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  • Full Rules: Burt Award for African Literature (Ghana)

    Deadline: 29 April 2011

    2010 Submission Criteria for the Burt Award for African Literature - Ghana

    Manuscript Criteria

    In the second year of the the Burt Award for African Literature in Ghana, manuscripts will be accepted through publishers only who are allowed to submit no more than three manuscripts per publisher. The manuscripts are expected to be prepared by authors in collaboration with publishers. This is to ensure that the submitted manuscripts are edited to some extent by the publishers before they are read by the jury.

    Manuscripts will be reviewed by a panel of judges based on the following criteria:

    The Award is restricted to authors who are citizens and reside in Ghana.

    1. Manuscripts shall be written in English.
    2. Manuscripts should be thought-provoking and original.
    3. Manuscripts should show creativity, readability, and suitability to adolescents (12-15 years old).
    4. Manuscripts should portray strong and admirable principal characters.
    5. Manuscripts should use humour and or suspense to entertain and captivate the reader.
    6. Manuscripts should be lively and allow for dramatization.
    7. Manuscripts should reflect modern realities and indicate some of the social problems which are facing adolescents in Ghana.

    Manuscripts are encouraged to be written with potential to evolve into a book series or sequel.

    The Award is restricted to authors who are Ghanaian citizens and reside in Ghana.

    Tips for strong submissions:

    The best stories:

    * Engage young readers in characters they can identify with such as protagonists who overcome challenges or obstacles in a positive way.
    * Have a well-developed plot with a good flow of events and pacing.
    * Effectively use literary devices, such as flashbacks.
    * Display excellent story-telling style, such as strong imagery, lively dialogue, and vivid descriptions.
    * Reflect current issues and challenges of concern to contemporary Ghanaian adolescents

    Specifications

    To be accepted for consideration manuscripts need to be:

    * Manuscripts should be between 80-120 pages in length.
    * Manuscripts should be in chapter form.
    * Manuscripts should be type-written and double spaced on an A-4 sized paper.
    * The font type should be Times New Roman and size 12.

    Winning authors will be awarded monetary prizes and will work with local publishers to ensure 3,000 published copies are distributed by GBT to schools in rural areas of Ghana. The announcement of the second Burt Award winners will coincide with the Ghana International Book Fair to be held in November 2011.

    Deadline for Submission

    The manuscripts should be submitted in both hard and soft copies through publishers to the Ghana Book Trust by 29th April, 2011 by 4.00pm. They will be reviewed and assessed by a panel of qualified judges to determine the winners.

    Three awards will be presented annually:

    Gold, 16,000 GHS
    Silver 8,000 GHS
    Bronze 4,000 GHS

    (Prizes are based on $12,000, $6,000 and $3,000 Canadian dollars and are subject to changes in currency exchange rates)

    Contact Information

    The Ghana Book Trust (GBT) is the implementing organization that manages the award. The Ghana Book Trust (GBT) is a non-governmental organization that increases literacy by supporting educators to teach reading and writing, while supplying relevant books and learning materials to school and community libraries across Ghana.

    Ghana Book Trust
    No. 16 IPS Road
    P.O. Box LG 536
    Legon-Accra
    Tel: + 233 (0) 21 502495
    Email: gbt@africaonline.com.gh

    The Award is sponsored by CODE, a Canadian NGO, with generous support from a Canadian individual, Bill Burt.

  • Ghana Voices Book Reading Series at the Goethe Institute

    Date: 25 February 2011 (7-8pm)

    Location: Goethe Institute
    30, Kakramadu Road, next to NAFTI Cantonments
    Accra

    The Writers Project of Ghana in collaboration with the Goethe Institute firm on bringing you the best of Ghanaian literature returns with Ghana Voices Series, our monthly book reading. 2011 will be an exciting year for readers and writers as every month comes with enchanting literature and discussions.

    The second month of the year becomes the first to give you a chance to meet, read and hear Ghanaian writers. Farida Bedwei is ou...r guest writer for the sixth reading in the Ghana Voices Series. Farida Bedwei is author of Definition of a Miracle, her debut novel.

    Definition of a Miracle, has received rave reviews from home and abroad. It is a bold novel that puts into perspective the idea of 'not giving up'. It also challenges the kind of story that has become representative of Africa.

    The Ghana Voices Series provides a platform to explore the synchrony between the literary arts and societal change in Ghana. We invite you to follow this oral anthology as we bring together the treasure of our literary heritage.

