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Hari Kunzru
My Choice...

The law locks up the man or woman
Who steals the goose from off the common
But lets the greater villain loose
Who steals the common from the goose

Anonymous

I came across this quite recently and I've been thinking about it a lot. It seems to date from the period of the Enclosures in Britain, when common land was taken into private hands and many poor people lost their traditional rights of gathering and grazing. For such an old-fashioned rhyme, which has the tone of a nursery rhyme or a proverb, it seems startlingly relevant.

We're living through a new period of enclosures. All over the world, public spaces are being taken into private hands: think of the difference between shopping in a market and shopping at a mall. Mall space is owned by a private company, who have the power to decide who walks through it, who should be there and who shouldn't.

Recently in a mall in Hong Kong I was moved on by a security guard for trying to sit down. I was told it was only permissible to sit if I was buying a coffee in a café or a meal in a restaurant. What happened to the right to sit and rest without paying? The erosion of public space is about more than shopping malls. It's about a change in our idea of what should belong to everyone by right and what can be owned. Should the genetic code of an animal or plant be owned? Should a river or a spring which supplies water to a town? What about the air? These are the questions that we struggle over in the twenty-first century, but they're not new. Not at all.


 

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Facts on Hari Kunzru

First novel The Impressionist gained Kunzru one of the largest advances in publishing history - around £1.25 million.

Hari Kunzru was music editor of Wallpaper* magazine from 1999-2004

In 2003 Hari Kunzru turned down The John Llewellyn Rhys award for writers under 35, on the grounds that it was backed by a newspaper whose "hostility towards black and Asian people" he felt was unacceptable.

 

More about Hari Kunzru...
Writing crime novels

Hari Kunzru was born in London in 1969 and grew up in Essex, UK.

He was born into a mixed English and Kashmiri Hindu family. He studied English at Oxford University, and then went on to take an MA in Philosophy and Literature from Warwick University. He now lives in London.

Hari Kunzru forged his career in journalism as a travel journalist for several British newspapers, as well as being travel correspondent for Time Out magazine. His first novel, The Impressionist was published to critical acclaim in 2002, and his latest novel was published in 2004.

 

Hari Kunzru
His own Moving Words

"I bathe in a soup of other people's words all the time and I'm sure they do go in and colonise me. But I seem to have this trick of not quite remembering properly and that's actually an odd warped talent...

"Things pop into your head and they probably are related to something that you've read but in that process of misremembering, you've changed them and made them your own...

"When you're writing you're echoing the words of everybody who has ever used that language before: many of us unconsciously use all the resources of English. People echo Shakespeare for example; people use all the common resources of language whether they're a fictional writer or just someone having a chat in the pub."

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