A revelatory and wide-ranging series of interviews with award-winning writer Arundhati Roy, touching on US empire, Indian nationalism, a writer’s work, and more.
As a novelist, Arundhati Roy is known for her lush language and intricate structure. As a political essayist, her prose is searching and fierce. All of these qualities shine through in the interviews collected here by David Barsamian.
This newly reissued and expanded edition, featuring interviews from 2001 to 2022 and a moving foreword by Naomi Klein, explores Roy’s evolving political thought and commitments across the tumultuous twenty-first entry. The Architecture of Modern Empire is a searing reckoning with the mechanics of power, in all its forms, and the role of imagination and creative expression in envisioning a radically different world.
Arundhati Roy is an Indian writer who is also an activist who focuses on issues related to social justice and economic inequality. She won the Booker Prize in 1997 for her novel, The God of Small Things, and has also written two screenplays and several collections of essays.
For her work as an activist she received the Cultural Freedom Prize awarded by the Lannan Foundation in 2002.
This is what the kids call a vibe-check kinda book. You learn less about the issues discussed (this is a book of interviews) than an approach to them, an orientation: to stand against power; to recognize the idiosyncrasies of 'the West'; to celebrate the dignity of independence; to see the interconnectedness of things. A set of discussions nearly twenty years old, Roy is here, politically, where it took me thirty years to get to. This is a kindred spirit, musing over the brutalities of the world in as lighthearted a fashion as one probably can. The above average rating isn't because this isn't good, it's just more because of the limitations of the interview format: it ranges wide, but cuts only just-so.
I have just recently begun learning about the rise of Indian Hindu nationalism, led mainly by the BJP and RSS. These discussions with Roy give a good analysis of both the resistance and the support for Modi and his policies, while not becoming too "in the weeds" of Indian politics
I was highly impressed by the interviews of Arundhati Roy, whose answers are always thought-provoking, honest (if one-sided), eloquent and erudite in nature.
At the same time, like any activist of any side, she tends to be one-sided, and rarely gives you the full view and events leading to a particular situation, so in that respect not as honest as she might have been otherwise.
It seems people with strong and opposite moral principals can rarely engage in a meaningful discourse since their passion for what they believe is right can easily get in the way of the facts and/or rational discussion.
Having said that I am quite interested at some point to read her essays that are captured in her book The Algebra of Infinite Justice. Seems I have marked it as "owned" - if only I knew on what shelf it is...
Reading with a book that's actually transcribed interviews was my way of trying to get back into some academic reading. This book was mostly a history lesson for me since the interviews were conducted between 1999 and 2002 and I don't know that much about Indian politics but it was interesting to think about how much has changed but also how much is the same. Also at one point she makes a prediction about the media in the US potentially changing to that US citizens/residents are aware of exactly how much violence the state commits globally which was interesting to think about since I'm not really sure that's happened yet (20 years later).
In general I really like Roy and while some of the rhetoric she uses feels outdated, her ideas about what democracy is and how to think about organized resistance against states are still relevant.
"There are many happiness that come from just loving and companionship and even losing." -The Chequebook and the Cruise Missile:Conversation with Arundhati Roy . . . Full review: https://literatureisliving.wordpress.... . . . #arundhatiroy #booklover #literature #literarian #literatureteacher #literatureisliving #igreads #igbook #instaread #instabooks #bookish #bibliophile #ilovereading #shelf #shelves #thechequebookandthecruisemissile #bookreview #booknerd #bookofinstagram #descaslibrary #descalibrary #bookland #bookaholic #bookworm #bookdragon #letsread #bookstagram #bookstagramindonesia
An interesting collection of essays. I really enjoy Roy's voice and am excited to pick up some of her fiction. While these essays were written in a different time, the early 2000s, many of the ideas still feel relevant. Her discussions of Hindutva were alarmingly prescient, especially as she discusses Modi when he was a governor. This provided a lot of helpful background. Roy is so intelligent and I found myself writing down countless quotes from this slim volume.
The clarity and consistency this woman has with her ideas and words is unmatched. No one captures and distills the recognizable shape of power, across a broad variety of complex issues, quite the way she does. I will be reading more of her formal work soon.
An excellent overview of Roy's sociopolitical worldview. The interviews wrap you in the warmth of a revolutionary woman in the midst of an India taking a turn for the fascist.
A little simplistic, but a great introduction to Roy’s work. Hopefully it inspires readers to check out the other texts mentioned within. I’m glad I read this before checking out The God of Small Things, it provides some important context.
To say that Arundhati Roy is brilliant, is an understatement. She marries intellect with pithy eloquence, saying so much in a few words.
It looks like Ms Roy has an opinion on everything: dams in India; corporate takeover of state responsibilities in India; sectarian politics in India; Bush and his wars in Asia; and the politics of division in India, be they of religion or caste or language. However, there is only one subject Ms. Roy pursues in the various issues she discusses, namely the politics of power.
I always enjoy her writings, even though they aren't exactly educational for me. However, it is extremely heartening to know that there is a voice such as hers in India, that unabashedly speaks the truth, without any agenda. Since it is the truth she speaks, often, her words remind me of a Qur'anic verse or hadith, and I smile as I nod my head, appreciating how spot on she is!
The Checkbook and the Cruise Missile, conversations with Arundhati Roy, interviews by David Barsamiam (pp 157). Roy is an Indian social commentator, journalist, and author. This book is a series of interviews of her thoughts about India, America, and the world. Rather than make what would be a pathetic attempt to summarize these wide-ranging conversations, I will quote several illustrative passages:
... all over the world, freedoms are being snatched away at a frightening pace. I think it’s not just important but urgent for us to become extremely troublesome citizens...
... we have to rescue democracy by being troublesome, by asking questions, by making a noise.
Every person who gets ahead gets ahead by stepping on his brother, or sister, or mother, or friend.
I think one of the most important points in this book that I came away with was Roy's assertion that the 'farther away' decision making takes place in a community or a country (i.e. on a higher bureaucratic level), the more dehumanized the process becomes - leading to the neglect of the people the decisions directly affect. This was in regard to the movement to build dams in India, but it really hit home for me and can apply universally...
Arundhati Roy is a really amazing writer and organizer. She is among a few outspoken writers that i feel presents both a well researched, thoughtful and not entirely hopeless view of our history and our current world. This interview doesn't really do that though, not sure if she just doesn't or is never given the chance, but she just skims the surface of most political issues. Not the best collection of her work.
A book that will make you question all you see, hear, and think: your beliefs, the pre-digested rot you are fed by most media, ideas you've inculcated from your environment, your teachers, everything!
“But still, how are you going to persuade a Naga sadhu–whose life mission has been to stand naked on one leg for twenty years or to tow a car with his penis–that he can’t live without Coca-Cola?” --page 17
This is an interview-style book, with David Barsamian (who interviews everybody), and A-Roy tells it like it is about India, America, and the rest of the fucked-up world we live in.