Giuseppe Conte Wins Argana International Poetry Award

Poet Giuseppe Conte.
Poet Giuseppe Conte.
TT
20

Giuseppe Conte Wins Argana International Poetry Award

Poet Giuseppe Conte.
Poet Giuseppe Conte.

Morocco’s House of Poetry announced Wednesday that Italian Poet Giuseppe Conte has won the Argana International Poetry Award 2022, in its 16th edition.

“Awarding the Italian poet comes to honor the cultural and linguistic dialogue reflected in the structure and meaning of his poem, and the human dimension that this dialogue reveals. Since the 1970s, Conte’s poems have never stopped expanding imagination and horizons with an aesthetic sense fueled by the poet’s own imagination and wide horizons,” said the House of Poetry in a statement.

The House of Poetry grants the Argana International Poetry Award every year in partnership with the Capital Private Equity (CDG) and the Ministry of Culture. The award, worth around $12,000, is presented with a shield and a certificate in a cultural and artistic ceremony.

The jury of this year’s edition included Italian Academic and Translator Simone Sibilio (president), Lebanese writer and publisher Lina Kreidieh, Egyptian poet Ahmed al-Shahawi, poet Najib Khadari, critic Khaled Belqasim, and poet Hassan Najmi (secretary general).

The jury said in a statement that Conte won this year’s award for “his poem promoting dialogue between different languages and views. Conte’s poem expresses a vision in which the western and eastern cultures overlap.”

The statement adds that Conte’s poem features a silent strain stemmed from a “cognitive interest in the difference between the East and the West, and the myths and the paradoxes of the two cultures. But this strain doesn’t lead to any clash; it rather reveals a vital harmony with promising human capacities, because his poem highlights the love that exists in everything, and calls for investing this love in human connections.”

“The dialogue in Conte’s poem doesn’t take one direction, and isn’t limited to his writings about the encounter between the East and the West, but it goes in other directions, including the vertical orientation that prepares for the death-life encounter. In this context, the poet shows keenness to speak to the dead who didn’t stop producing thought and meaning from their unseen places despite their wise silence, extending the horizon of friendships built outside this time,” the statement adds.

Syrian poet Adonis had written the introduction to the Arabic translation of a selection of Conte's poems dubbed “Joy Without a Name”, saying: "His friends / have slept for ages / in languages, without a candle, and without a cover.”



Rare New Zealand Snail Filmed for First Time Laying an Egg from its Neck

In this image made from video, a Powelliphanta augusta snail lays an egg from it's neck at the Hokitika Snail Housing facility, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024, in Hokitika, New Zealand. (Lisa Flanagan/New Zealand Department of Conservation via AP)
In this image made from video, a Powelliphanta augusta snail lays an egg from it's neck at the Hokitika Snail Housing facility, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024, in Hokitika, New Zealand. (Lisa Flanagan/New Zealand Department of Conservation via AP)
TT
20

Rare New Zealand Snail Filmed for First Time Laying an Egg from its Neck

In this image made from video, a Powelliphanta augusta snail lays an egg from it's neck at the Hokitika Snail Housing facility, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024, in Hokitika, New Zealand. (Lisa Flanagan/New Zealand Department of Conservation via AP)
In this image made from video, a Powelliphanta augusta snail lays an egg from it's neck at the Hokitika Snail Housing facility, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2024, in Hokitika, New Zealand. (Lisa Flanagan/New Zealand Department of Conservation via AP)

The strange reproductive habits of a large, carnivorous New Zealand snail were once shrouded in mystery. Now footage of the snail laying an egg from its neck has been captured for the first time, the country’s conservation agency said Wednesday.
What looks like a tiny hen’s egg is seen emerging from an opening below the head of the Powelliphanta augusta snail, a threatened species endemic to New Zealand.
The video was taken at a facility on the South Island’s West Coast, where conservation rangers attempting to save the species from extinction have cared for a population of the snails in chilled containers for nearly two decades, The Associated Press reported.
The conditions in the containers mimic the alpine weather in their only former habitat — a remote mountain they were named for, on the West Coast of the South Island, that has been engulfed by mining.
Observing their habits Lisa Flanagan from the Department of Conservation, who has worked with the creatures for 12 years, said the species still holds surprises.
“It’s remarkable that in all the time we’ve spent caring for the snails, this is the first time we’ve seen one lay an egg,” she said in a statement.
Like other snails, Powelliphanta augusta are hermaphrodites, which explains how the creatures can reproduce when encased in a hard shell. The invertebrate uses a genital pore on the right side of its body, just below the head, to simultaneously exchange sperm with another snail, which is stored until each creates an egg.
Each snail takes eight years to reach sexual maturity, after which it lays about five eggs a year. The egg can take more than a year to hatch.
“Some of our captive snails are between 25 and 30 years old,” said Flanagan. “They’re polar opposites to the pest garden snail we introduced to New Zealand, which is like a weed, with thousands of offspring each year and a short life.”
The dozens of species and subspecies of Powelliphanta snails are only found in New Zealand, mostly in rugged forest and grassland settings where they are threatened by habitat loss.
They are carnivores that slurp up earthworms like noodles, and are some of the world’s largest snails, with oversized, distinctive shells in a range of rich earth colors and swirling patterns.
The Powelliphanta augusta was the center of public uproar and legal proceedings in the early 2000s, when an energy company’s plans to mine for coal threatened to destroy the snails’ habitat.
Some 4,000 were removed from the site and relocated, while 2,000 more were housed in chilled storage in the West Coast town of Hokitika to ensure the preservation of the species, which is slow to breed and doesn't adapt well to new habitats.
In 2011, some 800 of the snails accidentally died in a Department of Conservation refrigerator with faulty temperature control.
But the species’ slow survival continues: In March this year, there were nearly 1,900 snails and nearly 2,200 eggs in captivity, the conservation agency said.