Hans Christian Andersen Award

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Hans Christian Andersen Award
A golden medallion with an embossed image featuring a bust of Andersen.
Awarded forOutstanding and lasting contribution to children's literature
Presented byInternational Board on Books for Young People
First award1956 (1956)
Websiteibby.org

The Hans Christian Andersen Awards are two literary awards given by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY), recognising one living author and one living illustrator for their "lasting contribution to children's literature".[1] The writing award was first given in 1956, the illustration award in 1966. The former is sometimes called the "Nobel Prize for children's literature".

The awards are named after Hans Christian Andersen, a 19th-century Danish author of fairy tales, and each winner receives the Hans Christian Andersen Medaille (a gold medal with the bust of Andersen) and a diploma. Medals are presented at the biennial IBBY Congress.

History

The International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY) was founded by Jella Lepman in the 1950s.[2] The Hans Christian Andersen Award was first proposed in 1953 and awarded three years later, in 1956.[3] It was established in the aftermath of World War II to encourage the development of high-quality children's books. The award was set to be given biennially and was initially awarded for individual works that had been published in the preceding two years.[4] By 1962, the award's formal criteria were amended "to a living author who is judged to have made a lasting contribution to good juvenile literature by the outstanding value of his or her work. The author's complete works, in particular those in fiction, will be taken into consideration in awarding the medal."[5]

Runners up were listed in 1960, 1962, and 1964. In reflection of what IBBY considered to be a trend of increasing quality in picture books,[5] the award was expanded to include illustrators in 1966.[3] From 1966 to 1996 runners up were named as "Highly Commended". In 1998, this was replaced with a list of three to four "Finalists".[5] It is sometimes called the "Little Nobel Prize" or the "Nobel Prize for children's literature"[6][7] and has been cited as the "most important activity" of IBBY.[2] Between 1992 and 2022, the patron of the awards was Queen Margrethe II of Denmark.[8] A special issue of Bookbird, a journal published by IBBY, is published as the award is given out.[9]

Jury

The winner of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards is selected by a jury which is put together by IBBY's executive committee. The Jury's president is elected by IBBY's General Assembly. There were initially seven jurors,[5] but this was increased to eight and in 2000 to ten. Two years later, the jury was split with five members focusing on writing and the other five handling illustrations. The jurors are expected to be competent in children's literature and ideally represent a diverse group. It generally takes six months to review candidates and select a winner.[10]

Jella Lepman served as Jury President for the first three Andersen Awards, 1956 to 1960, and remained on the jury until her death in 1970, as the President of IBBY and then as its honorary president. Current four-year terms cover two award cycles. Other notable presidents have included Virginia Haviland (1970–1974), Patricia Crampton (1982–1986), and Ana Maria Machado (1986–1990).[11]

Selection process

The award's regulations read: "The Hans Christian Award is presented every two years by IBBY to an author and to an illustrator, living at the time of the nomination, who by the outstanding value of their work are judged to have made a lasting contribution to literature for children and young people. The complete works of the author and the illustrator will be taken into consideration in the selection process". The award is explicitly designed to be an "international" work, and it is not explicitly given to a certain country.[5]

IBBY has many member nationsall countries are eligible for membership. Every member nation has its own organization, known as a "national section", that is active across the country. All member nations can nominate candidates for consideration in the Hans Christian Andersen Awards.[12] Some member states will repeatedly nominate the same author or illustrator, others nominate a new candidate each time.[13] To nominate a candidate, a dossier is prepared that provides information including a list of works and biographical sketch. The portfolio must have between five and ten books by the candidate, which are sent to jurors, IBBY's president, and the "Jury Secretary".[5] There were sixty-six nominees from thirty-three countries for the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen awards.[14]

Each winner receives the Hans Christian Andersen Medaille, a gold medal with the bust of Andersen, and a diploma.[2] These medals are presented at the biennial IBBY Congress.[1]

