Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes
The Donald Windham Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes | |
---|---|
Awarded for | to call attention to literary achievement and provide writers the opportunity to focus on their work independent of financial concerns |
Date | 2024 |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
Reward(s) | 175,000 USD |
First award | 4 March 2013 |
Website | windhamcampbell |
The Donald Windham Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes are an American literary award which offers unrestricted grants in four categories, namely fiction, nonfiction, poetry and drama. Established at Yale University in 2011, the first prizes were presented in 2013.[1][2][3] Administered by the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, the award recognizes English language writers from across the world. The mission of the award is to call attention to literary achievement and provide writers the opportunity to focus on their work independent of financial concerns. In 2017 the category of poetry was added and eight prizes have been awarded annually since then.
Since 2023, winners receive a citation, award and an unrestricted grant of $175,000. The individual prizes are among the richest literary prize amounts in the world, if not the richest in certain categories.[1] The award is endowed from the combined estates of writer Donald Windham and actor Sandy Campbell. Campbell was Windham's companion of 45 years, and when Campbell died in 1988 he left his estate to Windham with the understanding a literary award would be created from the combined estate after Windham's death.[1] Windham died in 2010, and in 2011 Yale announced they would become administrators of the new award.
The inaugural winners were announced on March 4, 2013, and a ceremony conferring the awards took place at Yale on September 10, 2013 with the nine recipients receiving a citation, award and an unrestricted grant of $150,000 each.[4]
Recipients
[edit]Year | Category | Recipient | Country | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013[2][3][5][6][7][a] | Drama | Stephen Adly Guirgis: "Stephen Adly Guirgis writes dramatic dialogue with passion and humor, creating characters who live on the edge, and whose linguistic bravado reinvigorates the American vernacular." | ![]() |
[8] |
Tarell Alvin McCraney: "Tarell Alvin McCraney’s working class characters inhabit an extraordinary mythic universe, speaking a poetic language through which we grasp the spiritual stature of embattled people." | ![]() |
[9] | ||
Naomi Wallace: "Naomi Wallace mines historical situations in plays that are muscular, devastating, and unwavering." | ![]() |
[10] | ||
Fiction | Tom McCarthy: "Tom McCarthy constructs strange worlds where we find reflective echoes of our own and meditations on the meaning and making of art." | ![]() |
[11] | |
James Salter: "Sentence by sentence, James Salter’s elegantly natural prose has a precision and clarity which make ordinary words swing wide open." | ![]() |
[12] | ||
Zoë Wicomb: "Zoë Wicomb’s subtle, lively language and beautifully crafted narratives explore the complex entanglements of home, and the continuing challenges of being in the world." | ![]() |
[13] | ||
Non-Fiction | Adina Hoffman: "In a land where even the most cautious nonfiction can draw howls of protest, Adina Hoffman combines fastidious listening, even-handed research, and prose so engaged that it makes the long-vanished visible again." | ![]() |
[14] | |
Jeremy Scahill: "Jeremy Scahill’s investigative reporting is in the best tradition of speaking truth to power, waging a political campaign by journalistic means, indefatigable in its detail and international in outlook." | ![]() |
[15] | ||
Jonny Steinberg: "Using a novelistic style that gives everyday people heroic complexity and scale, Jonny Steinberg allows us to encounter lives that enlarge our empathy and sharpen our understanding of the human condition." | ![]() |
[16] | ||
2014[17][18][b] | Drama | Kia Corthron: "Through her command of dramatic spectacle, Kia Corthron places often unheard and marginalized characters within a historical and political context that gives their lives an urgent and poetic resonance." | ![]() |
[19] |
Sam Holcroft: "Sam Holcroft’s plays explore the routinized and expressive registers of language, gesture, and role-playing, walking the uncomfortably thin line between spectatorship and complicity." | ![]() |
