Blue Metropolis

Blue Metropolis is the name for the Montreal International Literary Festival. Also known as Blue Met, is the world's first multilingual literary festival and has been held annually in Montreal since April 1999. It was founded by Montreal writer Linda Leith. In early 2011, Leith departed and a new President was hired as well as a new Director of Programming. The Blue Metropolis Foundation is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1997 that brings together people from different cultures to share the pleasures of reading and writing, and encourages creativity and intercultural understanding. The Foundation produces an Annual Literary Festival and offers a wide range of educational and social programs year-round, both in classrooms and online. These programs use reading and writing as therapeutic tools, to encourage academic perseverance, and fight against poverty and social isolation.

History

Blue Metropolis was inspired by an earlier event called "Write pour écrire". In 1996, three Montreal writers who were members of the Writer's Union of Canada (Linda Leith, Ann Charney and Mary Soderstrom) organized a new kind of literary event in partnership with the Union des écrivaines et des écrivains québécois (UNEQ). Called "Write pour écrire", this event brought writers and readers together from across the language divide. In 1997, Linda Leith founded Blue Metropolis Foundation. Created by writers and readers for writers and readers, the Foundation grew thanks to the support of many volunteers, friends and partners. The first Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival took place April 19 to 23, 1999. Its events, which took place in French or English or both, included the first Blue Metropolis Translation Slam and literacy/community writing activities, as well as readings, on-stage interviews, and panel discussions. With the support of writers, readers and volunteers, the Foundation was able to expand its programming beyond the Festival and organize a wide range of educational programs for young people, from the primary school to cégep levels, as well as year-round Literacy & the Literary activities in Montreal and beyond.

The name "Blue Metropolis" was partially inspired by the philosophical essay "On Being Blue", in which the American writer Wiliam H. Gass investigates the many different and contradictory connotations of the word "blue".

The 2015 edition of the Festival, which ran April 20-26, hosted over 150 writers from 12 countries with 260 events in 8 languages.

The next dates of the Blue Metropolis Festival are early April, 2016.

Awards

The Festival awards the Blue Metropolis International Literary Grand Prize annually. Past winners are:

In 2013, the Festival announced a new prize, the Premio Metropolis Azul. To be bestowed each year to an author from any country or region for a work of fiction written in Spanish, English or French, the prize recognizes works which explore some aspect of Hispanophone culture or history. The prize is sponsored by Ginny Stikeman.

The Festival also awards the Blue Metropolis Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher Arab Literary Prize. Named after the poet Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher, the prize was initiated in 2007 and is worth CAD 5000. The prize is sponsored by the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage. Dr Issa J. Boullata serves as consultant for the prize and the jury is composed of an international roster of poets, novelists and literary professionals. The prize is on hiatus for 2015, expected to return in 2016 with a new winner.

Past winners of the Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher prize are:

In March, the Festival announced the creation of two new on-going prizes.

The Blue Metropolis First Peoples Prize is awarded to a Canadian Indigenous writer for a work in any genre. and the inaugural prize has been announced as Anishnabe poet, Annharte, for her collection, Indigena Awry. Annharte was also invited under the auspices of Blue Met as one of the featured authors in the Hay Festival Cartagena's 2015 series on Indigenous writers of the Americas.

The 2015 Blue Metropolis Words to Change Prize has been awarded to American comics artist, Gene Luen Yang. This prize aims to honor a writer whose work connects communities whether they be linguistic, religious, ethnic or other communities.

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