The White Tiger author Aravind Adiga Columbia College Salutorian 1997

<p>Another very impressive Columbian: [Aravind</a> Adiga - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aravind_Adiga]Aravind”>Aravind Adiga - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>Biography
[edit] Early life and education</p>

<p>Aravind Adiga was born in Madras (now Chennai) on the 23rd of October, 1974 to Dr. K. Madhava Adiga and Usha Adiga, Kannadigas both of whom hailed from Mangalore. His paternal grandfather was Late K. Suryanarayana Adiga, former chairman of Karnataka bank.[3][4] He grew up in Mangalore and studied at Canara High School, then at St. Aloysius High School, where he completed his SSLC in 1990. He secured first rank in the state in SSLC[4][5]. After emigrating to Sydney, Australia, with his family, he studied at James Ruse Agricultural High School. **He studied English literature at Columbia College, Columbia University in New York, where he studied with Simon Schama and graduated as salutatorian in 1997.[6] **He also studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, where one of his tutors was Hermione Lee.
[edit] Career</p>

<p>Adiga began his journalistic career as a financial journalist, interning at the Financial Times. With pieces published in the Financial Times and Money, he covered the stock market and investment, interviewing, among others, Donald Trump. His review of previous Booker Prize winner Peter Carey’s book, Oscar and Lucinda, appeared in The Second Circle, an online literary review.[7] He was subsequently hired by TIME, where he remained a South Asia correspondent for three years before going freelance.[8] During his freelance period, he wrote The White Tiger. He currently lives in Mumbai, India.[9]
[edit] Booker Prize</p>

<p>**Aravind Adiga’s debut novel, The White Tiger, won the 2008 Booker Prize. **He is the fourth Indian-born author to win the prize, after Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy and Kiran Desai. (V. S. Naipaul, another winner, is of Indian origin, but is not an India citizen). The five other authors on the shortlist included one other Indian writer (Amitav Ghosh) and another first-time writer (Steve Toltz).[10] The novel studies the contrast between India’s rise as a modern global economy and the lead character, Balram, who comes from crushing rural poverty.[11]
“ At a time when India is going through great changes and, with China, is likely to inherit the world from the West, it is important that writers like me try to highlight the brutal injustices of society (Indian). That’s what I’m trying to do – it is not an attack on the country, it’s about the greater process of self-examination. „</p>

<p>He explained that “the criticism by writers like Flaubert, Balzac and Dickens of the 19th century helped England and France become better societies”.[12]</p>

<p>Shortly after winning the prize it was alleged that Adiga had, the previous year, sacked the agent that had secured his contract with Atlantic Books at the 2007 London Book Fair.[13] In April 2009 it was announced that the novel would be adapted into a feature film.[1]
[edit] Between the Assassinations</p>

<p>Adiga’s second book, Between the Assassinations, was released in India in November 2008 and in the US and UK in mid-2009[14]. The book features 12 interlinked short stories.[15]</p>

<p>[Columbia</a> College Today](<a href=“http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct_archive/jul04/cover.php]Columbia”>http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct_archive/jul04/cover.php)</p>

<p>Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner '78 delivered a 2004 Class Day address noteworthy for its impassioned call to action, its often self-deprecating humor and the rapid pace at which it was delivered. Kushner, whose work includes Angels in America, Homebody/Kabul and the Tony-nominated Caroline, or Change (currently on Broadway), told the graduates to “heal the world, and in the process, heal yourself, find the human in yourself by finding the citizen, the activist, the hero.” A streaming video of Class Day is available at [CCNMTL:</a> Commencement of the 250th Academic Year, May 2004](<a href=“http://www.ccnmtl.columbia.edu/projects/broadcast/commencement2004/]CCNMTL:”>Columbia CTL | Columbia Center for Teaching and Learning)</p>

<p>I’m not entirely sure what goes on at Class Day. I missed mine, I was on a picket line, so I’m sort of guessing as to what it is you want me to do this morning, apart from saying mazel tov, mazel tov, to all of you, and I do say it, mazel tov, mazel tov, it’s very exciting, a whole new bunch of Columbia College grads ready for the world, for the public conversation, for the work of repairing the world and repairing the public conversation, ready and able and, dare I say, eager to elevate the terms of the vast public debate in which you, American citizens, have a place prepared if you will claim it, you with your heads and hearts as full of fierce and fiery ideas fresh as they are ever likely to be, you who are not, by virtue of the superlative education you have received and its concomitant openness, engaged skepticism and reckless curiosity, you who are not the sort of grim careerists and ideologues and boodle-minded misadventurers who have seized the public debate and garbled it and reduced it to babble and run with it straight to the ninth circle of hell, dragging behind them the glory of our republic — you will rescue us from these dreadful, dreadful people, and we who are old are deeply grateful, and deeply proud, and, well, scared ****less, so mazel tov and get busy, your work awaits you, the world awaits you, the world is impatient for you, it made you for this purpose — and I don’t want to usurp the role your parents had in you, in getting you to this day, they too made you, the world made them so they could make you, and make the sacrifices they’ve made to get you to this point — my cherished B.A. in English literature from Columbia College, the entirety of the four most valuable and profitable years of my intellectual life, cost my parents less than one year of your time here, and I’m still paying student loans! — mazel tov to your parents, too, and by the way, if you haven’t gotten a graduation present yet, I have a musical running on Broadway and the number is 1-800-telecharge.</p>

<p>This is the Columbia dialectic, the New York City dialectic, all this spectacular symmetry, all this Euclidean geometry, all this rational griddage is a lattice entwined with floribund, uncontrolled and uncontrollable vines, shoots, roots, fruits, leaves, bees, busily cross-pollinating. This box, this machine, this is a crystal incubatory whence comes the fluid, the protean, the revolutionary, the non-mechanical, the non-commodified, the non-fetishized, the human. The air this morning is electric. You have fed, you have sated, you’re ready; and every step you take from this point on counts. This is your Code Orange: Life and its terrors, terrible and splendid, awaits. I know I speak for Jon, Warren and Justice Ruth — seek the truth; when you find it, speak the truth; interrogate mercilessly the truth you’ve found; and act, act, act. The world is hungry for you, the world has waited for you, the world has a place for you. Take it. Mazel tov. Change the world.</p>