[20] | ||
Noëlle Janaczewska: "Noëlle Janaczewska brings innovative stagecraft and a questioning voice to plays that translate cultural and political tensions into drama as complex as it is illuminating." | ![]() |
[21] | ||
Fiction | Nadeem Aslam: "Nadeem Aslam’s deftly crafted novels explore historical and political trauma with lyricism and profound compassion." | ![]() ![]() |
[22] | |
Jim Crace: "Jim Crace's ever-varied novels return us to the body, to ceremony and to community in a disenchanted world, transforming the indifferent and the repugnant alike into things of beauty." | ![]() |
[23] | ||
Aminatta Forna: "Aminatta Forna writes through and beyond personal experience to speak to the wider world in subtly constructed narratives that reveal the ongoing aftershocks of living through violence and war." | ![]() ![]() |
[24] | ||
Non-Fiction | Pankaj Mishra: "Pursuing high standards of literary style, Pankaj Mishra gives us new narratives about the evolution of modern Asia. He charts the journey from the Indian small town to the metropolis and rebuffs imperialist clichés with equal verve." | ![]() |
[25] | |
John Vaillant: "John Vaillant writes gripping narratives that combine science, geography, history and anthropology to convey his passionate commitment to preserving natural resources in an environmentally threatened world." | ![]() ![]() |
[26] | ||
2015[27][28][29][c] | Drama | Jackie Sibblies Drury: "Jackie Sibblies Drury deftly blends historical inquiry and meta-theatrical experiment to challenge assumptions about race, performance, and individual responsibility." | ![]() |
[30] |
Helen Edmundson: "Helen Edmundson’s ambitious plays distill historical complexities through characters whose passions and ethical dilemmas mirror and illuminate a larger political landscape." | ![]() |
[31] | ||
Debbie Tucker Green: "Pushing speech and silence to the limit, Debbie Tucker Green’s plays expose the brutal choices of individuals bound by the imperatives of family, society, and love." | ![]() |
[32] | ||
Fiction | Teju Cole: "Teju Cole’s peripatetic narrators, like his prose, revel in the possibilities and limitations of global urbanity, navigating the fine line between choice and circumstance, perception and memory." | ![]() ![]() |
[33] | |
Helon Habila: "Helon Habila is that rare combination of storyteller and stylist who challenges expectations while deepening our empathy for ordinary people confronting extraordinary times." | ![]() |
[34] | ||
Ivan Vladislavic: "Ivan Vladislavić’s fiction explores the uncomfortable aftermath of apartheid through inventive meditations on the complex intersection of history, politics, and art." | ![]() |
[35] | ||
Non-Fiction | Edmund de Waal: "Edmund de Waal’s sure narrative instinct and lyrical imagination inform a deeply felt examination of the hold that objects have on our personal and collective memory." | ![]() |
[36] | |
Geoff Dyer: "Omnivorously curious and psychologically probing, Geoff Dyer’s writings reinvent again and again the possibilities of nonfiction, discovering as many new subjects as he does ways of writing about them." | ![]() |
[37] | ||
John Jeremiah Sullivan: "John Jeremiah Sullivan’s wide-ranging, exuberant essays engage the full spectrum of American life with passion, precision, and wit." | ![]() |
[38] | ||
2016[39][40][41][d] | Drama | Branden Jacobs-Jenkins: "In his audacious and disarming plays, Branden Jacobs-Jenkins dismantles received ideas of race, history, and American culture." | ![]() |
[42] |
Hannah Moscovitch: "Hannah Moscovitch fuses the intimate and the epic in fiercely intelligent plays about violence, responsibility, and redemption." | ![]() |
[43] | ||
Abbie Spallen: "Abbie Spallen’s plays confront audiences with all the awkward questions, reminding us with thrilling proof that theater can still be urgently necessary." | ![]() |
[44] | ||
Fiction | Tessa Hadley: "Tessa Hadley brilliantly illuminates ordinary lives with extraordinary prose that is superbly controlled, psychologically acute, and subtly powerful." | ![]() |
[45] | |
C. E. Morgan: "In language that is lush and bold C. E. Morgan’s ambitious fiction explores poverty, wealth, faith, eros, and the inextricable complications of race in America." | ![]() |
[46] | ||
