2006 The 2006 inaugural Jaipur Literature Festival featured 18 writers, including
Hari Kunzru,
William Dalrymple,
Shobhaa De and
Namita Gokhale and 14 others. It drew a crowd of about 100 attendees, some of whom "appeared to be tourists who had simply got lost", according to the event's co-director William Dalrymple.
2007 In 2007 the festival grew in size and featured
Salman Rushdie,
Kiran Desai,
Suketu Mehta,
Shashi Deshpande, and
William Dalrymple.
2008 In 2008 the
festival continued to expand with about 2,500 attendees and the following authors/speakers:
Ian McEwan,
Donna Tartt,
John Berendt,
Paul Zacharia,
Indra Sinha,
Uday Prakash,
Christopher Hampton,
Manil Suri,
Miranda Seymour 2009 The 2009 festival had about 12,000 attendees and over 140 authors/speakers including
Vikram Seth,
Pico Iyer,
Michael Ondaatje,
Simon Schama,
Tina Brown,
Hanif Kureishi,
Hari Kunzru,
Pankaj Mishra,
Tariq Ali,
Ahmed Rashid,
Patrick French,
Mohsin Hamid,
Mohammed Hanif,
Wendy Doniger,
Sunil Gangopadhyay,
Tarun Tejpal,
Sashi Tharoor,
U R Ananthmurthy,
Alka Saraogi,
Anuragh Mathur,
Ashok Vajpeyi,
Ashis Nandy,
Basharat Peer,
Charles Nicoll,
Christophe Jaffrelot,
Colin Thubron,
Daniyal Mueenuddin,
Geetanjali Shree,
Mukul Kesavan,
Musharraf Ali Farooqui, G. T. Narayana Rao,
Nikita Lalwani,
Paul Zacharia,
Pavan K Varma,
Rana Dasgupta,
S R Faruqui,
Tash Aw, Udayan Vajpeyi,
Farah Khan and
Sonia Faleiro, with music provided by DJ
Cheb i Sabbah,
Nitin Sawney,
Salman Ahmad (
Junoon Unplugged),
Shye Ben Tzur,
Rajasthan Roots,
Paban Das Baul and others in evening concerts over the five days. and 172 authors/speakers, including
Geoff Dyer,
Henry Louis Gates Jr.,
Jamaica Kincaid,
Niall Ferguson,
Vikram Chandra and
Hemant Shesh.
2011 The 2011 festival had 226 writers like
Hemant Shesh,
Prasoon Joshi,
Javed Akhtar,
Gulzar and
Candace Bushnell, the speakers included Nobel-winners
J. M. Coetzee and
Orhan Pamuk.
2012 cancelled his complete tour of India citing possible threats to his life as the primary reason The 2012 festival was held from 20 to 24 January, with the talk-show host
Oprah Winfrey and author
Salman Rushdie among the names announced in advance. Rushdie later cancelled, and indeed cancelled his complete tour of India, citing possible threats to his life as the primary reason. Rushdie investigated police reports that
hitmen had been hired to
assassinate him and implied that the police might have exaggerated the potential danger. Kunzru later wrote, "Our intention was not to offend anyone's religious sensibilities, but to give a voice to a writer who had been silenced by a death threat". A proposed video link session between Rushdie and the Jaipur Literature Festival ran into difficulty after the government pressured the festival to stop it. Rushdie expressed disappointment "on behalf of India", "an India in which religious extremists can prevent free expression of ideas at a literary festival, in which the politicians are too, let's say, in bed with those groups...for narrow electoral reasons, in which the police forces are unable to secure venues against demonstrators even when they know the demonstration is on its way". The Chairman of the Press Council of India and former judge of the Supreme Court
Markandey Katju said that although he was "not in favour of religious
obscurantism", he found Rushdie a "poor" and "substandard writer" and the focus on him detracting from more fundamental issues of "colonial inferiority complex" among educated Indians and what a literary mission could be about. Scottish novelist
Allan Massie wrote, "The response to words should be words and words in the form of argument, not abuse".
Peter Florence, Director,
Hay Festivals, said the whole affair showed the importance of book festivals. On 28 January, Rushdie responded to
Chetan Bhagat via
Twitter after the popular writer taunted him and his work.
