The 1969 Neustadt Prize Charter

The Once Over The Editors of WLT Fifty years ago this week, Books Abroad editor Ivar Ivask traveled to Menton, Switzerland, to announce the establishment of the Books Abroad International Prize for Literature, the forerunner of the Neustadt Prize, at the PEN International Congress. (Arthur Miller, who presided over the congress, had been elected the first American president of PEN International in 1965.) Throughout 2020, World Literature Today will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the prize, which was first awarded to Giuseppe Ungaretti in March 1970. Formal ceremonies marking the anniversary are scheduled to take place at the fall 2020 Neustadt Festival, which will feature the launch of Dispatches from the Republic of Letters: Celebrating Fifty Years of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, an anthology that gathers the keynote talks by all twenty-five laureates from Ungaretti to Edwidge Danticat, plus the accompanying encomium by the respective jurors who nominated them.   Preamble Since its inception, Books Abroad has manifested a lively concern for the annual choices made by the Swedish Academy for that most respected of writing awards, the Nobel Prize for Literature. Under the original editorial aegis of Roy Temple House, we find in the quarterly such critical symposia as “Prodding the Nobel Prize Committee” (1932), “Nominations for the Nobel Prize for Literature” (1935), and “Books Abroad’s Super-Nobel... Continue reading at 'World Literature Today'

[ World Literature Today | 2019-09-13 14:34:18 UTC ]

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