Jerry Pinto: "Jerry Pinto’s writing is deeply empathetic, humorous, and humane, drawing on personal experience to tell stories much larger than the lives they contain." | ![]() |
[47] | ||
Non-Fiction | Hilton Als: "In brilliant, fearless essays that blend memoir, biography, and cultural criticism, Hilton Als explores and explodes our ideas of sexual and racial identity." | ![]() |
[48] | |
Stanley Crouch: "Stanley Crouch’s lyrical, sharp, and deeply American writing shines a bright light on the unexpected corners of our music, literature, culture, and history." | ![]() |
[49] | ||
Helen Garner: "Helen Garner brings acute observations and narrative skill to bear on the conflicts and tragedies of contemporary Australian life." | ![]() |
[50][51] | ||
2017[52][e] | Drama | Marina Carr: "Marina Carr draws on the essential elements of Greek tragedy to create stories for modern heroines who must make the starkest dramatic choices." | ![]() |
[53] |
Ike Holter: "Ike Holter writes explosive plays that are visceral, ambitious, and populated with diverse characters for whom the personal is inseparable from the political." | ![]() |
[54] | ||
Fiction | André Alexis: "André Alexis’s work displays a mastery of literature’s history and a startling power of invention, balancing intellectual sophistication with a sense of humor, pathos, and beauty." | ![]() ![]() |
[55] | |
Erna Brodber: "Erna Brodber’s uncompromising fiction weaves strands of diasporic history, memory, and identity into illuminating new forms that respond to the need to act as well as the need to know." | ![]() |
[56] | ||
Non-Fiction | Maya Jasanoff: "Maya Jasanoff’s brilliant historical writing brings to life forgotten worlds and characters in richly textured narratives." | ![]() |
[57] | |
Ashleigh Young: "With honest, insightful prose, Ashleigh Young offers intimate and playful glimpses of coming of age in small-town New Zealand." | ![]() |
[58] | ||
Poetry | Ali Cobby Eckermann: "Through song and story, Ali Cobby Eckermann confronts the violent history of Australia’s Stolen Generations and gives language to unspoken lineages of trauma and loss." | ![]() |
[59][60][61] | |
Carolyn Forché: "Carolyn Forché’s politically engaged work redefines lyric poetry through its attention to history and care for the world." | ![]() |
[62] | ||
2018[63][64][65][66][f] | Drama | Lucas Hnath for "agile writing which ranges across genres and subjects with voracious curiosity; his wit, formal daring and poetic precision crystallize dramas that are socially incisive and indelible." Works include The Christians (2014) and A Doll's House, Part 2 (2017). | ![]() |
[67] |
Suzan-Lori Parks: for being "an artist whose ethical imagination confronts rather than consoles; she acknowledges in the fissures of language and human relations the complexities of a fraught world." Works include The Death of Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (1992), Venus (1996), Topdog/Underdog (2001), and Father Comes Home from the Wars (Parts 1, 2 & 3) (2014). | ![]() |
[68] | ||
Fiction | John Keene: for writing that "[w]ith coruscating imagination, language and thought, …experiments with concealed scenes from history and literature, stepping outside the confines of conventional narrative." Works include Annotations (1995) and Counternarratives (2015). | ![]() |
[69] | |
Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi: for work that "opens up a bold and innovatory vista in African letters, encompassing ancient wounds that disquiet the present, and offering the restitution to be found in memory and ritual." She is the author of the novel Kintu (2014). | ![]() ![]() |
[70] | ||
Non-Fiction | Sarah Bakewell for work that "unknots complex philosophical thought with verve and wit; her eye for detail and her animated conversation bring readers to inhabit the lives of great philosophers." Works include How to Live: A Life of Montaigne (2010) and At the Existentialist Café (2016). | ![]() |
[71] | |
Olivia Laing for being "a cartographer of human emotion, mixing memoir, biography and critical engagement with an acute sense of place; through the arts, she searches the depths of the self." Works include To the River (2011), The Trip to Echo Spring (2013), and The Lonely City (2016). | ![]() |
[72] | ||
