LOS ANGELES — The International Armenian Literary Alliance (IALA), in partnership with h-pem, announces the fourth annual Young Armenian Poets Awards in honor of Tamar Asadourian, a contest for exceptional Armenian writers between the ages of 14 and 18. Over the past three years, the Young Armenian Poets Awards has provided a space for young Armenian writers from all over the world to express themselves and have their voices be heard on the global stage. This year is no exception.
This year’s entrants are asked to submit work that explores the idea of “home.” Responses may consider physical spaces such as buildings and land as well as more abstracted notions such as the sanctuary of language, memory, or the one suggested in Naguib Mahfouz’s words: “Home is not where you were born; home is where all your attempts to escape cease.”
Submissions can come from any young writer who identifies as Armenian, no matter gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, creed, national origin, socio-economic class, educational background, personal style/appearance, citizenship and immigration status, or political affiliation. Submissions will be read by IALA Advisory Board members and judges Gregory Djanikian, Arminé Iknadossian, and Raffi Wartanian. Cash awards totaling $600 will be granted for the top three poems, which will be published online on IALA’s and h-pem’s websites in the fall of 2024. Winning authors will be invited to read their work at IALA’s annual Emerging Writers Showcase and receive a copy of Tamar Asadourian’s I remember you my future…
“Literature is a vital element of a people and a culture — we are our stories,” says IALA founder Olivia Katrandjian. “As writers, we must support each other if we want to thrive not only as individuals, but as a literary community. As a people, Armenians must support our writers if we want the world to listen to our stories. IALA provides a platform through which young Armenian writers can be heard.”
Poet and IALA Advisory Board member Gregory Djanikian, who serves as a judge for the program, adds that YAPA is “a wonderful way for young poets to know that their poems are being read by strangers, that their poems are afloat in the world.”
“We continue to honor and create a platform for the next generation of exciting Armenian poets who have so much to teach us,” says contest founder and director Alan Semerdjian, “and this year we’re thankful, especially, to the family of musician/poet Asadourian whose support going forward will allow us to provide increased monetary prizes and assist in the vision of the Young Armenian Poets Awards initiative.”