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martedì 12 settembre 2017

2017 Janus Pannonius Grand Prize for Poetry to Augusto de Campos

The Hungarian PEN Club has made it official now: Brazilian poet Augusto de Campos is this year’s winner of the Janus Pannonius Grand Prize for Poetry. The decision was announced during the Quasimodo Poetry Competition of Balatonfüred, Hungary, on Friday, September 8, 2017.

 

An international contemporary poetry prize established by the Hungarian PEN Club in 2012, and “sometimes called the Nobel Prize for Poetry,” as The New York Times claims, the Grand Prize has gone to a roster of widely acclaimed poets: the Iranian lyricist Simin Behbahani (2013), the Syrian-born Lebanese bard Adonis (2014), the Parisian maestro Yves Bonnefoy (2014), the American avant-gardist Charles Bernstein (2015), the Italian celebrity Giuseppe Conte (2015), and the Polish versifier Adam Zagajewski. The Grand Prize includes publication, readings, and 50,000 euros.

 

The award ceremony will be held in Pécs, where Janus Pannonius (1434-1472), one of the most highly revered poets of the European Renaissance, praised among others by Erasmus of Rotterdam himself, was bishop. The Laureate will receive the Janus Pannonius Trophy and the Janus Pannonius Diploma on September 23, 2017, in the Csontváry Museum of Pécs, followed by a gala in Budapest the day after, complete with several exhibition openings, a lecture given by Getty Curator Nancy Perloff, a book launch of Campos’s Hungarian collection published for the occasion, and the poetry reading and performance given by Augusto de Campos and Cid Campos.

 

The international jury also awards two Janus Pannonius literary translation prizes every year, each worth 3,000 euros. In 2017 the translation prizes go to the German poet Hans-Henning Paetzke for his translations of Hungarian poetry into German and to Ádám Nádasdy for his poetry and drama translations into Hungarian.