The European Prize of Literature 2024 & The State of European Literature
This year, Olga Tokarczuk, together with her translator Karol Lesman, won the 2024 European Literature Prize for her novel Empusion (De Geus). Combining this wonderful fact and the occasion of the annual State of European Literature, Tokarczuk will engage in a conversation with Margot Dijkgraaf. They will explore the role of literature in our contemporary European society. Following this, Tokarczuk will discuss winning the 2024 European Prize of Literature and the significance of translation, joined by her translator Karol Lesman and jury chair Niña Weijers.
The European Literature Prize is awarded by het Nederlands Letterenfonds – the Dutch Foundation for Literature – for the best contemporary European novel published in Dutch translation in the preceding year. The award goes to both the author and the translator of the winning novel, each of them receiving € 10,000 in prize money. As well as chair author Niña Weijers, the jury for the prize consists of Ronnie Terpstra (Van der Velde bookstore), Astrid Bamberg (Hijman Ongerijmd bookstore), author and reviewer Ilse Josepha Lazaroms and Karina van Santen, the translator of last year’s winning book. They selected the shortlist from a longlist compiled by booksellers from all over the country.
The State of European Literature is organised by the Faculty of Humanities of the UvA , in collaboration with the Amsterdam Centre for European Studies (ACES), the Amsterdam School for Regional and Transnational and European Studies (ARTES), the Netherlands Research School for Literary Studies (OSL), and SPUI25. This year, the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA) has joined the initiative. The annual State of European Literature wishes to enhance awareness of the pivotal role of the key values of literature and culture for the current and future state of Europe: curiosity, imagination, reflection, critique, translation, eloquence, tradition, invention (in random order).
SPUI25 is the academic-cultural podium of Amsterdam. Since 2007, we have been giving scientists, authors, artists and other thinkers the opportunity to shine a light on issues that occupy, inspire or concern them. In cooperation with a large number of academic and cultural partners, we organize between 250 and 300 freely accessible programs per year. These are enriching, often interdisciplinary programs that move between science and culture, fact and fiction.
SPUI25 is one of the UvA podia in the University Quarter.