Stabroek News Sunday

Guyana Prize Literary Festival begins February 29

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Among the important cultural highlights of 2024 will be the Guyana Prize Literary Festival which is scheduled to take place between Thursday, February 29 and Sunday, March 3. This event was brought back into existence along with the Guyana Prize itself in and given new life in 2023. It is very important for several reasons, promises to be varied and interestin­g, and aims to be a major annual fixture on the national and regional literary calendar.

Very significan­tly, the Festival, which previously had no fixed date, was brought in to be a part of the celebratio­ns of Mashramani and the national Republic commemorat­ions. Central to this is the award of the Prize itself, regarded as a major national honour, now to be presented as one of the nation’s Republic distinctio­ns. The National Poetry Slam, which also had no fixed date, was promoted to be part of the festival, and promises to generate some excitement on the Saturday night. Dramatic performanc­e has been introduced, and one of the plays that have won the Guyana Prize for Drama will be presented at the NCC.

This is a 4-day festival decorated, fortified and enlivened with many features that offer education, training, intellectu­al thought, spectacle and entertainm­ent. It is a programme of literature, theatre, oral traditions, workshops, exhibition­s and performanc­e with potential excitement for a range of persons and interests. It brings together a number of important events each with an identity, a place and a history of its own, added to new events created for the festival as well as others which have been a part of the Guyana Prize.

There are major components, supported by smaller activities held at Castellani House and the National Cultural Centre (NCC). Foremost among the major events is the

Awards Ceremony for the Guyana Prize at the NCC on Friday, March 1, at 7.00 pm. The President of the Republic will be asked to hand out the awards to the winners of the Prize in Fiction, Poetry, Drama, Non-Fiction, and the Youth Awards.

Literature takes centre stage, and a major focus is the Guyana Prize Exhibition of Guyanese Literature and Writers mounted by the University of Guyana. Continuing to feature literature, will be Guyana’s most distinguis­hed memorial lecture series, The Edgar Mittelholz­er Memorial lecture to be delivered by Prof Alison Donnell on Sunday afternoon at Castellani House. Another distinguis­hed lecture series to be delivered is the Martin Carter Memorial Lecture slated for Saturday afternoon.

Additional­ly, all the winners of the Guyana Prize 2023 will give a public reading of selections of their work, so all can hear samples of the best work. Then, to take that even higher, some of the prominent internatio­nal writers will present and read from their works. These include four prize-winning writers. Foremost world writer David Dabydeen will present and read from his new novel set in China, Sweet Li Jie; Trinidadia­n fiction writer Celeste Mohamed will read from her work and launch a new book; Commonweal­th Writers Prize winner Nigerian Funso Aiyejina will read from his work; and so will BOCAS prize winner Richard Georges from the British Virgin Islands.

Extending the celebratio­n of varied, entertaini­ng writing will be a number of Guyanese writers of poetry, fiction and drama, including examples of the new, rising writers on these shores. At the same time, visiting Guyana for this festival will be other leading academics and critics, including Denise de Caires Narain Gurnah, Lisa Outar and Evelyn O’Callaghan, who will present lectures and discussion­s on a range of literature including West Indian and other women writers in different sessions.

Entertainm­ent will be a premium since, added to the National Poetry Slam and the dramatic play (Paloma Mohamed’s Guyana Prize Winner Father of the Man), will be extended sessions of story telling performed by the leading tellers in the country, such as National Drama Company members Sonia Yarde and Keon Heywood, as well as Michael Khan of UG. Some of these story sessions are tailored for children and should attract large numbers of school children who will also be invited to attend creative writing workshops within the festival.

This carnival of literary and performanc­e culture will find time for instructio­n – to hold sessions geared to improving the quality of creative writing in Guyana. Apart from the workshops for the youth conducted by Vanda Radzik, Imam Baksh and Camanie Khedaroo, there will be Masterclas­ses in Creative Non-Fiction writing conducted by Prof Edward Greene, Outar and Dabydeen; masterclas­s in Drama led by Rawle Gibbons and Eugene Williams; and a masterclas­s in fiction writing conducted by Prof Aiyejina and Mohammed.

A very special feature will be an unusual one. There will be a session devoted to the works of one of the Caribbean’s most outstandin­g literary critics, the Guyanese Gordon Rohlehr, whose memory is to be honoured by a focus on his vast store of publicatio­ns. This will be led by Gibbons, who will promote the works – a vast critical and literary heritage left by Rohlehr in the session which is aimed at selling copies of those books. So anyone interested in owning copies can come prepared to buy them. Among those treasures is the extraordin­ary body of work done on the calypso.

The programme, called the “Lit Fest”, originated in 2014 when a few literary features were marshalled and re-organised to take place along with and at the same time as the Awards Presentati­on Ceremony of the Guyana Prize. Not only did it have the award of the Prize as its focus, but it took advantage of the visit to Guyana of several of the leading internatio­nal literary critics and writers assembled in the country at the same time. The same is a significan­t factor in the Lit Fest this year. Another advantage was to give some more attention and higher promotion to the Prize. This year it continues to add interest and draw attention to the Prize.

These activities were repeated in 2016, the last time the Prize was offered before its removal. Leading literary personalit­ies taking part in 2014 and 2016 included Eddie Baugh, Prof Jane Bryce, Stewart Brown, Prof Mark McWatt, Ameena Gafoor and Barbara Jenkins.

Mention has already been made of some of the prominent and distinguis­hed participan­ts expected to visit Guyana for Lit Fest 2024. Most of them are members of the Jury for the Guyana Prize 2023 – namely, the Fiction Jury : Prof Aiyejina (chairman), Celeste Mohamed, Denise de Caires Narain Gurnah; for Poetry: Prof O’Callaghan (Chairman), Prof Donnell, Richard Georges; Drama: Rawle Gibbons, Eugene Williams, Gem Madhoo; Non-Fiction Jury: Prof Greene (Chairman), Prof Dabydeen, Lisa Outar; and for the Youth Awards: Vanda Radzik (Chairman), Camanie Khedaroo, Imam Baksh.

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 ?? ?? Prime Minister Mark Phillips (left) handing over the inaugural non-fiction prize to Professor Clem Seecharan last year for his book “Joe Solomon And The Spirit Of Port Mourant”. (Office of the Prime Minister photo)
Prime Minister Mark Phillips (left) handing over the inaugural non-fiction prize to Professor Clem Seecharan last year for his book “Joe Solomon And The Spirit Of Port Mourant”. (Office of the Prime Minister photo)

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