    Farida Bedwei shares with us in a relaxed ambience, her winning story following which the floor will be open for discussions.

    Autographed copies of the book will be available for sale.

  • Call for Essays - Contemporary African Literature: Thematics and Criticism

    Deadline: 14 February 2011

    Contemporary African Literature: Thematics and Criticism

    Edited by J. K. S. Makokha (Free University of Berlin, Germany) & Leonard Acquah (University of Cape Coast, Ghana)

    We are seeking critical essays for a new edited volume on major works of African literature by new writers emerging after 2000 or by established writers but published after 2000AD. Contemporaries of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Ngugi represent the two age groups of African writers. We are interested precisely in new critical essays focusing on themes and thematics in the new works of these two writers and/or their African contemporaries across the continent or living in Diaspora.

    The first decade of the 21st Century has just ended affording critics with the window for retrospection needed in order to ensure objectivity in our critical enterprise as set out in the intention of this project. The aim of this celebratory collection of new essays is to offer emergent critical perspectives on the concerns highlighted in the exciting new literary output of African writers after the fin de siècle. The works under study should be in English or in other Afrophone or Europhone languages with English translations.

    The contributions should be original and couched in relevant and current theories and frameworks of literary interpretation. Essays on new African literature that are related to the broad focus of the collection (i.e. theory of literature) and move beyond specific cases in an attempt to expand the discussion within a theoretical perspective are highly encouraged; the role of African literature or writers can be two good points of such a broad focus.

    Contributions are invited on essays that explore any of the following topics/themes/ideas in prose, poetry or play genres. Moreover, we explicitly invite contributions on topics or thematics not mentioned below but still fitting under this book project title above:

    1. Representing the Diaspora
    2. Gender
    3. Memory and Hybridity
    4. Cultural translation
    5. Borderland subjectivities
    6. Translocation and multilocality
    7. Migration and nomadology
    8. Multicultural and/or multilingual writing (narratives)
    9. Traveling Selves
    10. Maps and Mapping
    11. Postmodernism and Postcolonialism
    12. Genre Criticism
    13. Politics of Writing/Cultural Politics
    14. Democracy and Governance
    15. African Renaissance and new Pan-Africanism
    16. Urbanization and Cosmopolitanism

    NB: Send us a short abstract of 300 words via the email by February 14, 2011 to JKS Makokha - makokha@zedat.fu-berlin.de (copy to jksmakokha@yahoo.com) and Leonard Acquah - leoacquah@yahoo.com.

    The book will be published in 2012. Kindly note the important dates below:

    1. February 14 - February 28, 2011 - Assessment and Selection of Abstracts.
    2. March 1, 2011 - Notification of Acceptance.
    3. March 5, 2011 - July, 5 2011 - Writing and Submission of Article.
    4. July 5, 2011 - August, 5 2011 - Blind Peer Review Process.
    5. August 5, 2011 - October 5, 2012 - Revision of Articles in line with Peer Review Reports.
    6. October 6, 2011 - Deadline of Submission of revised articles.
    7. December 5, 2011 - Submission of Complete Book Manuscript to Publishers.

    The formatting guidelines will be sent on March 1, 2011 to the authors of the selected abstracts.

  • The 2011 Burt Award for African Literature Launched

    The 2011 Burt Award for African Literature Launched

    The long-awaited Burt Prize for African Literature was finally launched in Kenya on Wednesday, January 19th at the Kenya National Library Service Headquarters. For other countries, inquire at:

    Tanzania:

    Children’s Book Project for Tanzania
    Tel: (255) 22 2760750
    Email: cbpvitabu@yahoo.com
    Website: www.cbp.or.tz

    Or CODE
    Burt Award for African Literature – Tanzania
    Tel: (613) 232-3569
    Email: codehq@codecan.org

    Ghana:

    Ghana Book Trust, PO Box LG 536 Legon-Accra
    info@ghanabooktrust.com; gbt@africaonline.com.gh
    www.ghanabooktrust.com

    Or Tel: (613) 232-3569
    Email: codehq@codecan.org

    Ethiopia:

    CODE Ethiopia
    Addis Ababa
    tel: +251-11-515-31-66
    code.et@ethionet.et

    Or 613-232-3569
    codehq@codecan.org

    OBJECTIVES OF THE AWARD

    * To recognize excellence in literature for our youth
    * To support and motivate the development of supplementary reading materials for a critical stage of learning- the transition period between primary and secondary school
    * To strengthen the English language skills of the Kenyan youth and help foster enthusiasm and love for reading
    * To stimulate and support the African publishing industry and the development of African literature
    * To increase the stock of English readers in established school and community libraries

