The University of Guadalajara, through a project created by the Environmental Sciences Museum as part of the University’s Cultural Center, and with the support of the Guadalajara International Book Fair, has established the José Emilio Pacheco City and Nature Award. The prize, which will be given for the first time this year, will be dedicated to poetry. The winning author, who must write in Spanish and have at least ten unpublished poems or poems published in the last five years that are related to nature, urban sustainability, socio-ecological harmony and environmental conservation, will be given a purse of US $10,000. The award is dedicated to poet José Emilio Pacheco, whose work explores the duality between cities and nature.
Oswaldo Hernández Trujillo
Created by the University of Guadalajara, and with the collaboration of the National Institute for Indigenous Languages, the Culture Ministry, the National Commission for the Development of the Indigenous Cultures and Jalisco’s Department of Education, the American Indigenous Literature Award is granted to enrich, protect and promote the legacy and richness of Mexico’s indigenous peoples through literature in all its forms, and to and acknowledge and further develop the careers and works of indigenous authors. The award, which carries a purse of US $25,000, will be given for the fourth time at the 2016 FIL Guadalajara.
Florentino Solano
The SM Ibero-American Award for Literature for Children and Young People was implemented in 2005, the year of Ibero-American literature, with the goal of promoting literature for children and young people throughout Ibero-America. The award is given out each year during the Guadalajara International Book Fair to recognize writers of literature for children and young people and carries a purse of US $30,000.
María José Ferrada
With the goal of creating a network that helps to encourage the work of illustrators of books for children and young people in Ibero-America, the SM Foundation and the FIL Guadalajara invites illustrators to submit their work to be included in the Annual Ibero-American Illustration Catalog. The 45 works selected will be displayed in an exposition at the Guadalajara International Book Fair. In addition, illustrators will have the opportunity to work on an illustrated book with Ediciones SM and the winner will be given US $5,000. You can find more information at: www.iberoamericailustra.com
Gerald Espinoza
Program Search
Literature in Quebec: a duty of memory
FIL Literature
Literature in Quebec: a duty of memory
Rima Elkouri is a Quebecois writer and journalist. She is a columnist for La Presse, the most important French-language newspaper in North America. She is the granddaughter of Armenian genocide survivors. Her first novel, Manam (Boreal, 2019), which won over critics and thousands of readers, looks into genocide and the importance of witnessing. It is also a tribute to the courage of women and their search for hope in a desperate world.
Winner of the Jules-Fournier Prize from the Conseil Supérieur de la langue française du Québec and the Judith-Jasmin Prize from the Fédération Professionnelle des Journalistes du Québec, Rima Elkouri, published in 2014 the compendium Sin ganas de ser árabe (Somme Toute) which gathers her best writings published between 2000 and 2014. She is the co-author of the story La libertad no es un crimen (Plon, 2020) which recounts the struggle of Iranian women’s rights activist Shaparak Shajarizadeh, living in exile in Canada.
Participant: Rima Elkouri
Rima Elkouri
(Canadá)
Rima Elkouri es una escritora y periodista quebequés. Es columnista en La Presse, el periódico francófono más importante en América del Norte.
Nacida en Montreal, es nieta de sobrevivientes del genocidio en Armenia. Su primera novela, Manam (Boréal, 2019) que se ganó a la crítica y a miles de lectores, es una mirada al interior del genocidio y de la importancia de testificar. En parte, homenaje al coraje de las mujeres y a su búsqueda de la esperanza en un mundo desesperado, la novela fue traducida al español por Iballa López Hernández y fue publicada para Tiempo de Papel.
Ganadora del Premio Jules-Fournier del Consejo Superior de la Lengua Francesa de Quebec, y del Premio Judith-Jasmin de la Federación Profesional de Periodistas de Quebec, Rima Elkouri, publicó en 2014 el compendio Sin ganas de ser árabe (Somme toute) que reúne sus mejores textos publicados entre 2000 y 2014.
Ella es coautora del relato La libertad no es un crimen (Plon, 2020) que narra la lucha de la militante iraní Shaparak Shajarizadeh, que vive en exilio en Canadá, por los derechos de las mujeres.
Ha colaborado en diversas obras colectivas, como Diez años más tarde: la comisión Bouchard-Taylor, ¿éxito o fracaso? (Quebec Amerique, 2018), Abecedario del feminismo (Somme toute, 2016) y En alguna parte en el comienzo del siglo XXI. La de década de los 2000 vista por 40 jóvenes creadores y observadores quebequenses (La Pastèque, 2008).