Nigeria’s
most innovative telecommunications company Etisalat, in line with its vision of
promoting passions, nurturing talent and providing a platform for communicating
ideas has announced the first edition of the Etisalat Prize for Literature
aimed at recognising and celebrating writers and other members of the literary
community across Africa.
The Etisalat Prize for Literature is the first ever
pan-African prize to applaud first time writers of published fiction novels.
The prize will bring together high profile writers, book critics and academics
from across the continent and beyond to identify new writers of African
descent. Submitted works must be the writer’s first fiction novel of over
30,000 words and which has been published in the last twenty-four months.
Entries for the Fiction Novel category opens today the
5th of June to publishers who have published a minimum of five authors in the
last three years. All entries will be vetted and scrutinized by a panel of four
preselected judges chaired by Pumla Gqola, associate professor in the
Department of African Literature at the University of the Witwatersrand (South
Africa) and of South Africa’s most celebrated intellectuals. Other judges are
Zaks Mda, Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Ohio and winner of
the Commonwealth Prize, Billy KahoraManaging Editor of Kwani Trust, of the
literary Journal Kwani and Sarah Ladipo Manyika, writer and academic. These
judges will work together to select the longist as well as a shortlist of three
novels and finally the winner who will be announced in February 2014.
Chief Executive Officer, Etisalat Nigeria, Mr. Steven
Evans said that the Prize was created out of the need to give recognition to
indigenous works of literature while also rewarding new entrants and
encouraging further participation. “We are pleased to have initiated this
important project that celebrates literary excellence and creativity in Nigeria
and across Africa. We believe literature has the potential to effect change and
serve as a catalyst for promoting a cultural revolution. However, it is a field
that has been relegated to the background, making African fiction and short
story writers to look to international awards for recognition,” he said. “The
Etisalat Prize for Literature is our way of sharing in the passions and
aspirations of young and upcoming writers as well as breathing new life to the
literary society,” Evans added.
The Etisalat Prize for Literature aims to serve as a
viable platform for the discovery of new creative talent from the continent and
invariably promote the growing publishing industry in Africa. Entries will be
accepted for two categories, namely: Full length English fiction novels and
Flash Fiction Short Stories, to be launched towards the end of the year and
driven entirely via social media.
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