Poetry | Lorna Goodison for poetry that "draws us into a panoramic history of a woman’s life, bearing witness to female embodiment, the colonial legacy, mortality, and the sacred." She is the author of 13 collections of poetry including I Am Becoming My Mother (1986) and Oracabessa (2013). | ![]() ![]() |
[73] | |
Cathy Park Hong for poetry with "exhilarating and surprising language that connects us to unheard migrant voices, and her searching look at dystopic states which gives her poetry urgent power." Works include Dance Dance Revolution (2007) and Engine Empire (2012). | ![]() |
[74] | ||
2019[75][76][77][g] | Drama | Patricia Cornelius: "Patricia Cornelius channels the power of resisting received literary tradition in order to open up a space where the lives of characters on the margins can become vessels of universal truths." | ![]() |
[78][79] |
Young Jean Lee: "Young Jean Lee is a genuinely original playwright and theater-maker who explores diverse theatrical styles, forms, and subjects with a dramaturgy that constantly takes risks and pushes the boundaries of what is possible." | ![]() |
[80] | ||
Fiction | David Chariandy: "Offering a vision at once entirely humane and immensely tender, David Chariandy lays bare the ways that gestures and details articulate the revelations of grief as well as the intimacies found within fraught and fraying social spaces." | ![]() |
[81] | |
Danielle McLaughlin | ![]() |
[82] | ||
Non-Fiction | Raghu Karnad: "Combining forensic archival research with imaginative fire and unsettling national and colonial histories, Raghu Karnad creates an epic of un-forgetting that brings the experience of Indian soldiers of the Second World War into our common compass." | ![]() |
[83] | |
Rebecca Solnit: "With fearless brilliance, Rebecca Solnit’s essays range through subject matters that include politics, history, literature, art, and feminism in a manner at once provocative, erudite, and intensely engaging." | ![]() |
[84] | ||
Poetry | Kwame Dawes: "Kwame Dawes’s visceral, memorable, and urgent lyricism results in a poetry of compassion, moral seriousness, and depth that resonates across continents." | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
[85] | |
Ishion Hutchinson: "Conjuring Jamaica and the world within, Ishion Hutchinson’s poetry surprises and stuns with formal innovation, musical clarity, and historical depth, illuminating life 'after hurricanes' and 'after Pompeii.'" | ![]() |
[86] | ||
2020[87][88][h] | Drama | Julia Cho: "In stagecraft intimate with cadences of the spoken and unspoken, Julia Cho enlivens human connection in the languages of home and estrangement." | ![]() |
[89] |
Aleshea Harris: "Aleshea Harris’s meticulous pageantries of brutal injustice vibrate with rage, grief, hope, and truth, breathing life into ancient forms and indelibly making seen those who were unseen." | ![]() |
[90] | ||
Fiction | Yiyun Li: "Yiyun Li masterfully explores the landscape of loss with delicacy and precision, restoring the fractured lives of ordinary people on the margins, endowing them with agency and power." | ![]() |
[91] | |
Namwali Serpell: "Namwali Serpell reimagines the transmission of modern history through the commingled lives of her Zambian characters, writing unerringly sure prose and re-enchanting the contemporary novel in the process." | ![]() ![]() |
[92] | ||
Non-Fiction | Anne Boyer: "With unflinching self-scrutiny, Anne Boyer exposes uncomfortable truths about our culture’s mistreatment of the individual in duress and the ways in which we are complicit in that neglect." | ![]() |
[93] | |
Maria Tumarkin: "Maria Tumarkin's inventive writing on our current historical moment shows a relentless empathy and curiosity about the complexities of our world and its uncertainties." | ![]() |
[94][95] | ||
Poetry | Bhanu Kapil: "Through transgressive, lyrical language Bhanu Kapil undoes multiple genres to excavate crucial questions of trauma, healing, immigration, and embodiment at the outskirts of performance and process." | ![]() ![]() |
[96] | |
Jonah Mixon-Webster: "With tenderness and ferocity, Jonah Mixon-Webster invents dynamic multi-modal forms to indict structural racism, and to connect the personal to the violence and beauty of history." | ![]() |
[97] | ||
2021[98][99][100] | Drama | Nathan Alan Davis: "Nathan Alan Davis is an artist whose work fuses depth of feeling and love of language, balancing the profound, the prosaic, and an overwhelming desire to reach through the fourth wall and pull his audiences towards him." | ![]() |
