Amit Chaudhuri on Post-Realist Fiction: Why Realism Is No Longer an Adequate Novelistic Form for Describing the World
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now.
In this episode, Andrew is joined by Amit Chaudhuri, author of Sojourn.
Amit Chaudhuri is a novelist, essayist, poet, and musician. A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, he lives in Calcutta and the United Kingdom. Sojourn is his eighth novel. Among his other works are three books of essays, the most recent of which is The Origins of Dislike; a study of D.H. Lawrence’s poetry; a book of short stories, Real Time; two works of non-fiction, the latest of which is Finding the Raga; and four volumes of poetry, including New and Selected Poems (New York Review Poets, 2023). Formerly a professor of contemporary literature at the University of East Anglia, Chaudhuri is now a professor of creative writing and the director of the Centre for the Creative and the Critical at Ashoka University, as well as the editor of www.literaryactivism.com. He has made several recordings of Indian classical and experimental music, and has been awarded the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction, and the Indian government’s Sahitya Akademi Award.
The China Paradox: Chris Schroeder on what America is Missing
That Was The Year in Tech: When Nothing Happened (except Everything, Everywhere, All at Once)
Morbid Symptoms Abundant: The Demolition of Pax Americana
From Munich to Mar-a-Lago: Is Trump Appeasing Putin in Ukraine?
Americans Actually Dislike Each Other: The Unsavory Truth Behind the Data
Cracked, Jagged and Leaderless: The World is No Longer Flat
2025: The AI Year Scripted by Gary Marcus in 2024
Justice is Round: Mussolini Couldn't Woo the World Cup, Neither Will Trump
Capitalism with a Nationalist Face: What Comes after Neoliberalism
Trump 0.2: The Failing Revolution
The Arrival of the American Future: Stephen Marche on the Crisis in 2025 United States
Bethanne's Best Books of 2025: Where Fact & Fiction Blur
2025 as the New 1925: Will Crypto be Trump's Teapot Dome Scandal?