The Alliance of Radical Booksellers (ARB) is happy to announce that submissions are now being welcomed for the Bread and Roses Award for Radical Publishing 2020. The Bread and Roses Award celebrates non-fiction which is
- informed by socialist, anarchist, environmental, feminist and anti-racist concerns
- inspires, supports or reports on political and/or personal change
- accessible and readable by the interested reader
- relates to global, national, local or specialist areas of interest
Previous winners have included:
David Graeber’s ‘Debt: The First 5,000 Years’ (Melville House, 2011),
Hsiao-Hung Pai’s ‘Scattered Sand: The Story of China’s Rural Migrants’ (Verso, 2012),
Joe Glenton’s ‘Soldier Box: Why I Won’t Return to the War on Terror’ (Verso, 2013)
‘Here We Stand: Women Changing The World’, edited by Helena Earnshaw and Angharad Penrhyn Jones (Honno Press, 2014)
‘The Song of the Shirt: The High Price of Cheap Garments, from Blackburn to Bangladesh’ by Jeremy Seabrook (Hurst, 2015)
‘The Candidate: Jeremy Corbyn’s Improbable Path to Power’ by Alex Nunns (OR Books, 2016)
Joint winners ‘Familiar Stranger: A Life Between Two Islands’ by Stuart Hall with Bill Schwarz (Allen Lane 2017) and ‘Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race’ by Reni Eddo-Lodge (Bloomsbury 2017).
‘Europe’s Fault Lines: Racism and the Rise of the Right’ by Liz Fekete (Verso, 2018)
Award ceremony and prize money
The award will be awarded at the the Bread & Roses Theatre Space, Kings Cross, London, to be held in June 2020 (precise date tbc).
There is one prize of £500 to the winning title. The prize is run in conjunction with the ARB’s prize for progressive children’s writing, The Little Rebels Children’s Book Award.
Submissions
PLEASE NOTE A RECENT CHANGE OF ADDRESS FOR SUBMISSIONS TO THIS YEAR’S AWARD.
For full submissions criteria please visit Bread and Roses website:
https://breadandrosesprize.wordpress.com/faqs
Crucially, submitted books must have been published in 2019 and books must be written, or largely written by authors or editors normally living in the UK.
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