Singh Poetry Prize, Raza Award, the Il Ceppo Prize in Italy, the Homi Bhabha and Charles Wallace fellowships, among others. Her book When God is a Traveller, was the Season Choice of the Poetry Book Society, shortlisted for the TS Eliot Prize.

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is an award-winning writer, activist, teacher, and the author of 20 books including Mistress of Spices, Sister of My Heart, Before We Visit the Goddess, Palace of Illusions, The Forest of Enchantments, and most recently, The Last Queen, which won the Times of India AutHer Awards for Best Fiction and the Best Book of 2022 Award from The International Association of Working Women. Her work has been published in over 100 magazines and anthologies and translated into 30 languages, including Dutch, Hebrew, Bengali, Hungarian, Turkish, Hindi and Japanese. She is the recipient of the American Book Award, PEN Josephine Miles Award, a Premio Scanno, and a Light of India award. In 2015 The Economic Times included her in their list of 20 Most Influential Global Indian Women. Divakaruni is the McDavid professor of Creative Writing in the internationally acclaimed Creative Writing Program at the University of Houston. 

Gayatri Sinha is a writer, art critic and curator who works in New Delhi on the arts resource criticalcollective.in. Her principal interests are in  art and photography, gender and contemporary Indian social history.

Guru Prakash Paswan is the National Spokesperson of the Bharatiya Janta Party and an Assistant Professor at Patna University. He has been instrumental with the Dalit Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry since 2015 and has worked as National Youth coordinator and is presently working as an adviser. His columns keep appearing on Dalit issues in the Indian Express and The Print, among others. He has co-authored the book, Makers of Modern Dalit History, with Sudarshan Ramabadran.

Manil Suri is the author of The Death of Vishnu, The Age of Shiva, and The City of Devi. He is a distinguished mathematics professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and has written frequently for the New York Times. His latest book is The Big Bang of Numbers: How to Build the Universe Using Only Math.

Maya Kanwal is a Pakistani-American writer from Houston and Fiction Editor at Gulf Coast Journal. Her work appears in Witness Magazine, Meridian, Quarterly West and other journals. She holds an MS in Mathematics and is an Inprint C. Glenn Cambor Fellow at the University of Houston Creative Writing Program.

Naheed Phiroze Patel is a graduate of the MFA program at Columbia University’s School of the Arts. Her writing has appeared in the New England Review, The Guardian, LitHub, Poets & Writers, HuffPost, Scroll.in, BOMB Magazine, Public Books, PEN America, The Rumpus, EuropeNow Journal, Asymptote Journal, among others.

Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan is an assistant professor of English and Transnational Asian Studies at Rice University, where she works on ethnic, postcolonial, and Anglophone literature and theory. She is also an award-winning former magazine editor, freelance essayist, and a co-editor of Thinking with an Accent (UC Press, 2023).

Roberto Tejada is the author of poetry collections Why the Assembly Disbanded (2022), Full Foreground (2012), Exposition Park (2010), and Mirrors for Gold (2006), as well as Still Nowhere in an Empty Vastness (essays, 2019), and art and media histories that include the books National Camera: Photography and Mexico’s Image Environment (2009) and Celia Alvarez Muñoz (2009). He is the Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished Professor at the University of Houston.

Sonal Kohli grew up in Delhi and now lives in Washington, D.C. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia, UK and her stories have been shortlisted for the Bristol Story Prize and Fish Short Story Prize. Kohli is the author of The House Next to the Factory, out in India and forthcoming in the UK.

Sunanda Vashisht is a writer, political commentator, and a columnist. She writes for several news portals and has been a columnist for the Mumbai-based Daily News and Analysis (DNA) newspaper. Her bylines have appeared in the Houston Chronicle, Denver Post, Indian Express, Economic Times and many others. Her area of focus has been the conflict-ridden region of Jammu and Kashmir in India. In 2019, she testified at the US Congress’ Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.

Ambassador (ret’d) Michael Pelletier is Executive Director of the Institute for Global Engagement, an Aspire Initiative at the University of Houston. He served as a U.S. diplomat from 1987-2021. A graduate of Georgetown and Columbia, he is a Board member of Amideast, and a member of the CFR, the Texas Advisory Committee of the USGLC, and the Public Diplomacy Council of America.

Steven Evans is executive director of FotoFest, Houston, and a curator, writer, and artist. Responsible for the artistic direction of FotoFest, Evans co-curated the FotoFest Biennial 2018 “India: Contemporary Photographic and New Media Art” and the FotoFest Biennial 2022 “If I Had a Hammer” and co-edited their related books. He represents FotoFest at photography events worldwide.

Sanjoy K. Roy, an entrepreneur of the arts, is the Managing Director of Teamwork Arts, which produces over 33 highly acclaimed performing arts, visual arts and literary festivals in 40 cities across the world, including the iconic annual Jaipur Literature Festival, international editions of JLF and the launched-during-lockdown digital JLF Brave New World series. He is a Founder Trustee of Salaam Baalak Trust, providing support services for street and working children in Delhi. Roy works closely with various industry bodies and the government on policy issues in the cultural sector in India and has lectured and collaborated with leading international universities.

Seema Sirohi is a Washington, D.C.-based columnist for The Economic Times, India’s largest business daily, and also an analyst for the Observer Research Foundation, India’s premier think tank. She is the author of Sita’s Curse: Stories of Dowry Victims. She writes on U.S. policy toward South Asia and on major American political developments, and has covered U.S.-India relations for nearly three decades. She has also reported from Rome, Vienna, Jerusalem, Bratislava, Islamabad, and New Delhi. She has appeared on the BBC, CNN, and NPR as a commentator.


Performing Arts and Culture programs at Asia Society Texas are presented by Syamal and Susmita Poddar. Major support comes from Nancy C. Allen, Chinhui Juhn and Eddie Allen, the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance, Houston Endowment, and The Brown Foundation Inc. Generous funding also provided by AARP, The Anchorage Foundation of Texas, The Clayton Fund, The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts, and the Wortham Foundation. Additional support provided by the Texas Commission on the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, United Airlines, and through contributions from the Friends of Asia Society, a dedicated group of individuals and organizations committed to bringing exceptional programming and exhibitions to Asia Society Texas.

Performing Arts and Culture Presenting Sponsors

Syamal and Susmita Poddar

Official Airline Sponsor

Program Sponsors

Producing Partners


About Asia Society Texas

Asia Society Texas believes in the strength and beauty of diverse perspectives and people. As an educational institution, we advance cultural exchange by celebrating the vibrant diversity of Asia, inspiring empathy, and fostering a better understanding of our interconnected world. Spanning the fields of arts, business, culture, education, and policy, our programming is rooted in the educational and cultural development of our community — trusting in the power of art, dialogue, and ideas to combat bias and build a more inclusive society.


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