Speaker
Iryna Shuvalova
Speaker
Andrey Kurkov
Saturday 18 May, 2024
11:00 - 18:30
British Library Pigott Theatre
96 Euston Road, NW1 2DB
London
NW1 2DB
The Ukrainian Institute London — together with European Union National Institutes of Culture (EUNIC) London, the European Literature Network — presents the European Writers’ Festival, featuring coversations with Iryna Shuvalova and Andrey Kurkov.
Thirty leading and emerging writers respond to this year’s theme of Transformation, because change and its challenges are all around us. As we in Europe are again shaken to the core by war and division, the European Writers’ Festival hopes to demonstrate that community, debate, entertainment, and storytelling can unite us in creating hope and positive transformation.
Transformation denotes change in our lives or circumstances. It can be extreme or negative, or create magic or joy. All our festival writers have confronted change, maybe in the languages they use, or in the country they call home, sometimes driven out by conflict, or by attacks on their rights. For some, they may have changed the discipline or genre they work in. For others, their motivation may be love, or fun, or simply a desire to travel.
The European Writers’ Festival provides a platform for writers to discuss, and read from, their latest work in English translation, and together show what transformation means to them. This is a fantastic opportunity to meet a whole host of great European writers all in one place and all over one weekend.
Organised by the European Union National Institutes of Culture (EUNIC) London in partnership with the European Literature Network and the British Library, and with the support of the Delegation of the European Union to the United Kingdom and the European Parliament Liaison Office in the United Kingdom.
PROGRAMME
11:00 – 12:15
Panel 1 - Europe Transformed
An inter-generational panel of great storytellers from north, south, east and west kicks off the festival by discussing how Europe and storytelling have changed since the first post-Cold War generation up to today.
With Milena Michiko Flašar (Austria), Jógvan Isaksen (Faroes), Nora Ikstena (Latvia) and Elisa Victoria (Spain).
Chair: Rosie Goldsmith
12:45 – 14:00
Panel 2 - Changing Gears
Very few of our festival authors work and write in one genre, so does genre matter? Can you be good at everything? Meet the former bank manager who writes fiction, the philosopher writing on law, the academic-broadcaster and the musician-poet; among the many authors who switch jobs and genres, proving that changing gears only boosts creativity.
With Laurent De Sutter (Belgium Wbi), Kristiina Ehin (Estonia), Emma Dabiri (Ireland) and Selçuk Altun (Turkey).
Chair: Toby Lichtig
In partnership with The Times Literary Supplement.
14:30 – 15.45
Panel 3 - Transformation Through Translation
How has the art of translation – and attitudes to translation - changed in europe? Does the plethora of grants and prizes help? All our festival writers are translated, several lead double lives as translators. What does that mean for their own writing? And how do they judge the status of translation across europe and the uk?
With Joanna Elmy (Bulgaria), Jordi Larios (Catalonia), Simone Atangana Bekono (Netherlands) and Ioana Pârvulescu (Romania).
Chair: Will Forrester
In Partnership With English PEN
16:15 – 17:30
Panel 4 - Change and Conflict
Our festival writers come from all over the world. What is the impact of war, conflict and displacement on how they live, think and write? How does conflict and geography influence their sense of belonging and identity? Can they ever forget trauma and loss or is the shadow of war and conflict always present, always part of their creative process?
With Pajtim Statovci (Finland), Igiaba Scego (Italy) and Iryna Shuvalova (Ukraine).
Chair: Uta Staiger
(In partnership with University College London)
18:00 – 18:45
Special guest Andrey Kurkov
In conversation with Luke Harding
Prize-winning Ukrainian novelist Andrey Kurkov is also a prominent commentator and journalist. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion he has travelled the world campaigning to raise support for Ukraine. He has also continued to write, and his several fine books of reportage, including Our Daily War (pub. July 2024), sit alongside his witty novels, and the first in a series of historical crime novels, The Silver Bone: The Kyiv Mysteries, out now. He discusses writing and war with the Guardian’s senior international correspondent and author of Invasion, Luke Harding.
in partnership with Guardian Europe.
Speaker
Iryna Shuvalova
Speaker
Andrey Kurkov