The George Orwell Memorial Prize was an annual prize awarded by Penguin Publishing for articles or essays on current political, cultural or social issues.[1]
Penguin announced the founding of the Prize on 2 January 1976. The award for the first year was £500, with the winner chosen by a panel of five judges.[1] Only articles that had been published in Britain during the past year were eligible for the Prize. The article also had to be sponsored by the editor of the publication that it appeared in.[1] In 1977 the award was raised to £750.[2]
Year | Winner(s) |
---|---|
1976 | Ludvík Vaculík, 'Impermissible Thoughts', Index on Censorship, Vol 4, Issue 4 (1 December 1975), pp. 12–14.[2][3][4][5] |
1977 | John Berger, 'Drawn to that Moment', New Society.[6] |
1978 | Paul Bailey, 'The Limitations of Despair', The Listener.[7] |
1979 | Christopher Ricks, 'Geoffrey Hill and the Tongue's Atrocity', Times Literary Supplement.[8] |
1980 | David Marquand, 'Inquest on a Movement: Labour's Defeat & Its Consequences', Encounter (July 1979), pp. 8–17.[9] E. P. Thompson for a series of articles that appeared in New Society on the rule of law in relation to the ABC trial.[9] |
1986 | Richard Thornley for his film-project Coyote.[10] |