INDIA-BORN
POET VIJAY SESHADRI WINS THE 2014 PULITZER PRIZE
India-born poet Vijay
Seshadri has won the prestigious 2014
Pulitzer Prize in the poetry
category for his witty and philosophical collection of poems while The Washington Post and Guardian
were awarded for their reports on America's secret global surveillance
programmes.
Seshadri won the
Pulitzer, considered the most prestigious awards in journalism, for his work '3
Sections' which is a "compelling collection of poems that examine human
consciousness, from birth to dementia, in a voice that is by turns witty and
grave, compassionate and remorseless."
The 98th annual Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism, Letters, Drama and Music,
awarded on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board, were announced
yesterday by Columbia University. A Columbia University alum, Seshadri, 60,
would receive a USD 10,000 prize. Born in Bangalore in 1954, Seshadri came to
America at the age of five and grew up in Columbus, Ohio. He became the fifth
person of Indian-origin to bag the prestigious prize.
The Post and US edition of the Guardian newspaper won the prestigious public
service medal, which is for a "distinguished example of meritorious public
service by a newspaper ornews site through the use of its journalistic
resources, including the use of stories, editorials, cartoons, photographs,
graphics, videos, databases, multimedia or interactive presentations or other
visual material, a gold medal."
The Post won for its "revelation of widespread secret surveillance by the
National Security Agency, marked by authoritative and insightful reports that
helped the public understand how the disclosures fit into the larger framework
of national security."
The Guardian was awarded for its "revelation of widespread secret
surveillance by the National Security Agency, helping through aggressive
reporting to spark a debate about the relationship between the government and
the public over issues of security and privacy."
The Boston Globe staff received the Pulitzer Prize in the Breaking News
Reporting category for its "exhaustive and empathetic" coverage of
the Marathonbombings last year.
The 2014 Pulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to 'The
Goldfinch' by American writer Donna
Tartt for her "coming-of- age"
novel about a grieving boysentanglement with a small famous painting that has
eluded destruction.
The award in the drama category went to 'The Flick'
by Annie Baker that focuses on three
employees of a Massachusetts art-house movie theater. The New York Times won
two awards in the Breaking News Photography category for Tyler Hicks'
"compelling" pictures documenting the unfolding terrorist attackat
Westgate mall in Kenya.
The Feature Photography category award went to Josh
Haner of The New York Times for his "moving essay" on a
Boston Marathon bomb blastvictim who lost most of both legs and now is
painfully rebuilding his life.
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