Grand Prix of Literary Associations (GPLA) | |
---|---|
Awarded for | International Awards for Authors and Literary Associations. Open to three Languages : English, Spanish and French |
Country | Cameroon |
Presented by | GPLA Team |
First awarded | 2013 |
The Grand Prix of Literary Associations (GPLA) were launched in 2013 in Cameroon, [1] in partnership with Brasseries du Cameroun and sponsorship by Castel Beer. [2]
The GPLA are defined as bilingual English-and-French literary prizes, some being awarded on the proposals of literary associations, especially in the Research and Belles-Lettres categories. [3]
The contest is open worldwide, both to authors and to literary associations that propose their works to the Jury. In the 2016 edition (GPLA 2016), more than one hundred works were submitted to the Jury by the endorsement of 69 associations from diverse countries across the world. [4] The shortlist was made up of nine works, three of them being from Cameroon, two from Nigeria, and four respectively from France / Morocco, Côte d'Ivoire, Senegal and Chad. [5]
Since the launch of the 2017 edition, books written in Spanish are also eligible to compete, [6] alongside those in French and English that were formerly exclusively allowed. Among the 124 works registered for the pre-selections of the GPLA 2017, 16 books came from Spanish-speaking countries, and one of them was eventually awarded in the Research category. [7]
The prize also welcomes books written in African languages. In the 2018 edition, a work written in Kikongo made the shortlist. [8]
According to the GPLA regulations, [9] the Research and Belles-Lettres categories are open to recent works, published in the 18 months before the launch of each edition. Books have to be commended to the Jury by literary associations, or any cultural club active in literature. The Presort Commission readers, some from the GPLA team and others from the two associations awarded in the previous edition, read the pre-selected works and submit a shortlist to the jury. The Jury consists of at least nine members, in charge of designating two winners, one from the Research category and the other from the Belles-Lettres. An author regularly competing for those prizes can be awarded three times, [10] but a laureate cannot apply in the edition following his consecration. Another rule of the GPLA is that books self-published by their own authors, without any publishing house label, are allowed; the only condition being that they should be endorsed by literary associations. [11]
In addition to the prizes awarded in the Research and Belles-Lettres categories, there is a Memory Grand Prix (Grand prix de la mémoire), [12] awarded posthumously to an icon of literature; a Grand Prix des Mécènes is awarded to honour a writer's entire body of work; [13] and the Asso-Prize recognizes the will and endeavours of an association for promoting literature. [14]
In the year 2017, two other related GPLA awards were introduced: the Tam-tam Short Story Prize, [15] and the Prix Nnanga Kon. [16]
The GPLA attributes a reward of about 1,000 US dollars and a more expensive media promotion for awarded authors and works. [17] Many literary activities are also organized upon the awarded works, such as the GPLA Essay Contest (Concours de Dissertation-GPAL), [18] the GPLA Student Day (Journée de l’Etudiant-GPAL), [19] just to name a few of them.
The GPLA Report on the winners’ designation procedures is a document published for every edition two or three years after its awards ceremony. [20] The report aims to show transparency on GPLA methods and thus prevent any controversy around the laureates, but also to reinforce the reputation of objectivity that emerges from the contest. [21]
GPLA 2013 [22]
GPLA 2014 [23]
GPLA 2015 [24]
GPLA 2016 [25]
GPLA 2017 [27]
GPLA 2018 [29]
GPLA 2019 [34]
GPLA 2022 [36]
GPLA 2023 [37]
The Prix Femina is a French literary prize created in 1904 by 22 writers for the magazine La Vie heureuse. The prize is decided each year by an exclusively female jury. They reward French-language works written in prose or verse, by both women and men. The winner is announced on the first Wednesday of November each year.
Tahar Ben Jelloun is a Moroccan writer who rose to fame for his 1985 novel L'Enfant de sable. All of his work is written in French although his first language is Darija. He has been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
The Governor General's Award for French-language children's illustration is a Canadian literary award that annually recognizes one Canadian illustrator for a children's book written in French. It is one of four children's book awards among the Governor General's Awards for Literary Merit, one each for writers and illustrators of English- and French-language books. The Governor General's Awards program is administered by the Canada Council.
This is a list of recipients of the Governor General's Award for English-to-French translation awarded by the Governor-General of Canada.
This is a list of recipients of the Governor General's Award for French-language drama. The award was created in 1981 when the Governor General's Award for French language poetry or drama was divided.
Bernard Binlin Dadié was an Ivorian novelist, playwright, poet, and administrator. Among many other senior positions, starting in 1957, he held the post of Minister of Culture in the government of Côte d'Ivoire from 1977 to 1986.
Tchicaya U Tam'si was a Congolese author; his pen name means "small paper that speaks for its country" in Kikongo.
Anna Gavalda is a French novelist.
Patrice Kayo is an African scholar, poet, and author born in 1942 in Bandjoun, West Province, Cameroon. He is also known for his radical opposition to Paul Biya's political regime, and his advocacy for freedom of speech and human rights.
Seydou Badian Kouyaté was a Malian writer and politician. He wrote the lyrics to the Malian national anthem, "Le Mali".
Charles Dantzig is a French author, born in Tarbes (France) on October 7, 1961.
Lyonel Trouillot is a novelist and poet in French and Haitian Creole, a journalist and a professor of French and Creole literature in Port-au-Prince.
The Grand prix des lectrices de Elle is a French literary prize awarded by readers of Elle magazine.
Monique LaRue is a Quebec writer.
Louise Dupré is a Quebec poet and novelist.
Cameroonian literature includes literature in French, English and indigenous languages.
The Prix Renée Vivien is an annual French literary prize which is awarded to poets who write in French. Dedicated to the British poet Renée Vivien, the eponymous prize was first initiated in 1935, and continued intermittently by three different patrons, each with their own vision. First patron was Hélène de Zuylen de Nyevelt de Haar, followed by Natalie Clifford Barney in 1949 then more latterly and currently ongoing from 1994 with Claude Evrard. From each patron, the naming of the award after Renée Vivien was an act of remembrance. Nonetheless, women's poetry, feminist literature and the memories of romantic entanglement with the honoured poet have been inspiring on the first two patrons, who were more alike in their approach to awarding poets, while the heritage of Renée Vivien's style in contemporary poetry interested more Claude Evrard.
Jakuta Alikavazovic is a French writer. Her debut novel Corps volatils was awarded the prix Goncourt du premier roman. In 2021, her latest novel Night As It Falls was published in the United Kingdom by Faber & Faber.
Cécile Coulon is a French novelist, poet and short story writer. As of 2020, she has published seven novels, two poetry collections and one short story collection. She has been awarded the Prix des libraires (2017) and the prix Guillaume Apollinaire (2018)
Audrée Wilhelmy is a Canadian writer from Quebec.