JLF Valladolid 2026: How Spain Became Jaipur Literature Festival’s European Cultural Hub

From bilingual literary sessions to wine trails, heritage walks and cultural diplomacy, JLF Valladolid Spain 2026 reflects how the Jaipur Literature Festival has evolved into a wider India-Spain cultural exchange platform

Supplied
Supplied : A performance at JLF Valladolid, Spain, from an earlier edition

When the Jaipur Literature Festival expanded into Spain in 2023, it was seen largely as another international stop for a globally recognised literary brand. Three editions later, JLF Valladolid, Spain, is increasingly part of a wider cultural conversation between India and Spain—one that stretches beyond publishing into tourism, heritage, and diplomacy.

The 2026 edition of the festival, scheduled from June 11 to 14 across Madrid and Valladolid, arrives at a symbolic moment. Next year marks 70 years of diplomatic relations between India and Spain, and cultural institutions on both sides are expected to anchor several collaborative programmes around the milestone.

A preview event for JLF Valladolid Spain 2026 was held at the Embassy of Spain in New Delhi on May 16, hosted by Spanish Ambassador Juan Antonio March Pujol. Organised by Teamwork Arts in collaboration with Casa de la India, the gathering brought together diplomats, writers and members of the literary community to highlight the growing cultural exchange between India and Spain. The evening opened with remarks by Francisco Capote, Chargé d’Affaires of Spain in India, Teamwork Arts Managing Director Sanjoy K. Roy, and author Namita Gokhale, co-founder and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival.

Beyond Books: How JLF Spain Has Evolved

Unlike the Jaipur Literature Festival in India, the Valladolid edition has gradually developed a distinctly European identity. Literary panels remain central, but the format increasingly leans into immersive cultural programming—heritage walks, wine trails, live music and regional gastronomy now sit alongside conversations on literature, politics and history.

That evolution reflects Valladolid itself. Located about an hour from Madrid by train, the city is known for its literary history, medieval architecture, and wine-producing regions. It is also home to Casa de la India, one of Europe’s most prominent Indian cultural centres, which has played a key role in shaping the festival’s cross-cultural focus.

Valladolid was once the capital of Spain
Valladolid was once the capital of Spain Photo: Author
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The 2026 programme is expected to open in Madrid at the IE School of Arts & Humanities before shifting to Valladolid’s public and heritage venues. Organisers have also planned a closing event at the 12th-century Abadía Retuerta monastery-hotel in the Castilla y León region, known for its vineyards and Michelin-recognised dining experiences.

Sanjoy Roy, MD, Teamwork Arts, told Outlook Traveller that the decision to launch a JLF edition in Spain grew out of the organisation’s long-standing cultural engagement with the country through collaborations in film, food, and performing arts since the establishment of Casa de la India in Valladolid in the late 1990s.

He noted that Spanish literature already enjoys familiarity among Indian readers through translations, particularly in states such as Kerala and West Bengal, making Spain a natural choice for JLF’s first major edition in a non-English-speaking country.

“Who doesn’t know ‘Don Quixote’ and ‘Cervantes’?” Roy said, adding that Valladolid emerged as the obvious host city because of its strong institutional support and cultural openness.

Sanjoy K Roy
Sanjoy K Roy Photo: Supplied
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According to Roy, the festival has evolved into a city-wide cultural event in Valladolid, with public parks, fountains and community spaces becoming part of the celebrations. “The whole city celebrates it,” he said. “Every aspect of the city celebrates India and the idea of literature.”

Roy also described JLF Valladolid as an important gateway for literary exchange between India and the Spanish-speaking world, particularly in facilitating connections with writers, publishers and translators from Spain and Latin America.

“This is the way we can access Spanish writing,” he said, adding that the festival has encouraged growing conversations around translating Indian literature into Spanish and bringing more Spanish-language works to Indian readers.

Literature Meets Cultural Diplomacy

The timing of the festival is significant. Spain and India have been steadily deepening cultural and economic ties over the past decade, with tourism, education, and creative industries becoming areas of growing collaboration.

Against that backdrop, JLF Valladolid is increasingly functioning as a soft diplomacy platform as much as a literary festival. The event routinely brings together Spanish and Indian authors, translators, diplomats, academics, and artists for bilingual discussions, with simultaneous translation helping broaden participation in a country where English-language literary festivals remain relatively niche.

A glimpse from JLF Spain 2025
A glimpse from JLF Spain 2025 Photo: Supplied
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The 2026 line-up announced so far includes Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kailash Satyarthi, historian William Dalrymple, poet-novelist Jeet Thayil, Mexican writer Jorge Volpi and Spanish author Juan Manuel de Prada, among others. The programming is expected to span themes including literature, democracy, identity, migration, and contemporary politics.

The International Expansion Of JLF

JLF Valladolid also reflects the broader international ambitions of the Jaipur Literature Festival, which now hosts editions in the UK, the US, and Europe. But the Spanish edition occupies a unique position within that network.

It remains the only JLF held in a non-English-speaking country and one of the few international literary festivals in Europe built equally around translation and multilingual exchange. That bilingual approach has helped the festival attract audiences beyond the Indian diaspora and literary circuit.

The tapas bar La Casa del Abuelo in Madrid
The tapas bar La Casa del Abuelo in Madrid Photo: Shutterstock
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Over the past few years, the event has also become intertwined with regional tourism promotion in Castilla y León, with curated experiences built around local food traditions, music and wine culture. Morning concerts, heritage tours and culinary events have become recurring features alongside literary discussions.

As preparations begin for the 2026 edition, JLF Valladolid appears to be positioning itself less as an overseas extension of Jaipur and more as a cultural meeting point shaped equally by India and Spain.

FAQs

1. What is JLF Valladolid Spain 2026?

JLF Valladolid Spain 2026 is the European edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival, featuring literary discussions, cultural events, heritage experiences, and bilingual programming across Madrid and Valladolid.

2. When will JLF Valladolid 2026 take place?

The festival is scheduled from June 11 to 14, 2026, across Madrid and Valladolid in Spain.

3. Why is Valladolid important for the Jaipur Literature Festival?

Valladolid is home to Casa de la India, one of Europe’s leading Indian cultural centres, and has become a key hub for India-Spain literary and cultural exchange.

4. What makes JLF Spain different from the Jaipur edition in India?

JLF Spain combines literature with heritage walks, gastronomy, wine tourism, music, and multilingual cultural programming tailored to a European audience.

5. Which writers and speakers are expected at JLF Valladolid 2026?

The announced line-up includes figures such as Kailash Satyarthi, William Dalrymple, Jeet Thayil, Jorge Volpi, and Juan Manuel de Prada.

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