Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Rick Moody took some heat many years ago for winning and accepting a Pushcart prize. He's from a wealthy family, and people cried foul.
Now Nicole Krauss has been nominated for a National Book Award, and I'm wondering if similar sentiments will arise.
Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Now Nicole Krauss has been nominated for a National Book Award, and I'm wondering if similar sentiments will arise.
Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Read one of the best stories by Borges.
Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
... Er, if their books are good, yeah.
Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
I agree. If they win on the merits of their writing, then in my opinion, they won...
Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Me three. Best writer should win.
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- maybegenius
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Agreed, yeah. It's a literary award, not a grant. And speaking of grants, those are available for writers, as well. And I would say wealthy writers probably shouldn't win writing grants.
aka S.E. Sinkhorn, or Steph
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Please tell me how winning the National Book Award -- a $10,000 prize and subsequent boost in book sales -- will help a multimillionaire writer, as opposed to a less fortunate one.
Off topic, there are two writers with independent-published books up for the award this year. I'm hoping Karen Tei Yamashita and her book "I Hotel" [Coffee House Press] wins the NBA.
Off topic, there are two writers with independent-published books up for the award this year. I'm hoping Karen Tei Yamashita and her book "I Hotel" [Coffee House Press] wins the NBA.
Read one of the best stories by Borges.
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
The National Book Award isn't a contest for underprivileged writers. It's not based on economic status. It makes no difference if the winner is wealthy or not. Grants, as Maybegenius pointed out, are a different story. Hands off if you don't need the money.
Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Yep, pretty much.Down the well wrote:The National Book Award isn't a contest for underprivileged writers. It's not based on economic status. It makes no difference if the winner is wealthy or not. Grants, as Maybegenius pointed out, are a different story. Hands off if you don't need the money.
Putting 'starving' in front of 'writer' doesn't make them the best writer by default any more than being published by an independent book publisher does. Is the point of the award to acknowledge skill, punish a company, or nurture struggling underexposed talent?
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- maybegenius
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
I'm not sure I follow, steve. If a millionaire wrote the best book to come out in a given year, they should be automatically discounted for literary merits on the basis of not "needing" prize money? Doesn't that undermine the spirit of an award for literary skill?
Or are you arguing that wealthy people who win awards only win because they have the money to garner more exposure for their novel in the first place? I don't intend to defend the wealthy and their privilege, but the argument feels a little like "People of privilege cannot possibly have the soul/talent of those who suffer, for they do not suffer themselves." It's a step away from saying that *I* should not win literary merits because I grew up firmly middle class, and I don't "need" that money, either. It'd give nice breathing room, but I don't "need" it. Out of curiosity, how would your opinion change if these literary awards didn't come with prize money at all?
How will it help? Perhaps in further validating and commending that writer's work, something to which I believe most of us aspire. If Karen Tei Yamashita wrote the best book, then I hope she wins, as well.
Or are you arguing that wealthy people who win awards only win because they have the money to garner more exposure for their novel in the first place? I don't intend to defend the wealthy and their privilege, but the argument feels a little like "People of privilege cannot possibly have the soul/talent of those who suffer, for they do not suffer themselves." It's a step away from saying that *I* should not win literary merits because I grew up firmly middle class, and I don't "need" that money, either. It'd give nice breathing room, but I don't "need" it. Out of curiosity, how would your opinion change if these literary awards didn't come with prize money at all?
How will it help? Perhaps in further validating and commending that writer's work, something to which I believe most of us aspire. If Karen Tei Yamashita wrote the best book, then I hope she wins, as well.
aka S.E. Sinkhorn, or Steph
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
I'm with the others. Wealth shouldn't preclude someone from winning a literary award, if their book is good enough. I clicked the link and raised my eyes at the idea that they each needed their own floor, but awards are about the books, not who needs the money. Grants are another story, as has already been mentioned.
Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Not sure I follow my own question either, just throwing it out there.maybegenius wrote:I'm not sure I follow, steve. If a millionaire wrote the best book to come out in a given year, they should be automatically discounted for literary merits on the basis of not "needing" prize money? Doesn't that undermine the spirit of an award for literary skill?
But since the "best book" almost NEVER wins a literary award, why not give it to the poor schlub? Prize winners are usually proven worthless as years pass by. What we consider great books now were largely ignored/misunderstood when they were published, and won nothing.
All things being equal, giving literary awards to poor schlubs makes sense to me.
Read one of the best stories by Borges.
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
I'm afraid that's the thing, though... these aren't awards for the novels that will become the future classics, because there's really no way for us to know now which works will survive the ages. The awards today are for literary merit as we judge it in the here and now. And unfortunately it's arguable that the best book never wins... that's kind of a drawback when attempting to judge art. It'll always be subjective. My opinion of the best work probably won't match yours, and that won't match the critics, and that won't match the judges, on and on.
aka S.E. Sinkhorn, or Steph
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Steve, I'm with you. I don't think wealthy people should be allowed to write, much less enter awards for writing. It distracts them from thinking of ways to give away their money - which is the only true occupation which should....um, occupy them.
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Economic condition has nothing to do with the quality of someone's work. To say that monetary-literary awards should have a barrier to entry or qualification, on any basis, is shocking in the very least, sad at best. T.S. Eliot wouldn't have qualified, E.B. Browning would have been shown the door. Maybe nobility should be added, whoops! There goes Joseph Conrad. Memoirs not included? Hope not, or their goes the likes of Churchill. JFK was filthy rich, yet he wrote a book that won hearts and minds, as well as a monetary award.
I mention great authors of the past, because I believe writing is a legacy art. We are the sum total of those that came before us. Has so much changed, that someone could feel bitter about an award, won by effort, because the author is wealthy and the award comes with dollars? The struggling author is made more remarkable by circumstances that gave rise to their work. I applaud louder for the underdog when they win, because it proves that all is fair. Let me repeat that.... All is fair.
DougM
I mention great authors of the past, because I believe writing is a legacy art. We are the sum total of those that came before us. Has so much changed, that someone could feel bitter about an award, won by effort, because the author is wealthy and the award comes with dollars? The struggling author is made more remarkable by circumstances that gave rise to their work. I applaud louder for the underdog when they win, because it proves that all is fair. Let me repeat that.... All is fair.
DougM
Last edited by hulbertsfriend on October 20th, 2010, 11:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Should wealthy writers win literary awards?
Agree with everyone else that a writers' bank account has nothing to do with it. (Kind of like when people get upset that "good" or semi-established writers win short story contests. Yeah, if all the fast runners stayed home from the race, I might have a chance of winning too.)
But thank you, Steve, for mentioning Karen Tei Yamashita's new book. I read and thoroughly enjoyed Through the Arc of the Rainforest years ago, and wasn't aware of I Hotel. I'll have to check it out.
But thank you, Steve, for mentioning Karen Tei Yamashita's new book. I read and thoroughly enjoyed Through the Arc of the Rainforest years ago, and wasn't aware of I Hotel. I'll have to check it out.
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