[101] |
Michael R. Jackson: "By clothing bracing and irreverent truths in song and wit, Michael R. Jackson lifts us into worlds more vibrant and malleable than any we inhabit from day to day, infusing musical theater’s capacity to liberate with a fierce, joyful transgression." | ![]() |
[102] | ||
Fiction | Dionne Brand: "With genre-bending explorations of narrative form, Dionne Brand honors the complexities of diasporic experience, gracefully bringing to life the fundamental relationship between politics, aesthetics, and love." | ![]() ![]() |
[103] | |
Renee Gladman: "Aesthetically precise and formally daring, Renee Gladman sets us adrift in the country of her imagination, challenging us to puzzle out fluency, space, and meaning along the way." | ![]() |
[104] | ||
Non-fiction | Kate Briggs: "Pushing at the formal boundaries of the literary essay in witty, speculative prose, Kate Briggs explores the intricacies of translation and narrative structure in revelatory, provocative ways." | ![]() ![]() |
[105] | |
Vivian Gornick: "In her landmark criticism and frank, elegiac, often ruefully funny memoirs, Vivian Gornick asks us to connect the ways in which we think, write, and love, drawing from her feminism, intellectual clarity, and radical awareness of a personal story’s capacity to enlarge us all." | ![]() |
[106] | ||
Poetry | Canisia Lubrin: "Bursting beyond the confines of legibility and the individual, Canisia Lubrin summons up oceans, languages, and the self, the other, and the first-person plural, into a generous baroque project of anti-colonial plenitude." | ![]() ![]() |
[107] | |
Natalie Scenters-Zapico: "Drawing inspiration from the border towns of El Paso and Ciudad Juárez, Natalie Scenters-Zapico’s poems transform the violence of gender and cultural stereotypes into songs of resistance, resilience, and lyrical grace." | ![]() |
[108] | ||
2022[109][110][i] | Drama | Sharon Bridgforth: "Sharon Bridgforth’s powerful poetics expand our notions of form by asserting a mix of spiritual and physical intelligence and ecstatic improvisation in her evocative style of jazz theater." | ![]() |
[111] |
Winsome Pinnock: "The force of Winsome Pinnock’s epic and spacious dialogue deftly opens the ear and widens the heart; it gracefully compels the spirit to reckon with the necessity for absolute freedom." | ![]() |
[112] | ||
Fiction | Tsitsi Dangarembga: "Tsitsi Dangarembga’s groundbreaking fiction, first appearing more than thirty years ago, brings to stunning life the ongoing struggles of African women striving for agency in the face of colonial, racist, and patriarchal forces." | ![]() |
[113] | |
Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu: "iphiwe Gloria Ndlovu is both a chronicler and a conjurer whose soaring imagination creates a Zimbabwean past made of anguish and hope, of glory and despair: the story of the generations born at the crossroads of a country’s history." | ![]() |
[114] | ||
Non-fiction | Emmanuel Iduma: "In elegant, meditative vignettes that integrate art criticism, canny observation, and lyrical dispatches, Emmanuel Iduma invites readers to physically and spiritually observe the expansiveness of the world and its people." | ![]() |
[115] | |
Margo Jefferson: "Margo Jefferson’s incisive commentary on American life opens up counterintuitive dimensions, and invites us to rethink our assumptions, unknotting complex ethical subjects." | ![]() |
[116] | ||
Poetry | Zaffar Kunial: "With formally inventive poems drawing on multiple languages and literary traditions, Zaffar Kunial explores the complexities of hybrid cultural identities in an intimate and resonant lyric voice." | ![]() |
[117] | |
Wong May: "Spanning five decades, Wong May’s startlingly original poetry gleams with wit; her delicate but acute irony balances its lucid seriousness with a fizzing verbal lightness." | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
[118] | ||
2023[119][120] | Drama | Jasmine Lee-Jones: "Fierce, fresh, and funny, Jasmine Lee-Jones’s iconoclastic plays reinvigorate the vernacular of contemporary theater for a new generation." | ![]() |
[121] |
Dominique Morisseau: "The nuanced characters and trenchant stories in Dominique Morisseau’s plays strike at the heart of the most pressing conversations facing African Americans today, embodying a steadfast belief in the transformative power of love and art." | ![]() |
