Neustadt International Prize for Literature

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The Neustadt International Prize for Literature is a biennial award for literature sponsored by the University of Oklahoma and World Literature Today. Authors, including poets, novelists, and playwrights are eligible for the US$50,000 prize, which is unusual for an international literary prize. The prize is funded by an endowment from the Neustadt family of Ardmore, Oklahoma, and Dallas, Texas, and was the first literary award of this scope to originate in the United States. The prize was established in 1969 as the Books Abroad International Prize for Literature, then renamed the Books Abroad / Neustadt Prize before assuming its present name in 1976. Some consider the prize to be almost as prestigious as the Nobel Prize in Literature.


Winners

Contents

[edit] 1970s

International Neustadt Prize in Literature, 1970s
Year Name Country
1970 Giuseppe Ungaretti Italy
1972 Gabriel García Márquez Colombia
1974 Francis Ponge France
1976 Elizabeth Bishop United States
1978 Czesław Miłosz Poland

[edit] 1980s

International Neustadt Prize in Literature, 1980s
Year Name Country
1980 Josef Škvorecký Czechoslovakia
1982 Octavio Paz Mexico
1984 Paavo Haavikko Finland
1986 Max Frisch Switzerland
1988 Raja Rao India

[edit] 1990s

International Neustadt Prize in Literature, 1990s
Year Name Country
1990 Tomas Tranströmer Sweden
1992 João Cabral de Melo Neto Brazil
1994 Edward Kamau Brathwaite Barbados
1996 Assia Djebar France/Algeria
1998 Nuruddin Farah Somalia

[edit] 2000s

International Neustadt Prize in Literature, 2000s
Year Name Country
2000 David Malouf Australia
2002 Álvaro Mutis Colombia
2004 Adam Zagajewski Poland
2006
2008

[edit] External links

In other languages