Poetry Writing: As An Income Source

Poetry Writing: As An Income Source

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Updated on Aug 1, 2011 05:03 IST
The lectern was taken by a young man and as he recited his piece, young and old sat in rapt attention.

The small café on the first floor of a bakery was solemn only in its silence. Else, the smiles on the faces of the people filling up the tables told of a joy that one finds only among like-minded people. The lectern was taken by a young man and as he recited his piece, young and old sat in rapt attention. When the applause came, it was evident it was from the heart. Whoever said no one has time for poetry these days mustn’t have heard of this group.


Sure, it’s still popular among certain circles but does petry pay? “Reading your poetry to live audiences, private poetry readings, sale of published poetry, and reading at large Hindustani poetry platforms where it is tradition to pay invited poets,” are some of the ways to earn, says Amit Dahiyabadshah, the founder of DelhiPoetree, under whose aegis regular poetry reading sessions are held. He is also a well-known poet, who has collections such as Last Will of the Tiger, Bhiksha, American Face, Mitti, Chidiya and Script Arabic to his credit.


He adds that earnings can range from just travel expenses plus Rs 1,000, to Rs 2.5 lakh per reading. Poets have been known to make decent money by writing for cinema and television too, Javed Akhtar and Gulzar, for example.


However, such cases are few. Before gaining any amount of recognition, leave alone money, one has to first work very hard to establish oneself. Take it from Anindita Sengupta, whose collection of poems, City of Water, was published by Sahitya Akademi in February. “One sends (one’s poems) to credible journals and gets rejected. After enough rejections, there may be acceptance notes, which send one into deliriums of joy. At some point, there may be enough poems and enough reason to make a book,” she says.

Sengupta is among the fresh crop of poets to have achieved reasonable success. Before City of Water, her work was published in several journals, including Eclectica, NthPosition, Yellow Medicine Review, Origami Condom, Kritya, and Muse India. In 2008, she received the Toto Funds the Arts Award for Creative Writing, annually given to two writers under thirty in India.

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Anuj

2010-07-21 15:12:52

hv u guys taken it from shine.com

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