Giller Prize - Biblioteka.sk

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Giller Prize
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Giller Prize
Awarded forEnglish-language Canadian fiction including translations
CountryCanada
Presented byScotiabank and the Giller Prize Foundation
First awardedNovember 1994; 30 years ago (1994)
Websitescotiabankgillerprize.ca

The Giller Prize (sponsored as the Scotiabank Giller Prize) is a literary award given to a Canadian author of a novel or short story collection published in English (including translation) the previous year, after an annual juried competition between publishers who submit entries. The prize was established in 1994 by Toronto businessman Jack Rabinovitch in honour of his late wife Doris Giller, a former literary editor at the Toronto Star, and is awarded in November of each year along with a cash reward (then CAN$25,000) with the winner being presented by the previous year's winning author.[1]

Since its inception, the Giller Prize has been awarded to emerging and established authors from both small independent and large publishing houses in Canada.

History

From 1994 to 2004, the prize included a bronze figure created by artist Yehouda Chaki.[2] The current prize includes a trophy designed by Soheil Mosun.[3]

On September 22, 2005, the Giller Prize established an endorsement deal with Canadian bank Scotiabank. The total prize package for the award was increased to $50,000, with $40,000 presented to the winning author and $2,500 each for the other four shortlisted nominees. The award's official name was also changed at that time to the Scotiabank Giller Prize.

In 2006, the prize instituted a longlist for the first time, comprising no fewer than 10 and no more than 15 titles. In 2008, the prize fund was increased to $50,000 for the winning author and $5,000 for each of the authors on the shortlist. In 2014, the prize package was expanded further, to $100,000 for the winning author and $10,000 for each of the shortlisted authors.[4] In 2015, the jury was expanded from three to five people.[5]

Over the years, the Giller Prize has run different promotions to extend its recognition and support of Canadian literary talent[6] to highlight all Canadian fiction eligible for the prize in a given publishing year. For example, the Craving CanLit feature (previously called Crazy for CanLit), which highlights the initial list of all titles that are under consideration for the award's longlist and shortlist nominations, seeks to publicize Canadian literature by engaging readers and writers through social media tools. Another online initiative started in 2021, the Giller Book Club, featuring virtual author readings and interviews, got off to a bumpy start when the inaugural offering was the victim of zoombombing.[7]

Since Rabinovitch's death in 2017, the Giller Prize Foundation is now overseen by his daughter Elana Rabinovitch.[8]

Cultural debate

Following Vincent Lam's win of the Giller Prize in 2006, Geist columnist Stephen Henighan criticized the Giller Prize for its apparent dependency for its shortlists and winners on books published by Bertelsmann AG-affiliated Canadian publishing houses, all of which are based in Toronto.

Arguing that the trend towards centralization of Canadian publishing in Toronto has led to a monopolistic control of the Giller Prize by Bertelsmann and its authors, Henighan wrote, "Year after year the vast majority of the books shortlisted for the Giller came from the triumvirate of publishers owned by the Bertelsmann Group: Knopf Canada, Doubleday Canada and Random House Canada. Like the three musketeers, this trio is in fact a quartet: Bertelsmann also owns 25 percent of McClelland & Stewart, and now manages M&S’s marketing."[9] Henighan added that all of the Giller Prize winners from 1994 to 2004, with the exception of Mordecai Richler, lived within a two-hour drive of downtown Toronto.

The article raised debate within the media and in the wider public over the credibility of the Giller Prize.[10][11][12] Henighan revisited that article in 2015.[13]

In 2010, there was much talk about how small presses dominated that year’s shortlist.[14] Montrealer Johanna Skibsrud won the Giller Prize that year for her novel The Sentimentalists, published by independent Gaspereau Press. The company produces books using a 1960s offset printing press and hand-bindery equipment.[15] As a result, while there was great demand for the book in the marketplace, the publisher had trouble keeping up with production.[16] In the end, they turned to Douglas & McIntyre,[17] a large West-coast publisher, to print copies of the book.

The Gaspereau situation prompted an examination within the cultural community about what makes a book and the nature of publishing and marketing books.[18] The book also became the top-selling title for Kobo eReaders, outselling even George W. Bush's memoir Decision Points.[19]

