Date
Mon September 17, 2007
Monday’s Featured Non-Fiction: Ontario’s Ghost Town Heritage by Ron Brown
View more items filed under “Non-Fiction” in our Open Book Archives.
Joseph Heath Wins The Writers' Trust Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing
Submitted by kateburgess on March 12, 2015 - 10:53am
From our friends at Writers' Trust: The Writers' Trust of Canada announced last night at the Politics and the Pen gala, held at the Fairmont Château Laurier in Ottawa, that Joseph Heath has won the $25,000 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing for his book Enlightenment 2.0: Restoring Sanity to Our Politics, Our Economy, and Our Lives, published by HarperCollins Publishers. A jury composed of author Denise Chong, author and Ottawa Citizen columnist Terry Glavin, and The Globe and Mail Queen's Park reporter Jane Taber selected the winner. Their citation reads: "A magisterial survey of the shambles that remains of the Enlightenment's great promise, Joseph Heath's Enlightenment 2.0 is a vivid chronicle of the descent of contemporary politics into a bedlam of competing irrationalities and appeals to unreason. Drawing deeply from popular culture, the social sciences, psychology, and public policy, Enlightenment 2.0 is an important work of serious philosophy that is at the same time lively, lucid, engaging, and entertaining." Now in its fifteenth year, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing is awarded annually for a book of literary nonfiction that captures a political subject of relevance to Canadian readers and has the potential to shape or influence thinking on Canadian political life. The winning work combines compelling new insights with depth of research and is of significant literary merit. The prize particularly values books which provide the general reader with an informed, unique perspective on the practice of Canadian politics, its players, or its principles. Four finalists for this year's prize received $2,500 each: For more information about the winning book and author, as well as the four finalists, please visit the Writers' Trust website. Related item from our archives |