The government has once again made the right socially acceptable.
I think isolation is one of the greatest problems, an ever-growing obstacle to political solidarity.
That started very early on, and then I guess I tried to close up this fissure with something that was accessible to me, and all I had was writing.
Eroding solidarity paradoxically makes a society more susceptible to the construction of substitute collectives and fascisms of all kinds.
It could draw from a greater reservoir of freedom. The irony could develop an even greater ease.
I have the feeling it will influence my future writing to the extent that without any material worries I could develop a greater ease, even lightheartedness, in my writing.
I do not want to have the feeling of writing "for eternity," so to speak.
Literature that keeps employing new linguistic and formal modes of expression to draft a panorama of society as a whole while at the same time exposing it, tearing the masks from its face - for me that would be deserving of an award.
My training in music and composition then led me to a kind of musical language process in which, for example, the sound of the words I play with has to expose their true meaning against their will so to speak.
I do not fight against men, but against the system that is sexist.
As is said about most writers: on the one hand all I ever did from when I was a child was read, and I was a loner, which was furthered by my parents and my upbringing.
I would gladly do it but I am suffering from social phobia. I cannot manage being in a crowd of people.
My plays are made up of long monologues, which is similar to prose working with the language.
I cannot stand public attention, I just can`t. Of course, if I may I might write something instead.
The problem is that it is difficult to translate.
The system that judges the worth of women, the system that judges a woman`s worth through her youthful body and looks and not for what she does.