Writing award winners

Eleanor Farjeon received the first award in 1956
Gianni Rodari, who received the 1970 award
Jacqueline Woodson received the award in 2020
Winners of the writing award[15]
Year Winner Country Award
1956 Eleanor Farjeon (for The Little Bookroom)[4] United KingdomWinner
1958 Astrid Lindgren (for Rasmus på luffen)[4] SwedenWinner
1960 Erich Kästner (for Als ich ein kleiner Junge war)[4] West GermanyWinner
1962 Meindert DeJong USAWinner
1964 René Guillot FranceWinner
1966 Tove Jansson FinlandWinner
Karl Bruckner AustriaHighly Commended
Gianni Rodari ItalyHighly Commended
José María Sánchez-Silva SpainHighly Commended
1968 James Krüss West GermanyWinner
José María Sánchez-Silva SpainWinner
Gianni Rodari ItalyHighly Commended
Elizabeth Coatsworth USAHighly Commended
1970 Gianni Rodari ItalyWinner
Ana María Matute SpainHighly Commended
E. B. White USAHighly Commended
Ela Peroci YugoslaviaHighly Commended
1972 Scott O'Dell USAWinner
Colette Vivier FranceHighly Commended
Otfried Preußler West GermanyHighly Commended
Ana María Matute SpainHighly Commended
Maria Gripe SwedenHighly Commended
Sergey Mikhalkov Soviet UnionHighly Commended
Siny van Iterson Netherlands Netherlands
1974 Maria Gripe SwedenWinner
Cecil Bødker DenmarkHighly Commended
Colette Vivier FranceHighly Commended
Rosemary Sutcliff UKHighly Commended
1976 Cecil Bødker DenmarkWinner
Agnija Barto Soviet UnionHighly Commended
E. B. White USAHighly Commended
1978 Paula Fox USAWinner
Alan Garner UKHighly Commended
1980 Bohumil Říha CzechoslovakiaWinner
Lygia Bojunga Nunes BrazilHighly Commended
Harry Kullman SwedenHighly Commended
1982 Lygia Bojunga Nunes BrazilWinner
1984 Christine Nöstlinger AustriaWinner
Patricia Wrightson AustraliaHighly Commended
1986 Patricia Wrightson AustraliaWinner
1988 Annie M.G. Schmidt NetherlandsWinner
Claude Roy FranceHighly Commended
1990 Tormod Haugen NorwayWinner
Bjarne Reuter DenmarkHighly Commended
1992 Virginia Hamilton USAWinner
María Elena Walsh ArgentinaHighly Commended
Houshang Moradi Kermani IranHighly Commended
1994 Michio Mado JapanWinner
1996 Uri Orlev IsraelWinner
1998 Katherine Paterson USAWinner
Brian Doyle CanadaFinalist
Ruskin Bond IndiaFinalist
Alice Vieira PortugalFinalist
Anne Fine UKFinalist
2000 Ana Maria Machado BrazilWinner
Ulf Stark SwedenFinalist
Peter Dickinson UKFinalist
Lois Lowry USAFinalist
2002 Aidan Chambers United KingdomWinner
Bart Moeyaert BelgiumFinalist
Bjarne Reuter DenmarkFinalist
2004 Martin Waddell IrelandWinner
Barbro Lindgren SwedenFinalist
Bjarne Reuter DenmarkFinalist
Joel Rufino dos Santos BrazilFinalist
Jürg Schubiger  SwitzerlandFinalist
2006 Margaret Mahy New ZealandWinner
Jon Ewo NorwayFinalist
Peter Härtling GermanyFinalist
Philip Pullman UKFinalist
Toon Tellegen NetherlandsFinalist
Eugene Trivizas GreeceFinalist
2008 Jürg Schubiger  SwitzerlandWinner
Bartolomeu Campos de Queirós BrazilFinalist
Brian Doyle CanadaFinalist
Guus Kuijer NetherlandsFinalist
David Almond UKFinalist
2010 David Almond United KingdomWinner
Ahmadreza Ahmadi IranFinalist
Bartolomeu Campos de Queirós BrazilFinalist
Lennart Hellsing SwedenFinalist
Louis Jensen DenmarkFinalist
2012 María Teresa Andruetto ArgentinaWinner
Paul Fleischman USAFinalist
Bart Moeyaert BelgiumFinalist
Jean-Claude Mourlevat FranceFinalist
Bianca Pitzorno ItalyFinalist
2014 Nahoko Uehashi JapanWinner
Ted van Lieshout NetherlandsFinalist
Houshang Moradi Kermani IranFinalist
Mirjam Pressler GermanyFinalist
Renate Welsh AustriaFinalist
Jacqueline Woodson USAFinalist
2016 Cao Wenxuan ChinaWinner
Louis Jensen DenmarkFinalist
Ted van Lieshout NetherlandsFinalist
Mirjam Pressler GermanyFinalist
Lois Lowry USAFinalist
2018 Eiko Kadono JapanWinner
Marie-Aude Murail FranceFinalist
Farhad Hassanzadeh IranFinalist
Joy Cowley New ZealandFinalist
Ulf Stark SwedenFinalist
2020 Jacqueline Woodson USAWinner
María Cristina Ramos ArgentinaFinalist
Bart Moeyaert BelgiumFinalist
Marie-Aude Murail FranceFinalist
Farhad Hassanzadeh IranFinalist
Peter Svetina SloveniaFinalist
2022 Marie-Aude Murail[16] France Winner
María Cristina Ramos Argentina Finalist
Fatima Sharafeddine Lebanon Finalist
Peter Svetina Slovenia Finalist
Annika Thor Sweden Finalist
Margaret Wild Australia Finalist
2024[17] Heinz Janisch Austria Winner
Marina Colasanti Brazil Finalist
Lee Geum-yi South Korea Finalist
Bart Moeyaert Belgium Finalist
Timo Parvela Finland Finalist
Edward van de Vendel Netherlands Finalist
2026 [18] Michael Rosen[19] United Kingdom Winner
Ahmad Akbarpour Iran Finalist
Timothée de Fombelle France Finalist
María José Ferrada Chile Finalist
Lee Geum-yi South Korea Finalist
Pam Muñoz Ryan United States Finalist