[122] | ||
Fiction | Percival Everett: "In its mordant humor and philosophical skepticism, Percival Everett’s virtuosic body of work exemplifies fiction’s capacity for play, vigilance, and compassion for life’s precarity in an uncertain world." | ![]() |
[123] | |
Ling Ma: "Ling Ma meditates on urban anomie with wry humor and subversive imagination, brilliantly bending and blending genre to plumb the depths of her characters’ origins, displacement, and alienation." | ![]() |
[124] | ||
Non-fiction | Darran Anderson: "With divinatory attention, Darran Anderson gives voice to the testimony of objects and geographies, chronicling the passage of individual memory as it turns into a community’s archive and sustaining myth." | ![]() ![]() |
[125] | |
Susan Williams: "Susan Williams chronicles imperial legacies with a forensic eye, a historical mind, and a decolonial sensibility for African agency; her findings are as stunning as they are transformative." | ![]() |
[126] | ||
Poetry | Alexis Pauline Gumbs: "The luminous, visionary poetry of Alexis Pauline Gumbs emerges from urgent realities of the present and haunting voices of the past to imagine alternative worlds shaped by radical listening, compassion, and love." | ![]() |
[127] | |
dg nanouk okpik: "dg nanouk okpik’s lapidary poems sound the depths of language and landscape, shuttling between the ancient past and imperiled present of Inuit Alaska in a searching meditation on ecology and time." | ![]() |
[128] | ||
2024[129] | Drama | Christopher Chen: "Christopher Chen challenges our relationship to truth and accuracy, spectatorship and performance, repeatedly disrupting our expectations of drama and form." | ![]() |
[130] |
Sonya Kelly: "Sonya Kelly’s plays sparkle with the quirkiness of the everyday, exploding fleeting moments into lyrical revelations, as she grapples with human fragility and pathos." | ![]() |
[131] | ||
Fiction | Deirdre Madden: "Deirdre Madden’s novels bring to life the smallest movements of characters’ impulses and thoughts, portraying the intricacies of human lives with compassion and effortless depth." | ![]() |
[132] | |
Kathryn Scanlan: "Blending documentary and fiction, Kathryn Scanlan fuses mundane experiences with the density of a redemptive vision, capturing the harrowing events of ordinary lives in raw, hard-hitting prose." | ![]() |
[133] | ||
Non-fiction | Hanif Abdurraqib: "Hanif Abdurraqib turns a poet’s gaze toward cultural archives, finds grace in the kinetic energy of performing bodies, and shows us how to find joy and generosity in unlikely places." | ![]() |
[134] | |
Christina Sharpe: "Recalibrating images of black existence, Christina Sharpe’s incisive, multi-layered work demands that we wrestle with brutality as we create meaning through language and art." | ![]() ![]() |
[135] | ||
Poetry | Jen Hadfield: "Jen Hadfield’s intricate poems slow down time, reveal overlooked details of the natural world, and forge complex relationships between language, history, and place." | ![]() ![]() |
[136] | |
m. nourbeSe philip: "Inventing derelict tongues of refusal, m. nourbeSe philip breaks open and reimagines the horror of official speech and how it acts, creating a genre-obliterating poetry." | ![]() ![]() |
[137] | ||
2025[138] | Drama | Roy Williams: "Roy Williams’s nuanced, multivocal portrayals of race and class lay bare uncomfortable truths about British identity, creating an essential and complex theater of contemporary life." | ![]() |
[139] |
Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini: "Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini’s exuberant plays barrel onto the stage with joyful abandon, loosening the knots in the fabric of our socio-political lives with forensic attention to reveal new, hopeful ways of remaking our world." | ![]() |
[140] | ||
Fiction | Sigrid Nunez: "With each careful, concise novel, Sigrid Nunez scrupulously dissects the ethical complications of authorship, while still enacting—soulfully, quietly, paradoxically—the visceral and emotional force of character and story." | ![]() |
[141] | |
Anne Enright: "In her wide-ranging and wryly unsentimental fiction, Anne Enright explores the limitations and joys of our human need for belonging." | ![]() |
[142] | ||
