Hans Christian Andersen Award Explained

Hans Christian Andersen Award should not be confused with Hans Christian Andersen Literature Award.

Hans Christian Andersen Award

The Hans Christian Andersen Awards are two literary awards given by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY), recognising one living author and one living illustrator for their "lasting contribution to children's literature". The writing award was first given in 1956, the illustration award in 1966. The former is sometimes called the "Nobel Prize for children's literature".

The awards are named after Hans Christian Andersen, a 19th-century Danish author of fairy tales, and each winner receives the Hans Christian Andersen Medaille (a gold medal with the bust of Andersen) and a diploma. Medals are presented at the biennial IBBY Congress.

History

The International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY) was founded by Jella Lepman in the 1950s. The Hans Christian Andersen Award was first proposed in 1953 and awarded three years later, in 1956. It was established in the aftermath of World War II to encourage the development of high-quality children's books. The award was set to be given biennially and was initially awarded for individual works that had been published in the preceding two years. By 1962, the award's formal criteria were amended "to a living author who is judged to have made a lasting contribution to good juvenile literature by the outstanding value of his or her work. The author's complete works, in particular those in fiction, will be taken into consideration in awarding the medal."

Runners up were listed in 1960, 1962, and 1964. In reflection of what IBBY considered to be a trend of increasing quality in picture books, the award was expanded to include illustrators in 1966. From 1966 to 1996 runners up were named as "Highly Commended". In 1998, this was replaced with a list of three to four "Finalists". It is sometimes called the "Little Nobel Prize" or the "Nobel Prize for children's literature"[1] [2] and has been cited as the "most important activity" of IBBY. Between 1992 and 2022, the patron of the awards was Queen Margrethe II of Denmark.[3] A special issue of Bookbird, a journal published by IBBY, is published as the award is given out.

Jury

The winner of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards is selected by a jury which is put together by IBBY's executive committee. The Jury's president is elected by IBBY's General Assembly. There were initially seven jurors, but this was increased to eight and in 2000 to ten. Two years later, the jury was split with five members focusing on writing and the other five handling illustrations. The jurors are expected to be competent in children's literature and ideally represent a diverse group. It generally takes six months to review candidates and select a winner.

Jella Lepman served as Jury President for the first three Andersen Awards, 1956 to 1960, and remained on the jury until her death in 1970, as the President of IBBY and then as its honorary president. Current four-year terms cover two award cycles. Other notable presidents have included Virginia Haviland (1970–1974), Patricia Crampton (1982–1986), and Ana Maria Machado (1986–1990).[4]

Selection process

The award's regulations read: "The Hans Christian Award is presented every two years by IBBY to an author and to an illustrator, living at the time of the nomination, who by the outstanding value of their work are judged to have made a lasting contribution to literature for children and young people. The complete works of the author and the illustrator will be taken into consideration in the selection process". The award is explicitly designed to be an "international" work, and it is not explicitly given to a certain country.

IBBY has many member nationsall countries are eligible for membership. Every member nation has its own organization, known as a "national section", that is active across the country. All member nations can nominate candidates for consideration in the Hans Christian Andersen Awards.[5] Some member states will repeatedly nominate the same author or illustrator, others nominate a new candidate each time. To nominate a candidate, a dossier is prepared that provides information including a list of works and biographical sketch. The portfolio must have between five and ten books by the candidate, which are sent to jurors, IBBY's president, and the "Jury Secretary". There were sixty-six nominees from thirty-three countries for the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen awards.[6]

Each winner receives the Hans Christian Andersen Medaille, a gold medal with the bust of Andersen, and a diploma. These medals are presented at the biennial IBBY Congress.