    CRITERIA FOR THE AWARD’S WRITING COMPETITION

    * The manuscripts shall be written in English and show the mastery and use of the English language.
    * The manuscripts should be thought-provoking and original
    * The manuscripts should portray strong and admirable principle characters
    * The manuscripts should use humor and/ or suspense to entertain and captivate the reader
    * The manuscripts should deploy dialogue and drama to become lively to read
    * The manuscripts should reflect modern realities and address some of the social problems which are facing adolescents and young reader today.

    Click on the images to enlarge:

    Contact the National Book Development Council of Kenya:

    PO Box 10904 - 00100 Nairobi, Kenya
    Tel. 254 020 2725006/ 2721876
    Mobile +254 770 108 556
    E-mail: info@nationalbookcouncilkenya.org

    More information here or at the CODE Canada website here.

  • ACLS African Humanities Program

    Deadline: 1 December 2010

    African Humanities Program
    in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda
    2010-2011

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR APPLICANTS

    Eligibility criteria
    • The proposed project must be in the humanities.
    • It must propose a written scholarly product such as a dissertation or a monograph.
    • Research and writing under terms of the fellowship award must be undertaken in Africa. AHP fellowships may not be used for travel outside the continent.
    • Dissertation applicants must be nationals of a country in sub-Saharan Africa, residing and working in Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, or Uganda, pursuing a doctorate in one of those countries. They must have begun to write the dissertation before applying and must be able to complete the dissertation during the fellowship year. Applicants pursuing doctorates at a university in South Africa are not eligible.
    • Postdoctoral applicants must be nationals of a country in sub-Saharan Africa, residing and working in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, or Uganda. At the time of the submission, applicants must have defended the dissertation and must be no more than five years past the date of receiving the Ph.D. degree. Postdoctoral applicants may propose either a combination of research and writing, or writing only.

    Fellowship awards
    • The stipend for Dissertation-Completion Fellowships is $9,000.
    • The stipend for Early Career Postdoctoral Fellowships is $16,000.
    • The Residential Allowance is $5,000, and will be paid directly to the selected institute for advanced study hosting the AHP fellowship recipient. A list of residential sites currently available can be downloaded from the ACLS website at www.acls.org/programs/ahp or may be requested from ahp@acls.org . Residencies must be undertaken outside of the country in which the applicant maintains institutional affiliation and must last for a continuous period of not less than two months. No additional support in the form of residential allowance is available to support work at an applicant’s home institution.

    Selection criteria
    • The intrinsic interest and substantive merit of the work proposed
    • The clarity of the intellectual agenda
    • The record of achievement of postdoctoral scholars and the promise of Ph.D. candidates
    • The contribution the work is likely to make to scholarship in the region and internationally
    • The feasibility of the workplan

    Preparing the application
    All applicants should begin preparation early! Applications must be received by the African Humanities Program at the American Council of Learned Societies in New York no later than December 1, 2010 .

    All applications must be typed (no handwriting, please). ACLS encourages the submission of applications via email in either Word (.doc or .docx files) or Acrobat (.pdf files). ACLS cannot application materials submitted in other file formats. Application forms may be downloaded in either Word or Acrobat. Application forms downloaded in Word may be typed on a computer, saved in a Word or Acrobat file and submitted via email attachment to ahp@acls.org . Applicants are asked to observe specifications for font and line-spacing and to maintain the page and space limits represented in the original application form. All applications must be signed and dated, or will be considered incomplete. Applications sent electronically must be named using the following file name format: Surname, Given Name(s).doc/docx/pdf.

    Application forms downloaded in Acrobat or received via Air Mail may be printed, then typed on a typewriter and returned to ACLS via Air Mail or courier service. Applicants are asked to send their materials via Air Mail or courier service only if they are unable to do so via email; it is not necessary to send applications both electronically and on paper.

    Application Elements
    An application form consists of the following numbered elements, which should be submitted in the order specified here and on the application form. Incomplete applications will not be considered.

