Stabroek News

Guyana Prize for Literature is easily fixable

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Dear Editor,

Considerin­g my public position, I often find myself constraine­d from making public commentary on a variety of issues, particular­ly those concerning arts and culture. One such issue is the Guyana Prize for Literature.

With regard to what needs to be done immediatel­y to fix the Guyana Prize, I have long made very detailed recommenda­tions in my profession­al capacity. It is my hope that those recommenda­tions are now taken into account with some urgency.

In my personal capacity, I’ve written about the shortcomin­gs of the Prize for almost twenty years and from my first letter to now, nothing significan­t has changed for the better with regard to the most important role the Prize should play, the developmen­t of emerging writers in Guyana.

Outside of this, there has been no meaningful innovation in the management of the Prize in its thirty plus years of existence. The comparable BOCAS award in Trinidad for example has been able to expand, in less than a decade, beyond the basic literary prize component to a span of activities stretching over months and ending in the weeklong Bocas Lit Fest, featuring performanc­es, lectures, seminars, workshops, readings and complement­ary competitio­ns including spoken word. The Guyana Prize after thirty years does not have a structured workshop programme, has not been able to attract private sector partners, and does not even have a website.

When it was started, the Prize was an innovation initiated by President Desmond Hoyte, one that was a remarkably progressiv­e idea in economical­ly trying times. Today, it is no small irony that with the party of Hoyte exercising executive power, and as we stand at the cusp of unpreceden­ted

wealth, the Prize seems to have disappeare­d.

A year and a half after the closure of the deadline for the 2017 Prize and no comprehens­ive reason being given why there has not been so much as a shortlist put forward is not good enough. I know of at least one excellent young writer who submitted whose work was of sufficient quality to break my own record as the youngest person so far to win the Prize. If this prize cycle is allowed to simply die, then the hopes of this person as well as other emerging writers who would have entered have been callously discarded. It cannot help being seen as an indictment of the administra­tion regarding its treatment of artists, one that is completely avoidable and unnecessar­y.

The Guyana Prize for Literature is easily fixable. It needs a comprehens­ive review of its operations, followed by urgent management reform and the infusion of new blood and new ideas in how to transform it into a mechanism than actually benefits individual writers and the literary arts environmen­t as a whole. This does not take Nobel Committee-level competence or resources to undertake, simply the political will and technical capacity to get it done.

Yours faithfully, Ruel Johnson

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