Illustration award winners

Farshid Mesghali, the 1974 recipient
Květa Pacovská, the 1992 recipient
Winners of the illustration award[15]
Year Winner Country Award
1966Alois Carigiet  SwitzerlandWinner
Jiří Trnka CzechoslovakiaHighly Commended
Brian Wildsmith UKHighly Commended
1968Jiří Trnka CzechoslovakiaWinner
Ib Spang Olsen DenmarkHighly Commended
Brian Wildsmith UKHighly Commended
Roger Duvoisin USAHighly Commended
1970Maurice Sendak USAWinner
Ib Spang Olsen DenmarkHighly Commended
Ota Daihachi JapanHighly Commended
Lidja Osterc YugoslaviaHighly Commended
1972Ib Spang Olsen DenmarkWinner
Elizabeth Cleaver CanadaHighly Commended
Adolf Zábranský CzechoslovakiaHighly Commended
Janosch FRGHighly Commended
Petros Zambellis GreeceHighly Commended
Björn Berg SwedenHighly Commended
Felix Hoffmann  SwitzerlandHighly Commended
1974Farshid Mesghali IranWinner
Helga Aichinger AustriaHighly Commended
Nicole Claveloux FranceHighly Commended
Charles Keeping UKHighly Commended
1976Tatjana Mawrina Soviet UnionWinner
Ľudovít Fulla CzechoslovakiaHighly Commended
Svend Otto S. DenmarkHighly Commended
1978Svend Otto S. DenmarkWinner
Leo & Diane Dillon USAHighly Commended
1980Suekichi Akaba JapanWinner
Tomi Ungerer FranceHighly Commended
Etienne Delessert  SwitzerlandHighly Commended
1982Zbigniew Rychlicki PolandWinner
1984Mitsumasa Anno JapanWinner
Helme Heine FRGHighly Commended
Raymond Briggs UKHighly Commended
1986Robert Ingpen AustraliaWinner
Adolf Born CzechoslovakiaHighly Commended
1988Dušan Kállay CzechoslovakiaWinner
Yasuo Segawa JapanHighly Commended
1990Lisbeth Zwerger AustriaWinner
1992Květa Pacovská Czechoslovakia[a]Winner
1994Jörg Müller  SwitzerlandWinner
1996Klaus Ensikat GermanyWinner
1998Tomi Ungerer FranceWinner
Binette Schroeder GermanyFinalist
Dick Bruna NetherlandsFinalist
Stasys Eidrigevičius PolandFinalist
2000Anthony Browne United KingdomWinner
Rotraut Susanne Berner GermanyFinalist
Boris Diodorov RussiaFinalist
Maria Lucija Stupica SloveniaFinalist
2002Quentin Blake United KingdomWinner
Grégoire Solotareff FranceFinalist
Rotraut Susanne Berner GermanyFinalist
Daihachi Ohta JapanFinalist
2004Max Velthuijs NetherlandsWinner
Rotraut Susanne Berner GermanyFinalist
Roberto Innocenti ItalyFinalist
Javier Serrano SpainFinalist
Grégoire Solotareff FranceFinalist
2006Wolf Erlbruch GermanyWinner
Lilian Brøgger DenmarkFinalist
Etienne Delessert  SwitzerlandFinalist
Isol Misenta ArgentinaFinalist
Grégoire Solotareff FranceFinalist
Klaas Verplancke BelgiumFinalist
2008Roberto Innocenti ItalyWinner
Isol Misenta ArgentinaFinalist
Svjetlan Junaković CroatiaFinalist
Adolf Born Czech RepublicFinalist
David Wiesner USAFinalist
2010Jutta Bauer GermanyWinner
Carll Cneut BelgiumFinalist
Etienne Delessert  SwitzerlandFinalist
Svjetlan Junaković CroatiaFinalist
Roger Mello BrazilFinalist
2012Peter Sís Czech Republic[b]Winner
John Burningham UKFinalist
Roger Mello BrazilFinalist
Mohammad Ali Baniasadi IranFinalist
Javier Zabala SpainFinalist
2014Roger Mello BrazilWinner
Rotraut Susanne Berner GermanyFinalist
John Burningham UKFinalist
Eva Lindström SwedenFinalist
François Place FranceFinalist
Øyvind Torseter NorwayFinalist
2016Rotraut Susanne Berner GermanyWinner
Alessandro Sanna ItalyFinalist
Suzy Lee South KoreaFinalist
Marit Törnqvist NetherlandsFinalist
Pejman Rahimizadeh IranFinalist
2018Igor Oleynikov RussiaWinner
Pablo Bernasconi ArgentinaFinalist
Linda Wolfsgruber AustriaFinalist
Xiong Liang ChinaFinalist
Iwona Chmielewska PolandFinalist
Albertine Zullo  SwitzerlandFinalist
2020Albertine Zullo  SwitzerlandWinner
Isabelle Arsenault CanadaFinalist
Seizo Tashima JapanFinalist
Sylvia Weve NetherlandsFinalist
Iwona Chmielewska PolandFinalist
Elena Odriozola SpainFinalist
2022 Suzy Lee[20] South Korea Winner
Beatrice Alemagna Italy Finalist
Ryoji Arai Japan Finalist
Iwona Chmielewska Poland Finalist
Gusti Argentina Finalist
Sydney Smith Canada Finalist
2024[17] Sydney Smith Canada Winner
Cai Gao China Finalist
Iwona Chmielewska Poland Finalist
Nelson Cruz Brazil Finalist
Elena Odriozola Spain Finalist
Paloma Valdivia Chile Finalist
2026 [18] Cai Gao China Winner
Beatrice Alemagna Italy Finalist
Linda Bondestam Finland Finalist
Gundega Muzikante Latvia Finalist
Walid Taher Egypt Finalist
María Wérnicke Argentina Finalist

