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The DSC Prize for South Asian Literature is a literary prize awarded annually to writers of any ethnicity or nationality writing about South Asia〔Note: South Asia for the purposes of the prize is defined as India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Afghanistan. See Eligibility Criteria.〕 themes such as culture, politics, history, or people.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eligibility Criteria for Entries to the 2011 DSC Prize )〕 It is for an original full-length novel written in English, or translated into English.〔 The award is for novels published in the year preceding the judging of the prize.〔 The winner receives (about ).〔 The prize was instituted by DSC Limited, an Indian infrastructure and construction company which also sponsored the Jaipur Literature Festival. ==Winners and shortlist== Blue Ribbon () = winner 2011 * Amit Chaudhuri, ''The Immortals'' (Picador India) * Musharraf Ali Farooqi, ''The Story of a Widow'' (Picador India) * Tania James, ''Atlas Of Unknowns'' (Pocket Books) * Manju Kapur, ''The Immigrant'' (Faber & Faber) * Neel Mukherjee, ''A Life Apart'' (Constable & Robinson) * H. M. Naqvi, ''Home Boy'' (HarperCollins India) 2012 * U.R. Ananthamurthy, ''Bharathipura'' (Oxford University Press, India; translated by Susheela Punitha) * Chandrakanta, ''A Street in Srinagar'' (Zubaan Books, India; translated by Manisha Chaudhry) * Usha K.R, ''Monkey-man'' (Penguin/Penguin India) * Shehan Karunatilaka, ''Chinaman'' (Random House, India) * Tabish Khair, ''The Thing About Thugs'' (Fourth Estate/HarperCollins India) * Kavery Nambisan, ''The Story that Must Not Be Told'' (Viking/Penguin India) 2013 *Jamil Ahmad, ''The Wandering Falcon'' (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin India) *Tahmima Anam, ''The Good Muslim'' (Penguin Books) *Amitav Ghosh, ''River of Smoke'' (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin India) *Mohammed Hanif, ''Our Lady of Alice Bhatti'' (Random House India) *Uday Prakash, ''The Walls of Delhi'' (Translated by Jason Grunebaum; UWA Publishing, W. Australia) * Jeet Thayil, ''Narcopolis'' (Faber and Faber, London) 2014 *Anand, ''Book of Destruction'' (Translated by Chetana Sachidanandan; Penguin India) *Benyamin, ''Goat Days'' (Translated by Joseph Koyippalli; Penguin India) * Cyrus Mistry, ''Chronicle of a Corpse Bearer'' (Aleph Book Company, India) *Mohsin Hamid, ''How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia'' (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin India) *Nadeem Aslam, ''The Blind Man’s Garden'' (Random House, India) *Nayomi Munaweera, ''Island of a Thousand Mirrors'' (Perera Hussein Publishing, Sri Lanka) 2015 The winner was announced January 22, 2015. *Bilal Tanweer, ''The Scatter Here is Too Great'' (Vintage Books/Random House, India) * Jhumpa Lahiri, ''The Lowland'' (Vintage Books/Random House, India) *Kamila Shamsie, ''A God in Every Stone'' (Bloomsbury, India) *Romesh Gunesekera, ''Noontide Toll'' (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin, India) *Shamsur Rahman Faruqi, ''The Mirror of Beauty'' (Penguin Books, India) 2016 *Akhil Sharma, ''Family Life'' (Faber & Faber, UK) *Anuradha Roy, ''Sleeping on Jupiter'' (Hachette, India) *K. R. Meera, ''Hang Woman'' (Translated by J Devika; Penguin, India) *Mirza Waheed, ''The Book of Gold Leaves'' (Viking/Penguin India) *Neel Mukherjee, ''The Lives of Others'' (Vintage/Penguin Random House, UK) *Raj Kamal Jha, ''She Will Build Him A City'' (Bloomsbury, India) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「DSC Prize for South Asian Literature」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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