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The '''Merano Poetry Prize''' (German: Lyrikpreis Meran) is an international [[Literary award|literary prize]] for German-language poetry established in 1993<ref>http://www.planetlyrik.de/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Cornelius-Hell-Meraner-Meriten.pdf</ref> and awarded by the [[South Tyrol|South Tyrolean]] provincial government in the city of [[Merano]]. In addition to this award, which is endowed with €8,000, usually two additional prizes are awarded, the Alfred Gruber Prize (€3,500) and the Media Prize of the RAI broadcaster South Tyrol (€2,500).
The '''Merano Poetry Prize''' (German: Lyrikpreis Meran) is an international [[Literary award|literary prize]] for German-language poetry founded by Alfred Gruber in ccoperatiion with the the then mayor of Merano, Franz Alber. It was established in 1993<ref>http://www.planetlyrik.de/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Cornelius-Hell-Meraner-Meriten.pdf</ref> and awarded by the [[South Tyrol|South Tyrolean]] provincial government in the city of [[Merano]]. In addition to this award, which is endowed with €8,000, usually two additional prizes are awarded, the Alfred Gruber Prize (€3,500) and the Media Prize of the RAI broadcaster South Tyrol (€2,500).


The Merano literary competition is held every two years.
The Merano literary competition is held every two years.

Revision as of 22:43, 23 July 2024

  • Comment: Possibly notable, but the sources cited are not enough to establish this. DoubleGrazing (talk) 14:24, 17 March 2024 (UTC)

The Merano Poetry Prize (German: Lyrikpreis Meran) is an international literary prize for German-language poetry founded by Alfred Gruber in ccoperatiion with the the then mayor of Merano, Franz Alber. It was established in 1993[1] and awarded by the South Tyrolean provincial government in the city of Merano. In addition to this award, which is endowed with €8,000, usually two additional prizes are awarded, the Alfred Gruber Prize (€3,500) and the Media Prize of the RAI broadcaster South Tyrol (€2,500).

The Merano literary competition is held every two years.

The Merano Poetry Prize is considered highly prestigious.[2][3] The Austrian national public broadcaster ORF called it "one of the most important literary competitions in the German-speaking world" ("[einer] der wichtigsten Literaturwettbewerbe seiner Gattung im deutschen Sprachraum")[4].

Winners

References

  1. ^ http://www.planetlyrik.de/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Cornelius-Hell-Meraner-Meriten.pdf
  2. ^ deutschlandfunk.de. ""In diesem sehr begrenzten Segment Lyrik, da ist zu kämpfen"". Deutschlandfunk (in German). Retrieved 2024-03-17.
  3. ^ "Lyrik hautnah – Lyrikpreis Meran 2010". Universität Innsbruck (in German). 2010-05-25. Retrieved 2024-03-18.
  4. ^ oe1.orf.at. "Lyrikpreis Meran". oe1.orf.at (in German). Retrieved 2024-03-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ SALTO. "Tamara Štajner gewinnt | SALTO". salto.bz (in German). Retrieved 2024-05-19.

Further reading

  • Delle Cave, Ferruccio, and Hanni, Martin. Lyrik im Gespräch. Der Lyrikpreis Meran. Ed. by Folio Verlag, Vienna and Bolzano 2010, ISBN 978-3-85256-530-9.
  • Wiesmüller, Wolfgang: Germanistik und literarisches Leben der Region. Am Beispiel des Meraner Lyrikpreises. In: Germanistik im Spannungsfeld von Regionalität und Internationalität. Hg. v. Wolfgang Hackl u. Wolfgang Wiesmüller. Wien: Praesens 2010 (=Stimulus. Mitteilungen der Österreichischen Gesellschaft für Germanistik 2009), S. 167–184. (Gem. m. S. Klettenhammer).
  • Wiesmüller, Wolfgang: Literaturpreise als Institutionen der Literaturvermittlung. Der Darmstädter Leonce-und-Lena-Preis und der Lyrikpreis Meran im Vergleich. In: Perspektiven der Literaturvermittlung. Hg. von Stefan Neuhaus und Oliver Ruf. Innsbruck-Wien-Bozen: StudienVerlag 2011 (=Angewandte Literaturwissenschaft Bd. 13), S.115–132. (gem. m. S. Klettenhammer)