
Logo of International PEN
- For the "Postsecondary Education Network International" see
PEN-International
International PEN, the
worldwide association of writers, was
founded in London
in 1921 to
promote friendship and intellectual co-operation among writers
everywhere. PEN originally stood for "Poets, Essayists and
Novelists", but now includes writers of any form of literature,
such as journalists and historians.Other goals included: to
emphasise the role of
literature in the
development of mutual understanding and world culture; to fight for
freedom of expression; and to
act as a powerful voice on behalf of writers harassed, imprisoned
and sometimes killed for their views. It is the world’s oldest
human rights organization and the
oldest international literary organization .
Role of PEN
PEN is a
non-governmental organization in formal consultative relations with
UNESCO
and Special Consultative Status with the Economic
and Social Council of the United
Nations .
The first
PEN Club was founded in London
in 1921 by
Mrs. C.A. Dawson Scott and
John Galsworthy, who would become
International PEN's first President. Its first members included
Joseph Conrad,
Elizabeth Craig,
George Bernard Shaw, and
H.G. Wells.
The club established the following aims:
- To promote intellectual co-operation and understanding among
writers;
- To create a world community of writers that would emphasize the
central role of literature in the development of world culture;
and,
- To defend literature against the many threats to its survival
which the modern world poses.
Past Presidents of International PEN have included
Malcolm Afford,
Alberto Moravia,
Heinrich Böll,
Arthur Miller,
Mario Vargas Llosa,
Homero Aridjis and
Jiří Gruša. The current President
is
John Ralston Saul and the
current
Executive Director is
Caroline McCormick.
International PEN is headquartered in London and composed of 145
autonomous PEN Centres in 104 countries around the world, each of
which are open to qualified writers, journalists, translators,
historians and others actively engaged in any branch of literature,
regardless of nationality, race, colour or religion.
PEN Affiliated Awards
- Main article: List
of PEN literary awards
PEN awards dozens of literary awards each year. Some examples
include:
PEN Charter
Literature, national though it be in origin, knows
no frontiers, and should remain common currency among nations in
spite of political or international upheavals.
In all circumstances, and particularly in time of
war, works of art and libraries, the heritage of humanity at large,
should be left untouched by national or political passion.
Members of PEN should at all times use what
influence they have in favor of good understanding and mutual
respect among nations; they pledge themselves to do their utmost to
dispel race, class, and national hatreds and to champion the ideal
of one humanity living in peace in the world.
PEN stands for the principle of unhampered
transmission of thought within each nation and among all nations,
and members pledge themselves to oppose any form of suppression of
freedom of expression in their country or their community.
PEN declares for a free press and opposes
arbitrary censorship in time of peace. It believes that the
necessary advance of the world toward a more highly organized
political and economic order renders free criticism of governments,
administrations, and institutions imperative. And since freedom
implies voluntary restraint, members pledge themselves to oppose
such evils of a free press as mendacious publication, deliberate
falsehood, and distortion of facts for political and personal
ends...
Writers in Prison Committee
International PEN's Writers in Prison Committee works on behalf of
persecuted
writers worldwide. Established in
1960 in response to increasing attempts to silence voices of
dissent by imprisoning writers, the Writers
in Prison Committee monitors the cases of over 900 writers who have
been
imprisoned,
tortured, threatened, attacked, made to disappear,
and killed for the peaceful practice of their profession. It
publishes a bi-annual
Case
List documenting free expression violations against writers
around the world.
The Committee also coordinates the International PEN membership's
campaign towards an end to these attacks and to the suppression of
freedom of expression world
wide.
International PEN's Writers in Prison Committee is a founding
member of the
International
Freedom of Expression Exchange, a global network of
non-governmental
organisations that monitors
censorship worldwide and defends
journalists, writers,
internet users and others who are persecuted for
exercising their right to freedom of expression.
It is also a member of the
Tunisia Monitoring Group, a
coalition of 16 free expression organisations that lobbies the
Tunisian government to improve its human rights record.
Memorials
A grove of
trees beside Lake Burley
Griffin
forms the International PEN memorial in Canberra,
Australian Capital Territory
. The dedication reads,
"The spirit dies
in all of us who keep silent in the face of tyranny."
Officially opened on
17 November
1997.
Notable Members of International PEN
See also
References
- LeRoi Jones Sentence - Free Preview - The New York
Times
- Songs for Parents - About
- San Antonio Express-News - Factiva, from Dow Jones - Oct 30,
2005
- PEN condemns persecution of writers in Vietnam
External links