ULYSEES AWARD 2005 ¡§ 2005/10/20

WINNERS OF THE LETTRE ULYSSES AWARD FOR THE ART OF REPORTAGE 2005

The international jury of the Lettre Ulysses Award, the only world prize for literary reportage, announced this year¡Çs winner on October 15th in Berlin.

The first prize of 50,000 Euro and a trophy designed by the Berlin artist Jakob Mattner were awarded to:

* ALEXANDRA FULLER (Great Britain) for the book SCRIBBLING THE CAT. TRAVELS WITH AN AFRICAN SOLDIER, Penguin Press, New York, 2004. In this book, Alexandra Fuller, who was born in Britain but grew up in Rhodesia / Zimbabwe and calls herself a ¡Èwhite African¡É, describes her journey with a war veteran and mercenary to the scenes of the East African wars in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique. The background of this reportage is the fate of Africa¡Çs ¡Èwhite tribe¡É, who were on the wrong side of history. The highly personal text is both a study of the social and psychological traces of war and a journey into the heart of the ¡Èuniversal soldier¡É.
Alexandra Fuller says of the book: ¡ÈMuch has been said about war but too little is said honestly about war and even less is said of those who fight and lose but must still carry with them the scars (mental and physical) of battle. While I hate war, I cannot hate the soldiers whose burden it is to fight them and I cannot ever choose ¡Èone side over another¡É in any conflict. After all, anyone who is given a gun is also given lies with which to carry them into battle. And then afterwards, when the politicians have moved into retirement villages or returned to their secluded ranches and the wars they precipitated are just blots in their resume, the soldiers who carry the horror of the war in their very souls must somehow find a way to live with what amounts to the most awful knowledge.¡É

The second prize of 30,000 Euro was awarded to:

* ABDELLAH HAMMOUDI (Morocco): UNE SAISON A LA MECQUE. RECIT DE PELERINAGE, Seuil, Paris, 2004 [A Season in Mecca. Account of a Pilgrimage]. The Moroccan anthropologist, Abdellah Hammoudi who teaches at Princeton, decides at the age of 50 to undertake the pilgrimage to Mecca. His aim is, on the one hand, as an ethnologist, to describe the central ritual of Islam, while at the same time ? despite being a self-described secular Muslim ? to explore the spiritual dimension of this experience. UNE SAISON A LA MECQUE is both a travelogue and a study of the historical, social, economic and psychological aspects of Muslim society that are connected with the ¡Ègreat hajj¡É.

The third prize of 20,000 Euro went to:

* RIVERBEND (Iraq): BAGHDAD BURNING. GIRL BLOG FROM IRAQ, The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, New York, 2005 & Marion Boyars Publishers, London, 2005. Riverbend, a young Iraqi woman, writes an Internet diary, using a pseudonym. Her commanding gift for observation, her intelligence and her extraordinary language skills make her account of the life of a normal Iraqi family, which has also been published in book form as BAGHDAD BURNING, one of the most uniquely critical documents of life in this abused country under the conditions of the war and the US military occupation.

The other finalists received prizes in the form of a working residencies in Berlin (endowed by the Goethe-Institut) and handmade watches by the company Nomos.

They are:
* CAROLIN EMCKE (Germany): VON DEN KRIEGEN. BRIEFE AN FREUNDE, S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main, 2004 [Of Wars. Letters to Friends]. Carolin Emcke, a reporter with Der Spiegel, writes in VON DEN KRIEGEN. BRIEFE AN FREUNDE about her work as a war and conflict correspondent in various regions of the world. The personal and reflective tone of this book deeply permeates the panorama of the horrors, as well as the challenges of this job. These diagnoses about the state of the world sensitively help us to experience the every-day life and inner world of a journalist.

* WILLIAM LANGEWIESCHE (USA): THE OUTLAW SEA. A WORLD OF FREEDOM, CHAOS, AND CRIME, North Point Press, New York, 2004. Published as The Outlaw Sea. Chaos and Crime on the World¡Çs Oceans by Granta Books, London, 2005. In his book THE OUTLAW SEA the American reporter William Langewiesche describes the lawlessness and anarchy of the oceans. His stories deal with ship wrecks, sea pirates, disputes over an International Maritime Legislation, the conflict between the shipping companies¡Ç search for profits and ecological necessities, as well as the scrapping of redundant ocean liners.