Nominees and winners

1990s

Year Jury Author Book Result Ref.
1994 Alice Munro
Mordecai Richler
David Staines
M. G. Vassanji The Book of Secrets Winner [20]
Bonnie Burnard Casino and Other Stories Shortlist [21]
Eliza Clark What You Need
Shyam Selvadurai Funny Boy
Steve Weiner The Museum of Love
1995 Mordecai Richler
David Staines
Jane Urquhart
Rohinton Mistry A Fine Balance Winner [22]
Timothy Findley The Piano Man's Daughter Shortlist [23]
Barbara Gowdy Mister Sandman
Leo McKay, Jr. Like This
Richard B. Wright The Age of Longing
1996 Bonnie Burnard
Carol Shields
David Staines
Margaret Atwood Alias Grace Winner [24]
Gail Anderson-Dargatz The Cure for Death by Lightning Shortlist [25]
Ann-Marie MacDonald Fall on Your Knees
Anne Michaels Fugitive Pieces
Guy Vanderhaeghe The Englishman's Boy
1997 Bonnie Burnard
Mavis Gallant
Peter Gzowski
Mordecai Richler Barney's Version Winner [26]
Michael Helm The Projectionist Shortlist [27]
Shani Mootoo Cereus Blooms at Night
Nino Ricci Where She Has Gone
Carol Shields Larry's Party
1998 Margaret Atwood
Guy Vanderhaeghe
Peter Gzowski
Alice Munro The Love of a Good Woman Winner [28]
André Alexis Childhood Shortlist [29]
Gail Anderson-Dargatz A Recipe for Bees
Barbara Gowdy The White Bone
Greg Hollingshead The Healer
Wayne Johnston The Colony of Unrequited Dreams
1999 Alberto Manguel
Judith Mappin
Nino Ricci
Bonnie Burnard A Good House Winner [30]
Timothy Findley Pilgrim Shortlist [31]
Anne Hébert Am I Disturbing You?
Nancy Huston The Mark of the Angel
David Macfarlane Summer Gone

2000s

Year Jury Author Book Result Ref.
2000 Margaret Atwood
Alistair MacLeod
Jane Urquhart
Michael Ondaatje Anil's Ghost Winner [32]
David Adams Richards Mercy Among the Children
Alan Cumyn Burridge Unbound Shortlist [33]
Elizabeth Hay A Student of Weather
Eden Robinson Monkey Beach
Fred Stenson The Trade
2001 David Adams Richards
Joan Clark
Robert Fulford
Richard B. Wright Clara Callan Winner [34]
Sandra Birdsell The Russlander Shortlist [35]
Michael Crummey River Thieves
Michael Redhill Martin Sloane
Jane Urquhart The Stone Carvers
Timothy Taylor Stanley Park
2002 Barbara Gowdy
Thomas King
W. H. New
Austin Clarke The Polished Hoe Winner [36]
Bill Gaston Mount Appetite Shortlist [37]
Wayne Johnston The Navigator of New York
Lisa Moore Open
Carol Shields Unless
2003 Rosalie Abella
David Staines
Rudy Wiebe
M. G. Vassanji The In-Between World of Vikram Lall Winner [38]
Margaret Atwood Oryx and Crake Shortlist [39]
John Bemrose The Island Walkers
John Gould Kilter: 55 Fictions
Ann-Marie MacDonald The Way the Crow Flies
2004 Charlotte Gray
Alistair MacLeod
M. G. Vassanji
Alice Munro Runaway Winner [40]
Shauna Singh Baldwin The Tiger Claw Shortlist [41]
Wayson Choy All That Matters
Pauline Holdstock Beyond Measure
Miriam Toews A Complicated Kindness
Paul Quarrington Galveston
2005 Warren Cariou
Elizabeth Hay
Richard B. Wright
David Bergen The Time in Between Winner [42]
Joan Barfoot Luck Shortlist [43]
Camilla Gibb Sweetness in the Belly
Lisa Moore Alligator
Edeet Ravel A Wall of Light
2006 Adrienne Clarkson
Alice Munro
Michael Winter
Vincent Lam Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures Winner [44]
Rawi Hage De Niro's Game Shortlist [45]
Pascale Quiviger (Sheila Fischman, tr.) The Perfect Circle
Gaétan Soucy (Lazer Lederhendler, tr.) The Immaculate Conception
Carol Windley Home Schooling
Caroline Adderson Pleased to Meet You Longlist [46]
Todd Babiak The Garneau Block
Randy Boyagoda Governor of the Northern Province
Douglas Coupland JPod
Alan Cumyn The Famished Lover
David Adams Richards The Friends of Meager Fortune
Kenneth J. Harvey Inside
Wayne Johnston The Custodian of Paradise
Annette Lapointe Stolen
Russell Wangersky The Hour of Bad Decisions
2007 David Bergen
Camilla Gibb
Lorna Goodison
Elizabeth Hay Late Nights on Air Winner [47]
Michael Ondaatje Divisadero Shortlist [48]
Daniel Poliquin (Donald Winkler, tr.) A Secret Between Us
M. G. Vassanji The Assassin's Song
Alissa York Effigy
David Chariandy Soucouyant Longlist [49]
Sharon English Zero Gravity
Barbara Gowdy Helpless
Lawrence Hill The Book of Negroes
Paulette Jiles Stormy Weather
D. R. MacDonald Lauchlin of the Bad Heart
Claire Mulligan The Reckoning of Boston Jim
Mary Novik Conceit
Michael Winter The Architects Are Here
Richard B. Wright October
2008 Margaret Atwood
Bob Rae
Colm Tóibín
Joseph Boyden Through Black Spruce Winner [50]
Anthony De Sa Barnacle Love Shortlist [51]
Marina Endicott Good to a Fault
Rawi Hage Cockroach
Mary Swan The Boys in the Trees
David Bergen The Retreat Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Giller_Prize
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