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Ananda Devi: 2024 Neustadt Prize Laureate

A photograph of Ananda Devi
Photo of Ananda Devi by Shevaun Williams

Born in Mauritius in 1957, Ananda Devi won a prize in an international short-story competition at the age of fifteen. She published her first collection of short-stories at the age of nineteen. Over the next five decades, she has become one of the major literary voices of the Indian Ocean with thirty books, including novels, collections of poetry, short stories, and essays, most recently La nuit s’ajoute à la nuit.

Published by major French publishers, she has won numerous literary prizes. Her writing is characterized by an unflinching look at violence and modern society, especially with regard to the status of women. Her characters are trapped by the contrary forces of society, religion, identity, human cruelty, and the seismic faults of history. Their only recourse, in their solitary quest, is their lucidity and humanity. Despite the harshness of her themes, Devi brings to her writing a poetry and sensuality that shines a light in the midst of the darkness she explores.

Devi has been translated into more than a dozen languages and has received decorations from Mauritius and also from France, with the title of Officier des Arts et des Lettres. In 2014 she received a major award from the Académie Française. The University of Silesia, Poland, conferred upon her a doctorate honoris causa. She was awarded the Neustadt Prize for her body of work in 2024.