Booker or not, Arundhati's still in the dock
Chindu Sreedharan
Arundhati Roy's just-won Booker prize doesn't make 
any difference to lawyers G M Idikkula and Sabu 
Thomas -- in the dock they want her, and in the dock, they say, they will see her sooner or later.
 
Idikkula and Thomas, for the uninitiated, are the Kerala 
lawyers who, three months ago, dragged 
Roy and her God Of Small Things to court for 'obscenity'. 
 
"The award doesn't affect the case in any way," Idikkula told Rediff On The NeT in a telephone interview from Pathanamthitta, Kerala, "Why should it? It came her way because of the sales."
 
Following their June 16 suit, the Pathanamthitta court had 
issued summons to Roy for August 15. However, 
the author had moved the Kerala high 
court on August 5 and got an interim stay order.
 
"We have already filed our reply to the high court and 
requested an early hearing," Idikkula said. 
 
The high court has now summoned the petitioners on 
Monday, October 20.
 
"Before the high court," says 
Idikkula, "Roy claimed her novel is not vulgar and 
that it was not submitted before the Pathanamthitta court. Which is not true -- the judge issued the summons after he went through the book."
 
The lawyers's claim is that the book -- especially the culminating chapter, wherein a sexual encounter between the upper caste heroine and her lower caste lover is described -- violates 'norms of decency.' 
 
"I have read the book three times. That chapter is unwanted. Roy wrote it to help the sales," Idikkula claimed, "She violates all decency 
with her description of oral sex. That's an unnatural phenomenon and unheard of in Kerala. It pollutes the minds of the people in this era of AIDS."
 
But aren't writers given more freedom than usual? And it isn't as 
if Roy's book is the only one that describes sex...
 
"But why should we care about all the obscene books on earth? This one is about Ayemenem, a town we all know well!" Idikkula said, "True, authors are usually granted more 
freedom and there is the Constitutional right of speech and expression. But this transcends all that. The speech and expression should be within the limit of decency."
 
"Also," he continued, "in most of the other books, it is 
normal sex that's described. Not abnormal sex like this!"
 
As of now, Idikkula is confident 
the case will go his way. He quotes 
a 1965 Supreme Court order -- regarding the distribution of D H Lawrence's famed Lady Chatterley's Lover -- in his support. 
 
"The ruling was made by a five-bench judge," he said, "It clearly mentions that the freedom of speech and expression should not be violative of IPC 292, the interpretation of which decides whether a book is obscene or not."
 
RELATED REPORTS: 
The god of small things comes bearing large gifts
 
'Arundhati did not write for money'
 
EARLIER FEATURES/INTERVIEWS/REPORTS: 
 Booker for Arundhati 
 And the winner is...
 
  'Ammu may have some similarities to me, but she is not Mary Roy'
 
  'Why would anyone abroad be interested in the book? I am not very well educated. So it's not as though I am like Salman Rushdie or Vikram Seth'
 
  Obscenity case slammed against Arundhati Roy
 
  Now, it is EMS's turn to slam Arundhati Roy!
 
EXTERNAL LINKS: 
  The New Masters
 
  Architect of Stories 
  How Amazon readers reacted to the book 
  The Salon Interview 
 
The Booker short-list 
 The Penelope Mortimer review 
 
 The Guardian reports 
 
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