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IWP Veteran Orhan Pamuk Wins Prestigious German Peace Prize

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  • IWP Veteran Orhan Pamuk Wins Prestigious German Peace Prize

    I-Newswire.com (press release)
    June 24 2005

    IWP Veteran Orhan Pamuk Wins Prestigious German Peace Prize

    Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, a veteran of the University of Iowa
    International Writing Program (IWP), has been selected to receive the
    prestigious Peace Prize awarded by the Association of German
    Publishers and Booksellers.


    i-Newswire, - The award, which includes a cash prize of 25,000 Euros,
    will be presented this October at the Frankfurt Book Fair.

    Announcing its decision, the prize jury praised Pamuk for a unique
    ability to bridge cultures. "In Orhan Pamuk, we are honouring an
    author who like no other writer of our time, explores the historical
    footprints of the West in the East and the East in the West," it
    said.

    "He is committed to a concept of culture based on knowledge and
    respect for others. Pamuk has created a genre in which Europe and
    Islamic Turkey co-exist."

    IWP Director Christopher Merrill commented, ""Orhan Pamuk is a world
    treasure. And his latest award is an emblem both of his extraordinary
    literary powers and of the largeness of his vision. He is indeed a
    peacemaker -- a writer whose every word deepens our understanding of
    the human condition."

    Pamuk, who lives in Istanbul, is Turkey's best-selling author, and is
    known internationally for novels including "My Name is Red", "The New
    Life", "The White Castle" "The Black Book" and, most recently,
    "Snow."

    He wrote part of a novel when he was in residence at the UI in the
    fall semester of 1985. He returned to Iowa City in 1998 to read on
    the "Live from Prairie Lights" series, broadcast on UI radio station
    WSUI.

    An Agency France Presse wire story noted, "Pamuk is no stranger to
    political controversy. Earlier this year, he angered nationalists in
    Turkey by publicly addressing the highly sensitive subject of the
    massacre of Armenians in World War I. In an interview with a Swiss
    newspaper, he said that '30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians were
    killed in Turkey.' One local official ordered the seizure and
    destruction of his works."

    The Peace Prize, one of the highest distinctions in German
    literature, presented each year at the close of the book fair in
    Frankfurt.

    In 2003 Pamuk won the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, whose cash prize
    is second only to the Nobel Prize for Literature.

    Founded in 1967, the IWP ( http://www.uiowa.edu/~iwp ) was the first
    international writers' residency at a university, and it remains
    unique in world literature. The IWP brings established writers of
    the world to the UI, where they become part of the lively literary
    community on campus. Over the years, more than a thousand writers
    from more than 120 countries have completed extended residencies in
    the program. Most IWP residency groups are a mix of poets, fiction
    writers, screenwriters, playwrights, journalists, essayists and
    critics.

    The importance of the IWP to international understanding was
    recognized as early as 1976, when former senator, diplomat and UN
    Ambassador Averrill Harriman nominated founders Paul and Hualing Nieh
    Engle for the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1995 the program was honored with
    the Governor's Award for distinguished service to the State of Iowa.

    The IWP is staffed and housed by the University of Iowa. IWP writers
    have been financed by the United States State Department, through
    bilateral agreements with numerous countries; by grants given by
    cultural institutions and governments abroad; and by private funds
    that are donated by a variety of American corporations, foundations
    and individuals.

    IWP director, poet and essayist Christopher Merrill is a faculty
    member in the UI English department, and the international literature
    commentator for the syndicated radio program "The World."

    For UI arts information and calendar updates, visit
    http://www.uiowa.edu/artsiowa. To receive UI arts news by e-mail,
    [email protected].

    STORY SOURCE: University of Iowa Arts Center Relations, 300 Plaza
    Centre One, Suite 351, Iowa City, IA 52242-2500.
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