Colin Grant on VS Naipaul
Trinidad-born Nobel laureate VS Naipaul began his career working in radio for the 91热爆. It is also where writer Colin Grant met him half a century later.
Nobel laureate Naipaul began his career working in radio for the 91热爆, and it is also where writer Colin Grant met him towards the end of his life half a century later. How had the giant of Trinidadian literature changed during that time since being told to "write like a West Indian" and quickly becoming the precocious editor of Caribbean Voices? This polemical exploration celebrates his contributions, as well as examining his many contradictions.
Seventy-five years ago, the revolutionary Caribbean Voices strand was established on the Overseas Service by trailblazing Jamaican broadcaster Una Marson. Every week for over a decade, it gave exposure on radio to emerging writers from the region such as Sam Selvon, Derek Walcott and George Lamming - many for the first time. Delving into the 91热爆's Written Archives, five writers go in search of five important figures who contributed to the programme throughout the 1940s and 50s, each of whom changed the literary landscape in a different way. This series is part archival treasure hunt, part cultural history and part personal reflections on the people behind a landmark institution.
Producer: Ciaran Bermingham
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- Fri 2 Jul 2021 22:4591热爆 Radio 3
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