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prada handbags 2012 refer to his novelistic profession as a search for truth. At an academic conference in New Delhi in 2002 shortly after he had received the acknowledgment of the Nobel Committee, he made headlines by interrupting another speaker from his panel. According to an account by Fiachra Gibbons writing in the British newspaper Guardian:Sir Vidia, in the land of his ancestors to celebrate his Nobel prize for literature, cut loose after listening to Shashi Deshpande and Nayantara Sehgal a niece of Nehru, India's first prime minister debate how gender oppression had affected their work.As the pair moved on to talk about the harmful influence of English on Indian literature, Naipaul's famously short fuse exploded: "Banality irritates me. My life is short. I can't listen to banality. This thing about colonialism, this thing about gender oppression, the very word oppression wearies me." 22 February 2002 online To describe Sir Vidia as having a "short fuse" is, of course, a prejudicial way of stating it, for Naipaul might well be studiously reticent and the provocation of him annoyingly inveterate and personal. A half century had passed, Naipaul added, pressing to Deshpande and Sehgal: "What colonialism are you talking about?" Naipaul's fame as a publicly prominent intellectual given to explosions the choice of words belongs to Gibbons is really about his refusal to submit to what has become a ritual requirement of belletristic and departmental discourse. One could even impute to Gibbons a subtle invocation of caste. Sehgal, she inserts, is "a niece of Nehru, India's first prime minister," the implication being that, as she is such, it constitutes l majest to impugn her. That the Nobel Committee had acclaimed Naipaul perhaps rankled his two rivals in the imbroglio, who could aspire neither to his audience nor to his now officially vetted artistic achievement. Deshpande's frosty codicil, after Vikram Seth had calmed the waters, suggests an attempt to retaliate rhetorically against Naipaul's unfettered judgment: "When I was listening to Sir Vidia's talk about the anguish of the exile, I was really cool about it." Sir Vidia, in other words, is just as banal as I. In her round about