Winners by country

The winners are most often residents of Europe and North America; the first winner from outside that region was Farshid Mesghali in 1974, from Iran.[13] After receiving the award, many authors and illustrators have their works gain wider recognition, particularly in the form of more translations.[21] As of 2024 there have been award winners from 29 countries. Americans have won the most writing awards (6) and have the most award winners (7). Germans have won the most illustration awards with four.

Country Illustration Writing No. of winners
United States 1 6 7
Germany 4 2 6
Japan 2 3 5
United Kingdom 2 4 6
Czechoslovakia 3 1 4
 Switzerland 3 1 4
Brazil 1 2 3
Denmark 2 1 3
France 1 2 3
Austria 1 2 3
Australia 1 1 2
Italy 1 1 2
Netherlands 1 1 2
Sweden 2 2
Argentina 1 1
Canada 1 1
China 1 1 2
Czech Republic 1 1
Finland 1 1
Israel 1 1
Iran 1 1
Ireland 1 1
South Korea 1 1
New Zealand 1 1
Norway 1 1
Spain 1 1
Poland 1 1
Russia 1 1
Soviet Union 1 1

See also

Notes

  1. Pacovská received the award one year before Czechoslovakia dissolved into its constituent states.
  2. Sis was nominated by the extant Czech Republic. He was born in the former Czechoslovakia and educated there in Applied Arts. He has been a U.S. citizen from 1982.

References

  1. "Hans Christian Andersen Awards". International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  2. Glistrup 2002, p. 14.
  3. Ellis 1973, p. 20.
  4. Glistrup 2002, p. 15.
  5. Glistrup 2002, p. 16.
  6. "Cao Wenxuan wins 'Nobel Prize' of children's books". The Telegraph. 8 March 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  7. "Mahy wins "Little Nobel."". New Zealand Books. 16: 2. June 2006. ISSN 1170-9103 via EBSCO.
  8. Latrobe, Kathy (2001). "Childern's [sic] Literature: International Perspectives". World Literature Today. 75 (3/4): 98–102. doi:10.2307/40156756. ISSN 0196-3570. JSTOR 40156756.
  9. Glistrup 2002, p. 21.
  10. Glistrup 2002, p. 17.
  11. "Hans Christian Award jury members". Glistrup, ed., pp. 119–24. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  12. Tomlinson, Carl M. (2003). "The International Children's Literature Movement". World Literature Today. 77 (1): 68–70. doi:10.2307/40157788. ISSN 0196-3570. JSTOR 40157788.
  13. Glistrup 2002, p. 19.
  14. Kantor, Emma (9 December 2020). "Candidates for the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Awards Announced". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  15. "Hans Christian Andersen Award". International Board on Books for Young People. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
  16. "Murail, Lee win 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Award". Books+Publishing. 22 March 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  17. Kantor, Emma (9 April 2024). "Bologna 2024: Heinz Janisch and Sydney Smith Win 2024 Hans Christian Andersen Awards". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
  18. "Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2026". www.ibby.org. Retrieved 29 January 2026.
  19. Joanne O'Sullivan, Bologna Children’s Book Fair 2026: Michael Rosen and Cai Gao Win Hans Christian Andersen Awards, Publishers Weekly
  20. "Murail, Lee win 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Award". Books+Publishing. 22 March 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  21. Glistrup 2002, p. 20.

Bibliography