Zambia’s Namwali Serpell has won the 2015 Caine
Prize for African Writing, described as Africa’s leading literary award, for
her short story entitled “The Sack” from Africa39 (Bloomsbury,
London, 2014).
The Chair of Judges, Zoë Wicomb, announced Namwali
Serpell as the winner of the £10,000 prize at a dinner held this evening
(Monday, 6 July) at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
“The Sack” explores a world where dreams and
reality are both claustrophobic and dark. The relationship between two men and
an absent woman are explored though troubled interactions and power
relationships which jar with the views held by the characters.
Also shortlisted were: Segun Afolabi (Nigeria) for
“The Folded Leaf” in Wasafiri (Wasafiri, London, 2014)
Caine Prize winner
2005 for “Monday Morning”
Read
"The Folded Leaf"; Elnathan John (Nigeria) for “Flying” in
Per Contra (Per Contra, International, 2014)
Shortlisted in 2013 for “Bayan
Layi”
Read
"Flying"; F. T. Kola (South Africa) for “A Party for the
Colonel” in One Story (One Story, inc. Brooklyn, New York City, 2014)
Read "A
Party for the Colonel"; and Masande Ntshanga (South Africa) for
“Space” in Twenty in 20 (Times Media, South Africa, 2014)
Read
"Space"
Zoë
Wicomb praised the story, saying, “From a very strong shortlist we have picked
an extraordinary story about the aftermath of revolution with its liberatory
promises shattered. It makes demands on the reader and challenges conventions
of the genre. It yields fresh meaning with every reading. Formally
innovative, stylistically stunning, haunting and enigmatic in its effects. ‘The
Sack’ is a truly luminous winner of the Caine Prize for African Writing.”
Namwali Serpell’s first published story, “Muzungu,”
was selected for the Best American Short Stories 2009 and
shortlisted for the 2010 Caine Prize for African Writing. In 2014, she was
selected as one of the most promising African writers for the Africa 39
Anthology, a project of the Hay festival. Her writing has appeared in Tin
House, The Believer, n+1, McSweeney’s (forthcoming), Bidoun,
Callaloo, The San Francisco Chronicle, The L.A. Review of Books, and The
Guardian. She is an associate professor in the University of California,
Berkeley English department; her first book of literary criticism, Seven
Modes of Uncertainty, was published in 2014.
The panel of judges is chaired by South African
writer and recipient of Yale’s 2013 Windham-Campbell Prize for fiction Zoë
Wicomb. Zoë‘s works of fiction are You Can’t Get Lost in
Cape Town, David’s Story, Playing in the Light, The One
That Got Away and October. She currently lives
in Scotland where she is Emeritus Professor in English Studies at Strathclyde
University. Her critical work is on Postcolonial theory and South African
writing and culture.
Once again the winner of the Caine Prize will be
given the opportunity to take up a month’s residence at Georgetown University,
as a Writer-in-Residence at the Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice.
Each shortlisted writer will also receive £500. The winner is
invited to take part in the Open Book Festival in Cape Town, Storymoja in
Nairobi and Ake Festival in Abeokuta, Nigeria.
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