Friday, August 8, 2003

Sri Lanka-born Poet Wins Prestigious PEN Fellowship 


By a Staff Reporter

SAN FRANCISCO - PEN U.S.A., the American chapter of the international literary organization established by George Bernard Shaw in 1921, has awarded the Rosenthal Fellowship to a South Asian for the first time in its history. The award was presented to Pireeni Sundaralingam, a Sri Lankan-born Tamil currently resident in San Francisco. She performed Aug. 3 at Desi Art in the Diaspora, in Oakland, Calif., and recently at Artwallah in Los Angeles.

Sundaralingam often performs her poetry to the accompaniment of Colm O'Riain's haunting violin.

It has been a memorable year for the young Oxford-educated Tamil poet: in February, she was flown to London to feature alongside Salman Rushdie, Bapsi Sidwa, Kaiser Hoque and a host of other literary luminaries in the English National Theatre's celebration of South Asian writers. In early spring, her poetry was selected for several anthologies (including "So Luminous the Wildflowers: An Anthology of Californian Poets) and she was invited to co-edit "Writing the Lines of Our Hands," the first anthology of South Asian Poetry in America.

Later this year, Sundaralingam will be featured in a special issue on "America's Emerging Writers" to be published by Ploughshares, one of the top literary journals in the United States.

Born in Sri Lanka and educated in Great Britain, Sundaralingam's poetry examines the many-facted aspects of exile, and the ways in which community may be found within the situation of exile. The poems in her forthcoming first collection (Margin Lands) move from fragmented personal memories of censorship and genocide in Sri Lanka to universal images of immigration and repatriation in the West.

To hear sound samples or to read a selection of Sundaralingam's work, visit www.wordandviolin.com.