Blue Metropolis
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Blue Metropolis (also known as Blue Met) is an international literary festival held annually in Montreal since 1999. Founded by Montreal writer Linda Leith, it is the world's first multilingual literary festival.[1] In early 2011, Leith departed, and a new president and a new director of programming were hired.
The festival is put on by Blue Metropolis Foundation, a nonprofit organization, established in 1997. The foundation offers educational and social programs year-round, in classrooms and online.
History
In 1996, three Montreal writers who were members of the
In 1997, Leith went on to establish Blue Metropolis Foundation as uniquely 'created by writers and readers for writers and readers'.[citation needed]
The first Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival took place April 19 to 23, 1997.[2] Its programming, 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.[citation needed]
After the event, the foundation was able to expand its scope beyond the festival and organize educational programs for young people, from the primary school to
The name 'Blue Metropolis' was partially inspired by the philosophical essay 'On Being Blue',[citation needed] in which the American writer William H. Gass investigates the many different and contradictory connotations of the word 'blue'.
In 2017, the festival added an
Awards
The festival presents a number of annual awards.
Blue Metropolis International Literary Grand Prize
- Marie-Claire Blais (2000)
- Norman Mailer (2001)
- Mavis Gallant (2002)
- Maryse Condé (2003)
- Paul Auster (2004)
- Carlos Fuentes (2005)
- Michel Tremblay (2006)
- Margaret Atwood (2007)
- Daniel Pennac (2008)
- A. S. Byatt (2009)
- Dany Laferrière (2010)
- Amitav Ghosh (2011)
- Joyce Carol Oates (2012)
- Colm Tóibín (2013)
- Richard Ford (2014)
- Nancy Huston (2015)
- Anne Carson (2016)
- Anita Desai (2017)
- Charles Taylor (2018)
- Annie Proulx (2019)
Premio Metropolis Azul
In 2013, the festival announced a new prize, the Premio Metropolis Azul. Given each year to an author from any country or region for a work of fiction written in Spanish, English, or French, the prize is awarded to works which explore some aspect of Hispanophone culture or history. The prize is sponsored by Ginny Stikeman.
- Sergio Ramírez, La fugitiva (2013)
- Luis Alberto Urrea, Queen of America (2014)
- Junot Díaz (2015)
- Valeria Luiselli (2016)
- Francisco Goldman (2017)
- Leila Guerriero (2018)
Blue Metropolis First Peoples Prize
The Blue Metropolis First Peoples Prize is awarded to a North American Indigenous writer for a work in any genre. Winners have included:
- Annharte(2015)
- Thomas King (2016)
- David Treuer (2017)
- Lee Maracle (2018)
Blue Metropolis Words to Change Prize
The Blue Metropolis Words to Change Prize is awarded to a writer whose work connects communities, whether they be linguistic, religious, ethnic or other communities:
- Gene Luen Yang (2015)
- Abdourahman Waberi (2016)
- Imbolo Mbue (2017)
- Charif Majdalani (2018)
Literary Diversity Prize
In 2016 the festival announced a new prize in association with the Conseil des arts de Montréal. The work is awarded to a first or second generation migrant to Quebec, residing in Montreal, from a multi-cultural community, written in French or English, for a first publication in Quebec.
- Ghayas Hachem, Play Boys (2016)
- Xue Yiwei, Shenzheners (2017)
- Alina A Dumitrescu, Le cimetière des abeilles (2018)
Blue Metropolis Violet Prize
The
- Nicole Brossard (2018)
- Dionne Brand (2019)
Blue Metropolis Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher Arab Literary Prize
The festival in the past also awarded the Blue Metropolis Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher Arab Literary Prize. Named after the 17th-century poet
Past winners of the Al Majidi Ibn Dhaher Prize are:
- Elias Khoury (2007)
- Saadi Youssef (2008)
- Zakaria Tamer (2009)
- Joumana Haddad (2010)
- Alaa Al Aswany (2011)
- Ahdaf Soueif (2012)
- Hisham Matar (2013)
- Habib Selmi (2014)
References
- ^ "Montreal's multilingual literary festival celebrates its 20th anniversary - Concordia University". www.concordia.ca. Retrieved 2023-02-19.
- ^ Cristi, A. A. "Blue Metropolis Celebrates 25 Years With Three Renowned Authors As Spokespersons". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
- ^ Peter Knegt, "Canadian LGBTQ literature is having a moment, and this Montreal festival is showcasing that". CBC Arts, April 18, 2018.
- ^ "Metropolis Violet : Écrivain(e)s LGBTQ à Metropolis bleu". Fugues, April 19, 2018.