* SUKETU MEHTA (India): MAXIMUM CITY. BOMBAY LOST AND FOUND, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 2004. After years of living in New York, the Indian writer Suketu Mehta decides to move back to his boyhood home of Bombay/Mumbai. MAXIMUM CITY. BOMBAY LOST AND FOUND is a multifaceted portrait of the Indian mega-metropolis and describes the art of survival in the midst of urban chaos. The author meets rural migrants and street kids, gangsters and policemen, film stars and transvestites, diamond traders and those seeking redemption. His book describes the horrors and wonders of this urban behemoth that straddles the archaic and the modern.

* RICARDO UCEDA (Peru): MUERTE EN EL PENTAGONITO. LOS CEMENTERIOS SECRETOS DEL EJERCITO PERUANO, Editorial Planeta, Bogota, 2004 [Death in the Little Pentagon. The Secret Killing Fields of the Peruvian Army]. The Peruvian journalist Ricardo Uceda immerses himself in the still suppressed recent history of Peru and investigates a secret story of the Peruvian army. MUERTE EN EL PENTAGONITO is a work of empirical research, based on many eye-witness accounts of the dirty war between the Shining Path revolutionary guerrilla organisation and the Peruvian army in the early 1980s. With its disturbing exposure, the book is part of the attempt in many Latin American countries to critically reconstruct the history of the past few decades.

Excerpts from the nominated texts are published in German in the current issue of Lettre International, Nr. 70.

The winners were announced on Saturday 15th October in Berlin at an award ceremony with 500 international guests from literature, art, culture, media, politics and diplomacy (including thirteen ambassadors). The evening¡Çs key note speaker was the Swedish writer SVEN LINDQVIST, who in his speech ¡ÈThe Power of Truth¡É discussed the ethics, responsibility and influence of the art of reportage in the context of the history of colonial policy in Africa. The South African writer Breyten Breytenbach and the speaker of the jury Isabel Hilton were the presenters of the ceremony. The annual Lettre Ulysses Award was initiated in 2003 by the cultural journal Lettre International in association with the Aventis Foundation. The Goethe-Institut is a partner of the project.

The prize has a total endowment of 100,000 Euro, as well as working residencies in Berlin and other prizes. The aim of the award is to bring the outstanding achievements of literary reportage to international attention and to support its authors both materially and symbolically.

The members of the jury represent nine of the world¡Çs largest language groups and thus guarantee that a wide range of languages and cultures are considered. The members of the 2005 jury were: Svetlana Alexievitch (Belarus), Gamal Al Ghitany (Egypt), Mark Danner (USA), Isabel Hilton (Great Britain), Lung Yingtai (Taiwan), Pankaj Mishra (India), Anne Nivat (France), Sergio Ramirez (Nicaragua), Pedro Rosa Mendes (Portugal), Ilija Trojanow (Germany).

Further information on the nominated texts, the award and the jury is available on the website: www.lettre-ulysses-award.org

Contact
Foundation Lettre International Award
Felix Wiesjahn 0176 21 10 44 78
Elisabethhof Portal 3 b, Erkelenzdamm 59/61, D - 10999 Berlin
tel: +49 (0) 30-30 87 04 ?52/ ?61, fax: +49 (0) 30-283 31 28, e-mail: lettre@lettre.de
www.lettre-ulysses-award.org

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Lettre Ulysses Award for The Art of Reportage - First Global Prize for Literary Reportage Awarded ¡§ 2003/10/5

For the first time, a jury of internationally recognized authors awarded a prize for the best literary reportage in the world on October 4, 2003 in Berlin.
The project, initiated by the cultural magazine Lettre International in connection with the Aventis Foundation and in partnership with the Goethe Institute includes prize money amounting to a total of ?100 000. The prize will be awarded annually as of 2003.