2015 The 2015 festival was scheduled from 21 to 25 January. Earlier that year it had been reported that the tentative list of speakers this season would number 181, including
V. S. Naipaul,
Chetan Bhagat and
Amish Tripathi. The festival also expanded beyond the four walls of Diggi Palace, holding more than 300 events in 10 venues, including the Music Stage at Clarks Amer, the Jaipur BookMark at Narain Niwas, and two special sessions at
Amer Fort and
Hawa Mahal to focus on heritage and culture, supported by
Rajasthan Tourism. Notable sessions of the festival in 2015 included two packed sessions each for Nobel Laureate Sir V. S. Naipaul and former
President of India, Dr
APJ Abdul Kalam, who drew a 5,000-strong crowd to the Front Lawns of Diggi Palace.
2016 The Jaipur Lit Fest 2016 began at the Diggi Palace as scheduled, with
Gair dance from
Barmer, Rajasthan accompanied by a crowd that had been waiting since early morning. The Chief Minister,
Vasundhara Raje, inaugurated the festival by lighting the ceremonial lamp, and reminisced about her childhood memories of reading books. In this year, the Jaipur Literature Festival entered into the
Limca Book of Records.
2017 Notable speakers at the Jaipur Literature Festival 2017 included writers
Shashi Tharoor and
Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
2018 The 2018 Jaipur Literature Festival was organised from 25 to 29 January at the
Diggi Palace in
Jaipur. The biggest yet, the event saw participation from more than 380 people from across the world, who represented over 20 international and 15 Indian languages. The participants included authors, novelists, essayists, actors, politicians, musicians, lyricists, film directors, historians, scientists, broadcasters, businesspersons, poets, translators, marketers, journalists, publishers, playwrights, critics, academics, civil servants, dancers, therapists and activists. Among the prominent speakers at the 2018 edition were
Helen Fielding,
Hamid Karzai,
Shashi Tharoor,
Anurag Kashyap,
Chetan Bhagat,
Chitra Mudgal,
Kota Neelima,
Nayantara Sahgal,
Prasoon Joshi,
Rajdeep Sardesai,
Roly Keating,
Tom Stoppard,
Sagarika Ghose,
Sharmila Tagore,
Sheila Dikshit,
Shobha De,
Soha Ali Khan,
Vinod Dua,
Vir Sanghvi and
Vishal Bhardwaj. Apart from lectures, book discussions, debates, book readings and book launches, the 2018 Jaipur Literature Festival also featured a music stage, headlined by
Kailash Kher, and a theatrical dance performance at
Hawa Mahal.
2019 The Jaipur literature festival 2019 was organised in royal
Diggi palace Jaipur from 24 to 28 January 2019. Around 300 speakers were expected to visit Jaipur literature festival 2018–2019, including prominent writers such as
Shobha de (known for her bold writing style),
Anuradha Roy (Indian novelist, journalist),
Chitra Banerjee (best known for her novel The palace of illusions). Some of the speakers including
Manisha Koirala (Indian actress),
Mithali raj (Indian women cricket team captain) would be the attraction of the festival who would talk about the journey and the challenges of their life. Here are few more names of Jaipur literature festival 2018–2019 are: •
Jon Lee Anderson (American biographer, author investigative reporter) •
Juergen Boos (CEO of the Frankfurt Book Fair) •
Marc Quinn(British visual artist) •
Markus Zusak (international bestselling author of
The Book Thief) •
Molly Crabapple American Writer •
N. S. Madhavan (Malayalam fiction-writer and columnist) •
Narendra Kohli (dramatist and comedian) •
NoViolet Bulawayo Zimbabwean author •
Perumal Murugan (Tamil author and literary speaker) •
Priyamvada Natarajan (astronomer and professor at Yale) •
Andre Aciman (author, memoirist, professor, known for the novel
Call Me By Your Name)
2020 The Jaipur Literature Festival 2020 took place at the royal
Diggi Palace from 23 to 27 January 2020. Around 300 speakers attended the Festival.
2021 The Jaipur Literature Festival 2021 took place Virtual edition from 19 to 28 February 2021. Around 200 speakers attended the Festival.
2022 The 2022 edition of the festival took place between 28 January and 1 February. The Festival hosted 250
speakers,
writers, thinkers, politicians, journalists and popular cultural icons representing 21 Indian and international languages as well as major awards such as the
Nobel, the
Booker Prize, the
Pulitzer Prize and the
Sahitya Akademi Award. • For the first time, Diggi Palace was not the primary venue. • For the first time, the festival was not be completely free. • Notable speakers include
Nobel Prize winner,
Abdulrazak Gurnah,
Booker Prize winner,
Damon Galgut, Indian writers
Vikram Sampath,
Shashi Tharoor, Saket Suman and
Gurmehar Kaur. == Format and themes ==