Jump to start of page content
Scottish Arts Council - Link to home page

 
advanced search

Please Note:

As from 1 July 2010, this site will no longer be updated and will be retained for Archive purposes only.

For the latest information on the Arts, Creative Industries and Film & TV in Scotland please visit:

www.creativescotland.com
Home*Latest news*Inaugural Muriel Spark International Fellowship
Home
About us
Contact us
Latest news
Arts in Scotland
International
Showcase
What's on
16 24 explore
Professional
Information
Jobs
Funding
Web help
Site map

Scottish Arts Council announce inaugural Muriel Spark International Fellowship

30/03/2006

The Scottish Arts Council is delighted to announce Booker Prize winner, Margaret Atwood, as the inaugural Muriel Spark International Fellow.

The Muriel Spark International Fellowship, named after one of Scotland’s greatest novelists, hosts a one-month visit to Scotland by a leading world writer every two years, providing them with the opportunity to spend time concentrating on work while also taking part in a number of light public duties, including presenting masterclasses, readings and lectures.

The new Fellowship was announced in August 2004 in celebration of Scottish writing’s burgeoning international profile, which was symbolised later that year in Edinburgh’s designation by UNESCO as the world’s first City of Literature.  It is hoped that the Fellowship will extend and enrich Scotland’s tradition of international literary exchange.

Canadian born Atwood has written more than thirty internationally acclaimed works of fiction, poetry, and critical essays, including The Blind Assassin, which won the 2000 Booker Prize for Fiction.  Other works include the Booker Prize shortlisted novels The Handmaid’s Tale, Cat’s Eyes, Alias Grace, and Oryx and Crake, which was also shortlisted for the 2004 Orange Prize for Fiction.  In 2005 Margaret also received the Edinburgh International Book Festival Enlightenment Award.  Atwood’s latest book The Tent, a collection of short stories, was published earlier this month. Selection of books

During the residency, which will take place in September, Margaret will be based at the artists’ residency centre, Cove Park, in Argyll and Bute, where she will have the opportunity to spend time in seclusion to research and write, before moving on to central Edinburgh.  She will also be involved in a number of events and activities during the month-long residency, including a masterclass session for creative writing students and a public reading in Edinburgh, providing Scottish writers with the opportunity to exchange ideas and learn from a major international author.

Commenting on her selection as the inaugural International Fellow Margaret Atwood said: ‘I am more than delighted to have been asked to be the first Muriel Spark International Literary Fellow.  I have long been an admirer of Muriel Spark's books and it is fitting that a Fellowship be named for her, in her honour, but also as a tribute to Scotland's long and very distinguished literary history.’

Gavin Wallace, Head of Literature at the Scottish Arts Council said:  ‘We’re absolutely thrilled and very honoured that Margaret Atwood has accepted our invitation.  Internationalism has always been close to the heart of our literary culture, and it’s one of the biggest driving strengths of our national literary life at the moment.  I’ve no doubt the literary and the wider community of Scotland will benefit immeasurably from Margaret’s presence’.

Notes to editors

  1. The Scottish Arts Council champions and sustains the arts for Scotland, investing over £60 million from Scottish Executive and National Lottery funding to support and develop artistic excellence and creativity throughout Scotland. Further information is available on our website: www.scottisharts.org.uk
  2. For more information about Margaret Atwood visit: www.owtoad.com

Contact email(s)

media.office@scottisharts.org.uk

Issued by: Scottish Arts Council

News search
Search all recent and archived news releases.
 





 
  Latest news  
Donald Worster Wins Scotland’s Biggest Literary Prize
Sixty Organisations Share £16m For Global Artistic Visions and Inspiring Public Engagement
Air Time Jazz CPD for Scotland
National Lottery Awards 2010 - Cast Your Vote
Artist selected for Scotland and Venice 2011
Highlands and Islands Focus for Creative Scotland’s ‘Rural Innovation’ Investment
Book Awards: Category Winners Announced
Winners of Creative Scotland’s Vital Spark awards announced
Sixteen Books Shortlisted for Scotland’s Biggest Literary Prize
Unlimited Commisions Scotland Announced
 
   
top of page print this page - opens in new window send to a friend  
Awarding funds from The National Lottery

© Scottish Arts Council. All rights reserved. Terms & conditions | Accessibility information