Writing award winners

Year !scope="col"
Winner CountryAward
1956 United Kingdom
1958 Sweden
1960
1962 United States
1964 France
1966 Finland
Austria
Italy
Spain
1968
Spain
Italy
United States
1970 Italy
Spain
United States
1972 United States
France
Spain
Sweden
Siny van Iterson Netherlands
1974 Sweden
Denmark
France
1976 Denmark
United States
1978 United States
1980
Brazil
Sweden
1982 Brazil
1984 Austria
Australia
1986 Australia
1988 Netherlands
France
1990 Norway
Denmark
1992 United States
Argentina
1994 Japan
1996 Israel
1998 United States
Canada
India
Portugal
2000 Brazil
Sweden
United States
2002 United Kingdom
Belgium
Denmark
2004 Ireland
Sweden
Denmark
Brazil
Switzerland
2006 New Zealand
2008 Switzerland
2010 United Kingdom
2012 Argentina
2014 Japan
2016 China
2018 Japan
2020 United States
2022Marie-Aude Murail[7] France
María Cristina Ramos Argentina
Fatima Sharafeddine Lebanon
Slovenia
Annika Thor Sweden
Margaret Wild Australia
2024[8] Austria
Marina Colasanti Brazil
Lee Geum-yi
Bart Moeyaert Belgium
Timo Parvela Finland
Edward van de Vendel Netherlands

Illustration award winners

Year !scope="col"
Winner CountryAward
1966
1968
Denmark
United States
1970 United States
Denmark
Japan
1972 Denmark
Canada
Greece
Sweden
Switzerland
1974 Iran
Austria
France
1976
Denmark
1978 Denmark
United States
1980 Japan
France
Switzerland
1982 Poland
1984 Japan
1986 Australia
1988
Japan
1990 Austria
1992
1994 Switzerland
1996 Germany
1998 France
Germany
Netherlands
Poland
2000 United Kingdom
Germany
Slovenia
2002 United Kingdom
France
Germany
Japan
2004 Netherlands
2006 Germany
2008 Italy
2010 Germany
2012 Czech Republic
2014 Brazil
Germany
2016 Germany
2018
2020 Switzerland
2022Suzy Lee[9]
Beatrice Alemagna Italy
Ryoji Arai Japan
Iwona Chmielewska Poland
Gusti Argentina
Sydney Smith Canada
2024Sydney Smith Canada
Cai Gao China
Iwona Chmielewska Poland
Nelson Cruz Brazil
Elena Odriozola Spain
Paloma Valdivia Chile

Winners by country

The winners are most often residents of Europe and North America; the first winner from outside that region was Farshid Mesghali in 1974, from Iran. After receiving the award. many authors and illustrators have their works gain wider recognition, particularly in the form of more translations. there have been award winners from 25 countries. Americans have received the most writing (6) and total (7) recipients. Germans have won four illustration awards.

Country! scope="col"
IllustrationWriting of winners
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See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cao Wenxuan wins 'Nobel Prize' of children's books . 24 February 2021 . The Telegraph . en-GB.
  2. June 2006. Mahy wins "Little Nobel.". New Zealand Books. 16. 2. 1170-9103. EBSCO.
  3. Latrobe. Kathy. 2001. Childern's [sic] Literature: International Perspectives]. World Literature Today. 75. 3/4. 98–102. 10.2307/40156756. 40156756 . 0196-3570.
  4. http://www.literature.at/viewer.alo?objid=14769&viewmode=fullscreen&scale=3.33&rotate=&page=114 "Hans Christian Award jury members"
  5. Tomlinson. Carl M.. 2003. The International Children's Literature Movement. World Literature Today. 77. 1. 68–70. 10.2307/40157788. 40157788 . 0196-3570.
  6. Web site: Kantor. Emma. 9 December 2020. Candidates for the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Awards Announced. 24 February 2021. Publishers Weekly.
  7. Web site: 2022-03-22 . Murail, Lee win 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Award . 2022-03-24 . Books+Publishing . en-AU.
  8. Web site: Kantor. Emma. 9 April 2024 . Bologna 2024: Heinz Janisch and Sydney Smith Win 2024 Hans Christian Andersen Awards . 9 April 2024 . Publishers Weekly . en-US.
  9. Web site: 2022-03-22 . Murail, Lee win 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Award . 2022-03-24 . Books+Publishing . en-AU.