    I. Applicant information – cover sheet

    II. Personal history: education, research, teaching, and service (as applicable )

    III. List of applicant’s publications [Maximum one page, 11 pt. type]

    IV. Intellectual autobiography [Maximum one page, single spaced, 11 pt. type]
    A description of the applicant’s academic career, detailing the ideas and experiences that have shaped and motivated the applicant’s intellectual work and plans for the future. The autobiography should conclude with a separate paragraph answering the question: “What do I see myself doing five years from now?”

    V. Application essay [Maximum two pages, single spaced, 11 pt. type]

    1. Main Thesis: The main argument or problematic guiding the proposed research and
    writing.
    2. Body: The research problem in more detail and a justification of the research focus and approach. What is already known about the problem and what more needs to be known?
    3. Literature and sources: The proposed topic placed in the context of existing literature and as well as potential new sources. What will be the criteria for determining which sources are relevant? How will the project extend, modify, or challenge existing scholarship?
    4. Methods: A detailed description of the methods to be used. How will they be deployed to address the main thesis or argument of the project?
    5. Significance: An explanation of the importance of the proposed work to central issues in the discipline, to the African humanities, and to humanities scholarship in general.
    6. Workplan: The concluding section of the essay, specifying a plan of work with a timeline for the research and/or writing during the fellowship period . How much has the applicant already accomplished on the project and how much remains to be done? What steps are anticipated during the fellowship period? What is the expected result? The workplan must specify the desired start and end dates for the fellowship period, ensuring that they fall within the period of the fellowship and form a period of work no less than 10 months in duration.

    Letters of recommendation should arrive with applications at ACLS by the deadline, December 1, 2010. Applicants should send the forms to recommenders early, so that there is enough time to complete them. While applicants are responsible for making sure that the completed application has two appropriate recommendations, they must not delay sending all other parts of the application by the deadline, regardless of whether recommenders have sent their materials or not.

    (Late letters of recommendation should be forwarded by the applicant to ACLS as soon as possible, in no case more than one month past the deadline.)

    Submitting the application
    Applicants are asked to follow these instructions carefully. Failure to do so may render an application late, incomplete, or otherwise ineligible for inclusion in the fellowship competition.

    1. Applications may be submitted electronically (via email attachment) or on paper (via Air Mail or courier service) to the AHP/ACLS office in New York.

    2. ACLS can accept only files sent in Word (.doc or .docx) or Acrobat (.pdf) formats. No other file formats are acceptable. Electronic submission is encouraged, with letters of recommendation and the applicant’s signature scanned as .pdf files. Electronic applications must be saved using a file name in the following format: Surname, Given Name(s).doc/docx/pdf.

    3. Applications submitted electronically should be sent to ahp@acls.org, with all application materials included as attachments to one single email. If the files are too large to send in one email, applicants must create a series of smaller numbered files following the same file name format and send them in separate emails, making sure to note the total number of files transmitted.

    The subject line of the email should include the applicant’s surname and the phrase “AHP application.” The body of the email should indicate the number of files attached. Application materials should be submitted only once, unless ACLS requests that and applicant resubmit. “Updated” or “revised” versions of the application will not be accepted once an application has been submitted.

    4. Applications sent by Air Mail or courier service should be addressed to:

    African Humanities Program
    American Council of Learned Societies
    633 Third Avenue, 8th floor
    New York, NY 10017-6795, USA

    5. IMPORTANT: Whether an application is submitted electronically or on paper, all applicants must send a separate email to ahp@acls.org requesting confirmation that the application file has been received and can be opened. Those who do not receive a reply within ten days confirming receipt should resend the confirmation request. Applicants should not resubmit application materials unless requested to do so.

  • The Burt Award for African Literature (Tanzania, Ethiopia, Ghana)

    Deadline: to be announced

    The Burt Award for African Literature is a new literary prize that the recognizes excellence in young adult fiction from Africa. Sponsored by CODE through the generous contributions of Canadian patron Bill Burt, the award addresses an ongoing absence of relevant, quality books for young people while at the same time promotes a love of reading and learning in Tanzania, Ethiopia and Ghana. The award consists of up to three cash prizes totaling $21,000 CAD and a publishing contract for winning submissions. Winning titles will be distributed to schools and libraries throughout these three countries.

    The Burt Award is supported in part by IBBY Canada. Members of IBBY are nominated to act as jurors in the award process. IBBY's role has recently been expanded to include workshop facilitation for emerging and experienced writers of youth fiction.

    Awards

    1st Prize CAD $ 12,000
    2nd Prize CAD $ 6,000
    3rd Prize CAD $ 3,000

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