Skip to main content

USP Announces International Competition to Launch USP Press


May 2011, the University of the South Pacific will be launching its publishing arm that will be known as the USP Press.


The goal of the Press is to publish high quality research and writing on issues related to the Pacific Islands, or the islands commonly known as Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia.


 Toward this end, the University wishes to announce an international competition seeking manuscripts in the following categories:



USP Press Literature Prize ($3000) will be awarded to the overall winner from the following categories.


The winner in each category will receive $1,000.00


Fiction ($1,000)


Poetry ($1,000)


Drama or Screenplay ($1,000)


USP Press Non Fiction Prize ($3,000) will be awarded to the overall winner from the following categories. The winner in each category will receive $1,000.00.


History, Auto/Biography ($1,000)


Sciences ($1,000)


Social Sciences/Humanities ($1000)


Best Children’s Book ($2,000)


The competition is open to all nationalities and closes on 15 February, 2011.


The prize money will be in American dollars


Each submission must clearly indicate the category in which it is to be considered.


All submissions must be in hardcopy. Online submissions will not be accepted.


All submissions should be addressed to:




The Chair, Board of the USP Press,
Professor Vilsoni Hereniko,
Oceania Centre for Arts, Culture and Pacific Studies,
The University of the South Pacific
Private Mail Bag,
Laucala Campus, Suva, Fiji.


For enquiries, write to
hereniko_v@usp.ac.fj

Comments

Blogger said…
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

Popular posts from this blog

The first PNG Writer: Hosea Linge

  With so much going on around us we tend to forget about important foundations of our history. I could not get out of my mind the much neglected discussion on the first Papua New Guinean writer. Every now and then we need to acknowledge the important parts of our history as we move forward. I would like to acknowledge the first Papua New Guinean to write a book in the 1930s. A New Irelander by name of Ligeremaluoga wrote and published his book under the title The Erstwhile Savage: An Account of the Life of Ligeremaluoga in 1932. Ligeremaluoga is from Kono village in New Ireland Province. Ligeremaluoga’s book is by all accounts the first written account by a South Pacific Islander. Most of what we know as Pacific writing is dated to the 1960s and 1970s. Last month I presented a paper at the University of Hawaii to discuss another early Papua New Guinean writer by name of Ahuia Ova of Hanuabada, who published his memoirs in 1939, six years after Ligeremaluoga’s autobiography. ...

Well Done! Nora

 Melanesian writers: Regis Tove Stella (PNG), Nora Vagi Brash (PNG), Sam Alasia (Solomon Islands), USP Fiji campus, 1999.    One of the outstanding playwright and poet to emerge in Papua New Guinea is Nora Vagi Brash. She remains the foremost and the only Papua New Guinean female playwright. Nora was involved with acting in amateur theatre, radio plays, and street theatre in early 1970s. Her exposure to the world of theatre in England inspired her to write her own plays on her return to Papua New Guinea. The National Arts School employed Nora as an assistant lecturer in puppetry, dance, and drama. She then moved on to become one of the two artistic directors with the National Theatre Company. Nora wrote her own scripts for the puppets using tradional stories of Papua New Guinea. The National Theatre Company toured local villages and performed in the streets. They went to the Pacific Arts Festival in Rotorua and Wellington, New Zealand. They also danced in Point Venus ...

the dull drumming, Yes of the flat drums. Thud dada thud da thud dada thud

Writer My late Kandre, Vincent Warakai, a robust scholar and intellectual, left a lasting impression on me as a Papua New Guinean with this poem “Dancing Yet to the Dim Dim’s Beat”, which was first published in Ondobondo , a literary magazine of the Literature Department of UPNG in the 1980s, when I studied Literature as a degree program. The poem was later republished in Albert Wendt’s Nuanua: pacific writing in English since 1980s , making it one of the most powerful pieces to have been written by a Papua New Guinean since Independence.  Below is the poem: Dancing Yet to the Dim Dim’s Beat We have been dancing Yes, our anklets and Amulets now are Yes, grinding into our skin No longer are they a décor Yes, they are our chains We have been dancing Yes, but the euphoria has died It is now the dull drumming Yes, of the flat drums Thud dada thud da thud dada thud Yes, it is signaling, not the bliss But the impending crisis. It i...