Interview with Annie Zaidi

Featured in

  • Published 20150804
  • ISBN: 978-1-922182-90-6
  • Extent: 264 pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook

ANNIE ZAIDI IS a journalist and creative writer based in Mumbai. Since the publication of her first book – a collection of essays called Known Turf: Bantering with Bandits and Other True Tales (Tranquebar, 2010) – she has published short stories, poetry and two novellas. She has also written several play scripts that have been performed on stage, and a handful of short films that you can watch on YouTube. Zaidi is a keen observer of her own society, and her writing is guided by a strong sense of social justice: she has written about problems associated with India’s democratic process, its bureaucracy and infrastructure, and its cultural and caste prejudices. She is particularly interested in the unique hurdles faced by women. In her essay ‘Embodying Venus’, Zaidi creates a vivid picture of women and girls living and growing up in India today, where there is an entrenched culture of policing women that includes the ‘fetishisation and terrorisation’ of their bodies. ’Embodying Venus’ raises pertinent questions about what it means for women to be empowered and unashamed of their bodies.


I know that you grew up with literature in the home. Your grandfather was a famous Urdu writer, scholar of Indian literature and freedom fighter for India’s independence in the 1930s; your mother, a schoolteacher and principal, has also written poetry. At college in Rajasthan, you were already writing poetry and drama skits, which you followed with a degree and career in journalism. What has writing meant to your family? How did your family’s appreciation of liberal arts and values affect your own practice of writing?

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

More from author

Interview with Miguel Syjuco

InterviewBORN IN 1976, Miguel Syjuco is a freelance writer from Metro Manila in the Philippines. Since finishing a Bachelor of English literature in Manila,...

More from this edition

Burma untold

Picture Gallery 

This series of images is a part of a work in progress. To view more of the story, visit www.tammylaw.com.

Vigil

FictionON THE TWENTY-EIGHTH day of Po Lin’s vigil, her mother opened her eyes and said, ‘Don’t pour that cheap stuff on your father’s grave....

Uniquely unique, with reason

e-bookWITH CHINA’S RISE, understanding what the country’s political elite thinks is no longer a matter that concerns just China or China scholars. Chinese students...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.