![]() ![]() It’s, you know, at a time when media is in such crisis, not just structurally but conceptually, I think. It should be about you and what amazing work you’ve done for so many years, you know, for 25 years, how to hold the line. It’s such a peculiar time.īut what are two decades, you know? And really, this shouldn’t be about me. ![]() It’s so strange, isn’t it? So intimate in one’s home, and yet so disembodied. Well, I really wish I were in the studio, to begin with.ĪRUNDHATI ROY: I wish you were at home with me. NERMEEN SHAIKH: We really wish you were here in studio with us. NERMEEN SHAIKH: Hello, Arundhati, and welcome back to the show. ![]() Can you just talk about - well, first of all, hello. I think of the Iraq War and you coming to the United States and your speaking around the world against it. But you were on Democracy Now! for the first time like 20 years ago, two decades ago, and then, from then on, all the landmark moments. It’s like that’s what you ascend, your books, as you, I guess, travel the world at home right now through the pandemic. We see the spiral bookshelves behind you. Democracy Now!’s Nermeen Shaikh and I just interviewed Arundhati from her home in New Delhi.ĪMY GOODMAN: Arundhati, it’s so amazing for Nermeen and I to be talking to you, coming really into your home in New Delhi. AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now! I’m Amy Goodman, as we turn to the acclaimed writer and activist Arundhati Roy. ![]()
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