The prizes for 2003 were received by the following authors:
1. Anna Politkovskaja for Tchetchenie - le deshonneur russe, Buchet/ Castel, Paris 2003, Russian/ French
2. Nuruddin Farah for Yesterday Tomorrow ( Voices from the Somali Diaspora, Continuum International, London/ New York 2000, English and Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt 2003, German. Prize: 30.000 Euro
3. Jiang Hao for Revealing the Secrets of Poachers, Qunzhong chubanshe, Beijing 2000, Chinese. Prize: 20.000 Euro

The winners of the awards were announced in a ceremony on Saturday, October 4, in the presence of 450 guests from the worlds of literature, culture and politics in the Berlin Tipi Tent. Guest speaker at the awards gala was the Polish reportage author Ryszard Kapuscinski; the South African author Breyten Breytenbach acted as master of ceremonies for the evening.
The winner of the first prize, Anna Politkoskaja, received the Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage designed by the Berlin artist Jakob Mattner. The evening was rounded off with a musical high point, a concert by the Portuguese Fado singer Misia.

Among the finalists were also
- Adrian Nicole LeBlanc for Random Family ( Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx, Scribner, New York, 2003. English
- Ian Buruma for Bad Elements - Chinese rebels from Los Angeles to Bejing, Random House, New York 2001, English. Prize: 50.000 Euro
- Linda Polman for We Did Nothing, Viking, London, 2003. Dutch
- Marc Tully and Gillian Wright for India in Slow Motion, Viking, London, 2002. English
They received grants in the form of scholarships at German cultural institutions.

The seven reportages nominated tackle controversial subjects from various cultural areas of the world. The texts originate from the USA, Africa, China, India, Europe and Russia. They deal with the situation of the Chinese dissidents, the Somali diaspora, the life of poachers and party functionaries in China, the social reality of the New York Bronx, the war in Chechnia, United Nations crisis management and the development of the Indian subcontinent.
Extracts of the finalists’ texts are published in the current edition of Lettre International No.62.

The multilingual jury 2003 was made up entirely of writers at home in the genre of reportage. Overcoming language and cultural barriers, they selected the literary reportage writing to which they want to draw international attention in an intensive process of discussion and translation. The members of the jury are native speakers representing eleven of the largest linguistic regions, thereby guaranteeing as broad a spectrum of linguistic and cultural perception as possible.

The members of the jury 2003 were Swetlana Alexijewitsch (Belorussia), Hans Christoph Buch (Germany), Jorge Edwards (Chile), Isabel Hilton (Great Britain), Philip Gourevitch (USA), Nedim Gursel (Turkey), Natsuki Ikezawa (Japan), Pedro Rosa Mendes (Portugal), Nirmal Verma (India), Abdourahman Waberi (Djibouti/ France), Yang Xiaobin (China).

An international advisory committee actively accompanied this pioneer project. Members of the committee included the German writer and Nobel prizewinner for literature Gunter Grass, the Polish reportage author Ryszard Kapuscinski, the French anthropologiest Jean Malaurie and the recently deceased Danish war reporter Jan Stage.

The intention of the initiators, the cultural magazine Lettre International, is to draw international attention to reportage writing and to offer financial and moral support for the work of writers of the genre.

Further information on the concept of the award and the jury can be found on the homepage: www.lettre-ulysses-award.org

Contact Persons
Foundation Lettre International Award
Frank Berberich, Esther Gallodoro
Elisabethhof Portal 3 b, Erkelenzdamm 59/61, D - 10999 Berlin
tel: +49 (0) 30-30 87 04 -52/ -61, fax: +49 (0) 30-283 31 28, e-mail: lettre@lettre.de
www.lettre-ulysses-award.org

SCRIPT Corporate+Public Communication GmbH
Christoph Potting, Michael Behrent, An der Herrenmuhle 7 - 9, D - 61440 Oberursel
tel: +49 (0)6171 - 28473, fax: +49 (0)6171 - 28471, e-mail: C.Potting@script-com.de,
M.Behrent@script-com.de

Thanks
to our sponsors for their support: Nomos Watches, Hotel Kempinski, Blue Band Hotels, Die Zunft AG, Vintners’ Co-Operative Jechtingen, Marchesi de’ Frescobaldi, Kossler & Ulbricht, Japan Airlines.

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