Bernardine Evaristo on The Process of Writing and Getting Published | Louisiana Channel

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2022
  • “I think there has never been a better time for Black writers or writers of color to get published.” Join Booker Prize-winner Bernardine Evaristo when she shares her thoughts on developing characters, why writer's block doesn’t exist and getting published as a Black writer.
    Bernardine Evaristo comes from a background in theatre, which is also where she first started to write. However, what she wrote had a strong, poetic quality: “For a long time, I didn’t understand why my natural voice as a writer was poetry.” Growing up in the Catholic Church meant being familiarized with and influenced by the Bible from a very young age. “Anybody who knows anything about the Catholic church or even who has read the Bible knows it’s incredibly poetic. So, I absorbed that. Poetry was absorbed into me through osmoses from my very early life.” It was also books of poetry that were the first Evaristo got published. It took her many years to develop from poetry to novels. The first attempt was “terrible writing,” according to Evaristo herself. She eventually found her way by mixing different literary forms, verse novels and prose novels.
    “My process to capture the voices in my characters and my poetic style and prose style changes from book to book. Because I began as a poet, I really pay attention to how language sounds,” Bernardine Evaristo explains and continues: “It’s about capturing the voice of an individual character which I have to hear in my head. But sometimes the character emerges through the act of writing.” Writing comes naturally to her. Evaristo prints out and redrafts all the time: “I’m not the kind of writer who begins at the beginning of the novel and finishes it and then redrafts the whole thing. I redraft every sentence, every word, and every paragraph. Each time I am tweaking it.” When it comes to the subject of the feared writer’s block, Evaristo does not “believe in the concept,” she says and elaborates: “I think to name something as writer's block is kind of misleading. Because there is something going on behind that, if you’re not able to write what’s going on, is it a lack of confidence? Is it that if you’re writing a novel, maybe you are new to novel writing, and it’s not structured in such a way that the architecture is not holding up the story? Should you be working on something else?”
    In 2019 Bernadine Evaristo published the book ‘Girl, Woman, Other’ which would later be awarded the Booker Prize. “I knew I wanted to expand the representation of Black women in fiction.” While writing the book, Evaristo witnessed a changing world around her. Suddenly the world was focused on the MeToo, and the Black Lives Matter movement, which ended up making the book more topical than intended. “The whole reason to write the book was just to create a novel that is peopled by Black women because there aren’t many of us writing these books, and so we are not really very present in the British literature.” The book resonated with the zeitgeist and became an instant bestseller. “Suddenly, I was taken extremely seriously. I was given this kind of gravitas which had not been the case before. And as a writer who’s also an activist, who speaks up and speaks out, people were listening to me,” she says and points out that for a long time, the publishing industry would claim that there was no market for books by Black British writers. “The landscape today is very different. I think there has never been a better time for Black writers to get published or writers of color,” Evaristo explains and continues: “As a writer, I never gave up.”
    Bernardine Evaristo (b. 1963) is a British writer, critic, poet, and playwriter. She has written ten books and numerous texts that span many genres. Her writing and projects are based on her interest in the African diaspora. Her novel ‘Girl, Woman, Other’ won the Booker Prize in 2019. She was the first Black woman and Black British person to win it in its fifty-year history. Evaristo has won other prizes, including the British Book Award’s Fiction Book of the Year & Author of the Year and the Indie Book Award for Fiction. Her books have been translated into more than 40 languages.
    Bernardine Evaristo was interviewed by Tonny Vorm during the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in August 2022.
    Camera: David Schweiger
    Edited by: Signe Boe Pedersen
    Produced by: Christian Lund
    Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2021
    Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet, C.L. Davids Fond og Samling, and Fritz Hansen.
    #Literature #Writer #BernardineEvaristo
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 14

  • @josepha133
    @josepha133 Рік тому +8

    This couldn't be better timing, I'm currently writing my dissertation on Girl, Woman, Other. And as an aspiring writer it's really inspiring to hear how she finally got to reap the fruits of her work after having put in forty years…

  • @JoyceDade
    @JoyceDade Рік тому +10

    @LouisianaChannel : A great big shout out of love and gratitude for your channel; and for presenting so many extraordinary, exciting, and wonderful interviews with American and global creatives who are changing the landscape of creativity, and authentic value in the world of arts and letters. 👑🎨🎭🔥💐💐🙏✍🥂🥂🍾🍾👑

  • @yonathanasefaw9001
    @yonathanasefaw9001 Рік тому +4

    Well done LC! I have a new author to watch out for! Her work seems intriguing, I will most likely purchase a copy of Girl, Woman, Other!

  • @omaryohan7694
    @omaryohan7694 Рік тому +2

    Really eye opening career and perspective, thank you!

  • @susannecromwell3461
    @susannecromwell3461 Рік тому +4

    Fantastisk inspiration

  • @JoyceDade
    @JoyceDade Рік тому +4

    @BernadineEvaristo : A great, tremendous pleasure, and surprise it is to watch this video. Blessed congratulations on the youthfulness of you attitude, and your appearance on the global literary landscape to such an astonishing degree. No matter how busy my schedule, I must find time to read, or hear your audio books read to me. I am especially excited to know you write poetry and combine prose on the page and in the reader's mind. Your playwriting as well. You are now on my growing list of "Super-Heroes and Super-Sheroes; thank you for the great contributions you are making. Congratulations on your Best Seller breakthrough, and for speaking the truth of what it is to be a positive thinker, while advancing the worthiness of being a literary artist and poet. Thank you for this marvelous interview as well. You are the writer I almost dared not dream existed, who is a poet at heart, and one who writes for the theatre. The UA-cam algorithm, once again, I owe so much to you for sending this Booker Prize winning author my way! Oh, and by the way, if I may ask. What is the beauty secret you might share, of looking half your age? Reading into Plato's Symposium on Love just today, I am seeing you as a modern day DIOTIMA. The extraordinary superwoman Plato wrote about in his discourse I refer to here. Perhaps you are such an extraordinary, even otherworldly woman of high caliber (as she is detailed in the Symposium on Love), alive and living among us today. A thousand thanks and blessings to you, Bernadine! 🍾🍾🍾🥂🥂🥂👁👁💐💐💐🌹🌹🌹🍀🍀🍀🙏🙏

  • @ArtHistoryProfessor
    @ArtHistoryProfessor Рік тому +4

    Brilliant author.

  • @aboveballetcompany-abc5436
    @aboveballetcompany-abc5436 Рік тому +2

    Beautiful!

  • @mosca3289
    @mosca3289 Рік тому +2

    Mr. Loverman. Yeah!

  • @RaheimFender
    @RaheimFender Рік тому +2

    Wow! I started out in Theatre as well and I always leaned toward poetry and I’ve stuck with it! ❤ I recently received my sixth book which is a verse novel 🤣🫣

  • @kennyholm7384
    @kennyholm7384 Рік тому +2

    ❤️

  • @kamalpreetsingh1686
    @kamalpreetsingh1686 Рік тому

    Sally Ronnie was introduced on this channel and I bought her novel which was deadly trash.....