The Prix Mallarmé is a poetry prize awarded each year by the Académie Mallarmé to a French speaking poet. To be eligible for the prize the poet must have published a piece in the year concerned, even though the prize does not reward a specific piece of poetry but the author's work all along his career as a whole. The prize may only be won once.[1]
The prize is awarded on the occasion of the book fair which takes place in Brive-la-Gaillarde, in the département of Corrèze, région Limousin, France. The cash prize amounts to €3,811 (25,000 FF). Over the past three years it has been financed through sponsorship from the company ISS; previously it was sponsored by the Mairie of Brives.
Winners
editThis is an incomplete list of authors having won the prize:
Year | Author | Published work nominated |
---|---|---|
2019 | Claudine Bohi | Naître c'est longtemps |
2018 | Béatrice de Jurquet | Si quelqu’un écoute |
2017 | Philippe Mathy | Veilleur d'instants |
2016 | Gérard Bayo | Neige, followed by Vivante étoile |
2015 | Werner Lambersy | La Perte du temps |
2014 | Hubert Haddad | La Verseuse du matin |
2013 | Alain Duault | Les Sept Prénoms du vent |
2012 | Yves Namur | La Tristesse du figuier |
2011 | Annie Salager | Travaux de lumière |
2010 | Robert Marteau | Le Temps ordinaire |
2009 | Jean Max Tixier | Parabole des nuées |
2008 | Jean Ristat | Artémis chasse à courre, le sanglier, le cerf et le loup |
2007 | Seyhmus Dagtekin | Juste un pont sans feu |
2006 | Michel Butor | 16 lustres |
2005 | Hélène Dorion | Ravir : les lieux |
2004 | Olivier Barbarant | Essais de voix malgré le vent |
2003 | Jean Portante | L'étrange langue |
2002 | Alain Veinstein | Tout se passe comme si |
2000 | André Schmitz | Incises, Incisions |
1999 | Benoît Conort | Main de nuit |
1998 | Mohamed Dib | L'Enfant-Jazz |
1997 | Marie Etienne | Roi des cent cavaliers |
1996 | Franck Venaille | Descente de l'Escaut |
1995 | Paul-Louis Rossi | Faïences |
1992 | Jacques Chessex | Les aveugles du seul regard |
1990 | André Velter | L'Arbre-seul |
1989 | Guy Goffette | Eloge pour une cuisine de province |
1988 | Jean Pérol | Asile exil |
1987 | Venus Khoury-Ghata | Monologue du mort |
1986 | Henri Meschonnic | Voyageurs de la voix |
1984 | Claude Esteban | Conjoncture du corps et du jardin |
1981 | Lionel Ray | Le corps obscur |
1980 | Yves de Bayser | |
1979 | Jacques Izoard | Vêtu, dévêtu, libre |
1978 | Jean Joubert | Les Poèmes - 1955-1975 |
1976 | Andrée Chédid | Fraternité de la parole et Cérémonial de la violence |
1942 | Yanette Delétang-Tardif | Tenter de vivre |
1940 | Paul Bulliard | Chacun sa croix |
1939 | Jean Follain | Chants terrestres |
Académie Mallarmé
editThe Académie Mallarmé (Mallarmé Academy) was founded in 1937. It is a French not-for-profit association (known in French as an association loi de 1901, a "1901 law association"), founded in commemoration of Stéphane Mallarmé, by people who knew him.
Its main objective is the promotion of poetry, and for a long time it was presided over by Guillevic and Alain Bosquet. It consists of thirty French or French-speaking members and 15 foreign correspondents. Notable members of the Académie include Jean Orizet, Marie-Claire Bancquart, Lionel Ray, Claude-Michel Cluny, François Montmaneix, Robert Sabatier, Jean Rousselot, Michel Deguy, Charles Dobzinski, Philippe Jones, Jean-Michel Maulpoix, Henri Meschonnic, Pierre Oster, Vénus Khoury-Ghata; and the foreign correspondents are Ismail Kadaré, Seamus Heaney and Andrei Vossnessenski.
The Academy seeks to promote poetry and organises poetry readings as well as the annual award of the Mallarmé prize. The Academy also seeks to promote the work of Stéphane Mallarmé, which is now in the public domain (since he died more than a hundred years ago).
References
edit- ^ Académie Mallarmé Le Prix Mallarmé