Award-winning
author of The Luminaries Eleanor Catton, is to receive the honorary
degree of Doctor of Literature at Victoria University of Wellington’s May
graduation.
“We are
extremely proud to count Eleanor among our illustrious alumni, and look forward
to formally acknowledging her achievements with an honorary doctorate,” says
Victoria University Vice-Chancellor Professor Pat Walsh.
Professor
Walsh says Ms Catton’s remarkable success so early on in her writing career is
clear evidence of her outstanding talent.
“As the
youngest ever author to win the 2013 Man Booker Prize for The Luminaries—only
her second novel—Eleanor has been catapulted to the forefront of New
Zealand literature, and can claim a significant place internationally among
authors writing in English,” he says.
Ms Catton has
a Master of Arts in Creative Writing from Victoria University, conferred with
Distinction in 2008 and a Bachelor of Arts, conferred with First Class Honours
in 2009.
Prior to
beginning her Masters at Victoria, her flair for writing was acknowledged when
she won the 2007 Sunday
Star-Times short-story competition.
Ms Catton wrote her first novel The
Rehearsal as her Master’s thesis at Victoria’s International Institute of
Modern Letters, receiving Victoria’s annual Adam Foundation Prize in Creative Writing for the best portfolio
submitted in the Master’s programme. Her novel was subsequently published, in
2008, by Victoria University Press and won the 2009 United Kingdom Society of
Authors' Betty Trask Award, the 2009 New Zealand Society of Authors Hubert Church
Best First Book Award for Fiction and the Amazon.ca First Novel Award. It was
also shortlisted for the Guardian First
Book Award, the Prix Femina literature award, the abroad category of the Prix
Médicis, the University of Wales Dylan Thomas Prize 2010, and longlisted for
the Orange Prize 2010.
In 2008, Ms
Catton was awarded a fellowship to the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, widely regarded
as one of the world’s premier writing schools. Other accolades include being
awarded the 2008 Louis Johnson New Writers’ Bursary, being named one of
Amazon’s Rising Stars in 2009 and receiving the New Zealand Arts Foundation New
Generation Award in 2010.
She was
awarded the Ursula Bethell Residency at the University of Canterbury in 2011.
In 2013, as well as winning the prestigious
Man Booker Prize for The Luminaries, Ms Catton was awarded the Canadian
Governor General's Literary Award for fiction and was made a Member of the New
Zealand Order of Merit.
Ms Catton currently teaches creative writing
at the Manukau Institute of Technology.
Footnote:
Warmest congratulations Eleanor, I always regard honorary doctorates as the ultimate accolade so well done; it is an accolade you richly deserve.
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