Jerusalem Prize | |
Awarded For: | writers whose works have dealt with themes of human freedom in society |
Presenter: | Organisers of the Jerusalem International Book Forum |
Location: | Jerusalem |
Website: | https://www.jbookforum.com/jerusalem-prize-winner |
The Jerusalem Prize for the Freedom of the Individual in Society is a biennial literary award given to writers whose works have dealt with themes of human freedom in society.[1]
It is awarded at the Jerusalem International Book Forum (previously known as the Jerusalem International Book Fair), and the recipient usually delivers an address when accepting the award. The award is valued at $10,000.
The prize's inaugural year was 1963, awarded to Bertrand Russell who had won the Nobel Prize in 1950. Octavio Paz, V. S. Naipaul, J. M. Coetzee, and Mario Vargas Llosa all won the Jerusalem Prize prior to winning the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Year | Picture | Name | Nationality | Language(s) | Genre(s) | Refs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1963 | Bertrand Russell (1872—1970) | English | philosophy, essay | ||||
1965 | Max Frisch (1911—1991) | German | drama, novel, philosophy | ||||
1967 | André Schwarz-Bart (1928—2006) | French | novel | ||||
1969 | Ignazio Silone (1900—1978) | Italian | novel, short story, essay | ||||
1971 | Jorge Luis Borges (1899—1986) | Spanish | short story, poetry, essay, philosophy, literary criticism, translation | ||||
1973 | Eugène Ionesco (1909—1994) | French | drama, novel | ||||
1975 | Simone de Beauvoir (1908—1986) | French | philosophy, novel, drama | ||||
1977 | Octavio Paz (1914—1998) | Spanish | poetry, essay | ||||
1979 | Isaiah Berlin (1909—1997) | English | philosophy, essay | ||||
1981 | Graham Greene (1904—1991) | English | novel, short story, autobiography, drama, essay, screenplay | ||||
1983 | Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul (1932—2018) | English | novel, short story, essay | ||||
1985 | Milan Kundera (1929–2023) | Czech / French | novel, short story, poetry, essay, drama | ||||
1987 | John Maxwell Coetzee (b. 1940) | English | novel, essay, translation | ||||
1989 | Ernesto Sabato (1911—2011) | Spanish | novel, essay | ||||
1991 | Zbigniew Herbert (1924—1998) | Polish | poetry, essay, drama | ||||
1993 | Stefan Heym (1913—2001) | German / English | novel, short story, autobiography, essay | ||||
1995 | Mario Vargas Llosa (b. 1936) | Spanish | novel, short story, essay, drama, memoirs | ||||
1997 | Jorge Semprún (1923—2011) | French / Spanish | novel, essay | ||||
1999 | Don DeLillo (b. 1936) | English | novel, short story, drama, screenplay, essay | ||||
2001 | Susan Sontag (1933—2004) | English | short story, novel, drama, essay | ||||
2003 | Arthur Miller (1915—2005) | English | drama, screenplay, essay | ||||
2005 | António Lobo Antunes (b. 1942) | Portuguese | novel | ||||
2007 | Leszek Kołakowski (1927—2009) | Polish | philosophy, history | ||||
2009 | Haruki Murakami (b. 1949) | Japanese | novel, short story | ||||
2011 | Ian McEwan (b. 1948) | English | novel, short story, drama, screenplay | [2] | |||
2013 | Antonio Muñoz Molina (b. 1956) | Spanish | novel | [3] | |||
2015 | Ismail Kadare (1936—2024) | Albanian | novel, short story, poetry, essay, drama, screenplay | [4] | |||
2017 | Karl Ove Knausgaard (b. 1968) | Norwegian | novel, autobiography | [5] | |||
2019 | Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938) | English | novel, short story, drama, essay, memoirs, poetry | ||||
2021 | Julian Barnes (b. 1946) | English | novel, essay, memoirs, short story | [6] |