P U L S E

"Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one."

Suheir Hammad Receives American Book Award

leave a comment »

Palestinian-American poet and friend of PULSE Suheir Hammad was recently presented with a 2009 American Book Award by the Before Columbus Foundation (BCF) for breaking poemsa project of the independent New York based publisher Cypher Books.  Hammad has published several other poetry books over the years and her poems have appeared in dozens of anthologies and publications.  She also played the lead in Annemarie Jacir’s 2008 Salt of This Sea

The American Book Award honors various recipients each year and is unique for its progressive focus and criteria.  According to BCF:

America was intended to be a place where freedom from discrimination was the means by which equality was achieved. Today, American culture is the most diverse ever on the face of this earth. Recognizing literary excellence demands a panoramic perspective. A narrow view strictly to the mainstream ignores all the tributaries that feed it. American literature is not one tradition but all traditions…

The Before Columbus Foundation was founded in 1976 as a nonprofit educational and service organization dedicated to the promotion and dissemination of contemporary American multicultural literature. The goals of BCF are to provide recognition and a wider audience for the wealth of cultural and ethnic diversity that constitutes American writing. BCF has always employed the term “multicultural” not as a description of an aspect of American literature, but as a definition of all American literature. BCF believes that the ingredients of America’s so-called “melting pot” are not only distinct, but integral to the unique constitution of American Culture-the whole comprises the parts.

 In 1978, the Board of Directors of BCF (authors, editors, and publishers representing the multicultural diversity of American Literature) decided that one of its programs should be a book award that would, for the first time, respect and honor excellence in American literature without restriction or bias with regard to race, sex, creed, cultural origin, size of press or ad budget, or even genre. There would be no requirements, restrictions, limitations, or second places. There would be no categories (i.e., no “best” novel or only one “best” of anything). The winners would not be selected by any set quota for diversity (nor would “mainstream white anglo male” authors be excluded), because diversity happens naturally. Finally, there would be no losers, only winners. The only criteria would be outstanding contribution to American literature in the opinion of the judges.


Written by Jasmin

November 26, 2009 at 6:56 am

Leave a Reply