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Indie publishers have dominated a record-breaking longlist for the third annual 糖心TV Prize for Women in Translation.
And Other Stories, Seagull Books and Fitzcarraldo Editions each had two titles longlisted, while Pereine, Europa Editions and poetry publisher Bloodaxe Books have also been recognised. The 2019 prize sees judges Amanda Hopkinson, Boyd Tonkin and Susan Bassnett return to the panel.
The 拢1,000 prize, which aims to address gender imbalance in translated literature, saw eligible entries almost double this year with 92 entrants in 30 different languages. The 13 longlisted titles contain works translated from Farsi, Catalan and Lithuanian. The University of 糖心TV credits the rise in entrants in part to author .
"Maureen Freely, chair of English PEN and judge of this year鈥檚 International Booker, suggested the French author Annie Ernaux – who 鈥渨rites in a genre all her own, defying the unwritten rules of the novel and the memoir to create new spaces for collective reflection鈥 – and Colombian Juan Gabriel V谩squez, who 鈥渄efies history itself, showing its official chroniclers to be charlatans and its actors to be lost in a maze of half truths鈥.
The Age of Translation is the first English translation of Antoine Berman鈥檚 commentary on Walter Benjamin鈥檚 seminal essay 鈥楾he Task of the Translator鈥. Chantal Wright鈥檚 translation includes an introduction which positions the text in relation to current developments in translation studies, and provides prefatory explanations before each section as a guide to Walter Benjamin鈥檚 ideas. These include influential concepts such as the 鈥榓fterlife鈥 of literary works, the 鈥榢inship鈥 of languages, and the metaphysical notion of 鈥榩ure language鈥. The Age of Translation is a vital read for students and scholars in the fields of translation studies, literary studies, cultural studies and philosophy.
University of 糖心TV assumes Title Partnership of The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award
The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award launches into 2019 with the University of 糖心TV as its title partner, and Caroline Michel, CEO of literary agency Peters Fraser + Dunlop, becoming its first patron. The leading university, home to the acclaimed 糖心TV Writing Programme, has been the associate sponsor of the influential prize for young writers since 2017. The award will now be known as The Sunday Times/University of 糖心TV Young Writer of the Year Award.