20

Oct

2007

The Medal of Honor for Literature presented to Nigerian Writer Chinua Achebe PDF Print E-mail
By National Arts Club
The Medal of Honor for Literature presented to Nigerian Writer Chinua Achebe
 
The Medal of Honor for Literature
 
One of America’s most prestigious honors – The Medal of Honor for literature from the National Arts Club is to be presented to Nigerian novelist Professor Chinua Achebe on November, 16, 2007, in New York City.
 
The Medal of Honor for Literature is given for a body of work of literary excellence. The recipient can be a novelist, poet, playwright, memoirist, or biographer.
 
The Medal of Honor of The National Arts Club honors the achievement of the author chosen annually by the Literary Committee Members. The Club's membership has included three presidents, and some of the most important artists and arts patrons in America . Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Dwight D. Eisenhower were all members of the National Arts Club.
  
Past recipients  of the Medal of Honor for Literature have included some of the most distinguished and important writers of the past fifty years. Achebe is the first black African and second black writer to receive this honor.
 
Past Recipients include:

2005 Alice Munro
2000 Nadine Gordimer
1999 Toni Morrison
1997 Margaret Atwood
1993 Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
1992 Arthur Miller
1991 Philp Roth
1988 Carlos Fuentes
1984 John Updike
1980 Isaac Bashevis Singer
1979 Allen Ginsberg
1978 Saul Bellow
1976 Norman Mailer
1975 Tennessee Williams
1969 W. H. Auden
 
Black Tie Event
 
Chinua Achebe was the recipient of the 2007 Man Booker Prize, as well as Nigeria’s highest award for intellectual achievement, and many other prestigious awards. Nadine Gordimer says “Achebe is the father of modern African literature who made it an integral part of World literature.”
Speakers at the Black Tie event will include Brown University President Ruth Simmons, Distinguished Global Professor in Creative Writing at NYU, Breyten Breytenbach  and distinguished Professor of Afro-American studies Michael Thelwell of the University of Massachusetts. Master of Ceremonies will be noted musician and Bard College President, Leon Botstein.
 
Event tickets are $85 per person, price includes tax and service
charge. RSVP by 11/12 at (212) 475-3424.
 
 
About the National Arts Club
 
The mission of the National Arts Club is to stimulate, foster and promote public interest in the arts and educate the American people in the fine arts.
 
The National Arts Club was founded in 1898 by Charles de Kay. Charles de Kay was the literary and art critic for The New York Times for 18 years. He and a group of distinguished artists and patrons conceived of agathering place for artists, patrons and audiences in all the arts. American art at the turn of the century had begun to look inward for inspiration, rather than to Europe, and the American art world was alive with energy. As The National Arts Club moved into its first home in a townhouse on 34th Street, American art had found a new home.
 
Distinguished Membership
 
Among the distinguished painters who have been members are Robert Henri, Frederic Remington, William Merritt Chase and Cecilia Beaux. Sculptors have included Saint-Gaudens, Daniel Chester French, Anna Hyatt Huntington and Paul Manship. Many renowned literary figures have also been members. The National Arts Club is proud of its early recognition of new media art forms, like photography, film and digital media, and counts Alfred Stieglitz as one of its early Members. Musicians Victor Herbert and Walter Damrosch were members, as were architects Stanford White and George B. Post. The Dramatic Arts are currently represented by members Martin Scorcese, Dennis Hopper and Robert Redford amongst others.
 
Location
 
The National Arts Club is located in the historic Tilden Mansion. 15 Gramercy Park was built in the 1840's and its original flat-front, iron-grilled appearance matched the style of the houses still maintained on the west side of Gramercy Park. Samuel Tilden acquired 15 Gramercy Park in the 1860's, and in the 1870's gave the house a massive overhaul. Tilden hired Calvert Vaux, a famed architect and one of the designers of Central Park to "victorianize" the facade with sandstone, bay windows and Gothic Ornamentation. John LaFarge created stained glass ceilings for the inside of the mansion, and Italian wood carvers made the fireplaces. Glass master Donald MacDonald wrought a unique stained glass dome for the building. All of this prompted architect Philip Johnson to call the mansion, "among the most beautiful in New York." Spencer Trask and the Board of Governors acquired the Tilden Mansion in 1906 as the new home for the National Arts Club.


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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 20.10.2007 22:57

The Medal of Honor for Literature presented to Nigerian Writer Chinua Achebe
...Read the full article.

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joyhappinessjoyhappiness is offline

 # 2 | 21.10.2007 07:18

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!!!!!
I love chinua achebe...
GOD BLESS U and ur family

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igweigwe is offline

 # 3 | 21.10.2007 08:28

Congratulations, mazi Chinua Achebe!!!!!

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EnforcerEnforcer is offline

 # 4 | 21.10.2007 09:40

Delighted to read this.

Congratulations to Chinua Achebe, a man that has brought honour to us all.

May he live long to bring us more accolades

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blondieblondie is offline

 # 5 | 21.10.2007 10:47

This man has won everything that literature can offer save the Nobel Price. This makes me to believe the conspiracy theory that he cannot win it because his novels, especially Things Fall Apart, often depict the black man's resistance to white domination.
Anyways , congrats to the great bard!

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ObiObi is offline

 # 6 | 21.10.2007 14:31

Eagle-on-the-Iroko, may the blessings of God continue to shower on you.

Dalu, Nwoke Ike!

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DimaanuDimaanu is offline

 # 7 | 21.10.2007 16:22


Once Okoye, one of Unoka's creditors, came to visit. Unoka brought out a kola nut for his guest and after some polite conversation about who should break the nut, Unoka finally did the honors with prayers to his ancestors for life, health, and protection from enemies. Meanwhile, Okoye used a piece of chalk he'd brought with him to paint his toe and draw a few lines on the floor in a ritualistic fashion. After they had eaten the kola, Okoye spoke for a long time using ancient proverbs to come to his point as was customary in the Ibo culture. He had come to claim payment of the two hundred cowries that Unoka owed him from two years prior so that he could fund the feast for acquiring his new title of Idemili, which was the third highest title in the land. Hearing Okoye's request, Unoka burst into laughter and pointed toward a wall of his mud house that was covered in chalk markings aligned in columns. It was a record of Unoka's debts and they were numerous. Unoka insisted that he would pay Okoye, but not until he'd paid his larger debts first.



Congratulations to Professor Achebe.

I have read "Things fall part" a number of times, but the above quote has never ceased to crack me up.:lol::lol:

Thank you, Sir!

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emjemj is offline

 # 8 | 21.10.2007 17:43

Though things have fallen apart in our nation Nigera and the centre cannot hold, the Medal of Honor for Literature is well deserved. Congratulations to Professor Chinua Achebe.

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Shoko Loko BangosheShoko Loko Bangoshe is offline

 # 9 | 21.10.2007 20:14

Apropos of nothing, I must say that in the photo of Achebe used for this story, he looks rather like Nelson Mandela.
 

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