Non-fiction | Patricia J. Williams: "In incisive works of moral philosophy and cultural critique, Patricia J. Williams draws together history, memoir, and legal scholarship to reckon with urgent issues of our time." | ![]() |
[143] | |
Rana Dasgupta: "Rana Dasgupta captures contemporary capitalism’s visions and challenges with unflinching candor, and through delicately layered perspectives, allows his subjects to reveal themselves in a world of dissonances." | ![]() |
[144] | ||
Poetry | Tongo Eisen-Martin: "With unambiguous purpose and a distinctive voice, Tongo Eisen-Martin puts injustice, love, and intergenerational memory to work in verse that is both surreal and revolutionary." | ![]() |
[145] | |
Anthony V. Capildeo: "Anthony V. Capildeo’s poems are immersed equally in narrative and lyric, querying forms with an insistent playfulness and a radical political consciousness." | ![]() ![]() |
[146] |
Notes
[edit]- ^ The prizewinners with the following citations were announced by Yale president-elect Peter Salovey on March 4, 2013. Each winner received $150,000.
- ^ The prizewinners with the following citations were announced by Yale president Peter Salovey on March 7, 2014.
- ^ The prizewinners with the following citations were announced by Yale president Peter Salovey on February 24, 2015.
- ^ The prizewinners were announced on February 29, 2016. The prize highlighted some works by each author.
- ^ The prizewinners were announced March 1, 2017. The authors were chosen for their "literary achievement or promise" and the reward money of $165,000 each would support their continued writing.
- ^ The prizewinners were announced on March 7, 2018. The recipients of the $165,000 prize to support their work and give them freedom to write.
- ^ The prizewinners were announced March 12, 2019. The authors were chosen for their "literary achievement or promise" and the reward money of $165,000 each would support their continued writing.
- ^ The prize winners were announced March 19, 2020. Each winner received $165,000.
- ^ The prize winners were announced March 29, 2022. The writers were honored for their literary achievement or promise. Each will receive $165,000 to support their work.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c McGrath, Charles (June 17, 2011). "A Writer's Estate to Yield $150,000 Literary Prizes". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on October 29, 2022. Retrieved April 23, 2024.
- ^ a b Carolyn Kellogg (June 20, 2011). "Yale to launch $150,000 writing award". LA Times. Archived from the original on February 7, 2019. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
- ^ a b David Brensilver (June 22, 2011). "Yale Launches Literary Prize Program". New Haven Independent. Archived from the original on August 28, 2011. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
- ^ "History and Mission". Windham Campbell Prizes. Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved April 23, 2024.
- ^ R.D. Pohl (March 6, 2013). "Yale awards nine writers its inaugural Windham Campbell Literature Prizes". Buffalo News. Archived from the original on February 21, 2014. Retrieved February 3, 2014.
- ^ "Awards: Windham-Campbell; Tufts Poetry; Independent Foreign Fiction". Shelf Awareness. March 5, 2013. Archived from the original on October 1, 2017. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
- ^ David Ng (March 4, 2013). "Windham-Campbell, new Yale literary prize, honors three playwrights". LA Times. Archived from the original on March 3, 2014. Retrieved February 3, 2014.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Stephen Adly Guirgis". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Tarell Alvin McCraney". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Naomi Wallace". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Tom McCarthy". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for James Salter". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Zoë Wicomb". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Adina Hoffman". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Jeremy Scahill". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
- ^ "Prize Citation for Jonny Steinberg". Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes. Archived from the original on January 7, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
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