Subsequently, writers Carmen Maria Machado and Monica Byrne tweeted they had also been subjected to inappropriate and aggressive behavior from Diaz.
In a statement Saturday, the Sydney Writers’ Festival said that following the allegations, Diaz had pulled out of his remaining scheduled appearances at the festival. It said organizers were committed to providing a “supportive and safe environment for our authors and audiences alike.”
The statement added: “In his recent New Yorker essay, Mr. Diaz wrote, ‘Eventually the past finds you.’ As for so many in positions of power, the moment to reckon with the consequences of past behavior has arrived.”
Diaz, who won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao,” told the New York Times through his literary agent that he takes responsibility for his past.
“That is the reason I made the decision to tell the truth of my (childhood) rape and its damaging aftermath,” he said. “This conversation is important and must continue.”
Clemmons told The Associated Press she believed she was far from being the only woman “exploited” by Diaz, a creative writing professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and said she could not bear to think of the others.
“Junot Diaz has made his behavior the burden of young women — particularly women of color — for far too long, enabled by his team and the institutions that employ him,” Clemmons wrote in a statement to the AP. “It is time for the burden of his bad behavior to be laid squarely at his feet, and for him to deal with the consequences of his actions.”
Neither Diaz nor MIT have responded to the AP’s requests for comment.
Diaz is also known for his books “Drown” and “This Is How You Lose Her.” NVG
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