Prix Sainte-Beuve

The Prix Sainte-Beuve, established in 1946, is a French literary prize awarded each year to a writer in the categories "novels" (or "poetry") and "essays" (or "critics"); it is named after the writer Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve. The founding jury included Raymond Aron, Maurice Blanchot, Edmond Buchet, Maurice Nadeau, Jean Paulhan and Raymond Queneau.[1]

Laureates

Prix Sainte-Beuve des collégiens

In 2008 a Prix Sainte-Beuve des collégiens, also called Prix Sainte-Beuve des collégiens et des apprentis was created. An interschool contest literary critic takes place before the election of a youth novel by college students and apprentices. Designed and coordinated by Pierric Maelstaf, this price is borne by the association "çà & là" and the County Council of Pas-de-Calais.

List of laureates

  • 2008: Hélène Vignal for Passé au rouge
  • 2009: Yaël Hassan for Suivez-moi jeune homme
  • 2010: Gemma Malley for La Déclaration
  • 2011: Julia Billet for Sayonara samouraï
  • 2012: Jay Asher for Treize Raisons
  • 2013: Yves Grevet for Seuls dans la ville
  • 2014: Florence Hinckel for Théa pour l'éternité
  • 2015: Isabelle Pandazopoulos for "La Décision"
gollark: As a programmer who wants future jobs, I fear this.
gollark: I eagerly await the first GPT-something-based lawyers.
gollark: Spreadsheets probably did a lot for slightly-financey office work.
gollark: That seems implausible, what are you defining as office work?
gollark: IIRC old AI research did that, but it didn't work very well and the "throw tons of compute at it" approach is much more effective.

References

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