The Ongoing Struggle to Make Women’s Voices Heard.
Do we still need magazines, anthologies, prizes, and publishers’ lists devoted solely to women writers? For a start, have recent electoral events not shown that women now have access to the highest position of power in the world, that the glass ceiling . . . etc.? Don’t we know that women have been winning the Nobel Prize, the Pulitzer, the Booker in increasing numbers? Can we not just relax and read people and put all this gender debate, at least as far as something as relatively benign as literature is concerned, behind us?
No. And the reason why we cannot may lie, precisely, with the readers who ask themselves these questions.
When the then-“Orange” Prize for Women (now the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction) was created in 1996 in the UK, there were dissenting voices, including that of A. S. Byatt, who maintained that the prize was sexist, defeating its very purpose by ghettoizing women in a category of literature that was both different and exclusive. This was not the intention of the prize’s founders, which was rather to redress a situation—and call attention to it: namely, that women were woefully and systematically underrepresented on the shortlists of literary prizes. The Stella Prize was similarly created in Australia in 2013 in response to the all-male shortlist two years earlier for the country’s leading literary prize, the Miles Franklin (ironically named for one of Australia’s pioneering women authors). If Australia, the second major country on the planet to grant women the right to vote, had a “literary gender problem” as recently as 2011, what does this mean for the status of women writers both in the Anglo-Saxon world and globally?
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Denne historien er fra November 2016-utgaven av World Literature Today.
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Our Revenge Will Be the Laughter of Our Children
What is it about the revolutionary that draws our fascinated attention? Whether one calls it the North of Ireland or Northern Ireland, the Troubles continue to haunt the land and those who lived through them.
Turtles
In a field near the Gaza Strip, a missile strike, visions, and onlookers searching for an explanation.
Surviving and Subverting the Totalitarian State: A Tribute to Ismail Kadareby Kapka Kassabova
As part of the ceremony honoring Kadare as the 2020 laureate—with participants logging in from dozens of countries around the world— Kadare’s nominating juror, Kapka Kassabova, offered a video tribute from her home in Scotland.
Dead Storms and Literature's New Horizon: The 2020 Neustadt Prize Lecture
During the Neustadt Prize ceremony on October 21, 2020, David Bellos read the English language version of Kadare’s prize lecture to a worldwide Zoom audience.
Ismail Kadare: Winner of the 2020 Neustadt International Prize for Literature
Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, World Literature Today presented the 2020 Neustadt Festival 100 percent online. In the lead-up to the festival, U.S. Ambassador Yuri Kim officially presented the award to Kadare at a ceremony in Tirana in late August, attended by members of Kadare’s family; Elva Margariti, the Albanian minister of culture; and Besiana Kadare, Albania’s ambassador to the United Nations.
How to Adopt a Cat
Hoping battles knowing in this three-act seduction (spoiler alert: there’s a cat in the story).
Chicken Soup: The Story of a Jewish Family
Chickens, from Bessarabia to New York City, provide a generational through-line in these four vignettes.
Awl
“Awl” is from a series titled “Words I Did Not Understand.” Through memory—“the first screen of nostalgia”—and language, a writer pieces together her story of home.
Apocalyptic Scenarios and Inner Worlds
A Conversation with Gloria Susana Esquivel
Marie's Proof of Love
People believe, Marie thinks, even when there’s no proof. You believe because you imagine. But is imagination enough to live by?