Giuseppe Conte Wins Argana International Poetry Award

Poet Giuseppe Conte.
Poet Giuseppe Conte.
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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.”



Billy Crystal, Mandy Moore Among Those who Lost Homes in Los Angeles Fires

A blackened US flag flies above a charred structure after the passage of the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, California, on January 8, 2025. (Photo by AGUSTIN PAULLIER / AFP)
A blackened US flag flies above a charred structure after the passage of the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, California, on January 8, 2025. (Photo by AGUSTIN PAULLIER / AFP)
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Billy Crystal, Mandy Moore Among Those who Lost Homes in Los Angeles Fires

A blackened US flag flies above a charred structure after the passage of the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, California, on January 8, 2025. (Photo by AGUSTIN PAULLIER / AFP)
A blackened US flag flies above a charred structure after the passage of the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, California, on January 8, 2025. (Photo by AGUSTIN PAULLIER / AFP)

Fires burning in and around Los Angeles have claimed the homes of numerous celebrities, including Billy Crystal, Mandy Moore and Paris Hilton and led to sweeping disruptions of entertainment events.
Three awards ceremonies planned for this weekend have been postponed. Next week's Oscar nominations have been delayed. And tens of thousands of Angelenos are displaced and awaiting word Thursday on whether their homes survived the flames — some of them the city's most famous denizens, The Associated Press reported.
More than 1,900 structures have been destroyed and the number is expected to increase. More than 130,000 people are also under evacuation orders in the metropolitan area, from the Pacific Coast inland to Pasadena, a number that continues to shift as new fires erupt.
Late Wednesday, a fire in the Hollywood Hills was scorching the hills near the famed Hollywood Bowl and Dolby Theatre, which is the home of the Academy Awards.
Here are how the fires are impacting celebrities and the Los Angeles entertainment industry:
Stars whose homes have burned in the fires Celebrities like Crystal and his wife, Janice, were sharing memories of the homes they lost.
The Crystals lost the home in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood that they lived in for 45 years.
“Janice and I lived in our home since 1979. We raised our children and grandchildren here. Every inch of our house was filled with love. Beautiful memories that can’t be taken away. We are heartbroken of course but with the love of our children and friends we will get through this,” the Crystals wrote in the statement.
Mandy Moore lost her home in the Altadena neighborhood roughly 30 miles east of the Palisades.
“Honestly, I’m in shock and feeling numb for all so many have lost, including my family. My children’s school is gone. Our favorite restaurants, leveled. So many friends and loved ones have lost everything too,” Moore wrote on Instagram in a post that included video of devastated streets in the foothill suburb.
“Our community is broken but we will be here to rebuild together. Sending love to all affected and on the front lines trying to get this under control,” Moore wrote.
Hilton posted a news video clip on Instagram and said it included footage of her destroyed home in Malibu. “This home was where we built so many precious memories. It’s where Phoenix took his first steps and where we dreamed of building a lifetime of memories with London,” she said, referencing her young children."
Elwes, the star of “The Princess Bride” and numerous other films, wrote on Instagram Wednesday that his family was safe but their home had burned in the coastal Palisades fire. “Sadly we did lose our home but we are grateful to have survived this truly devastating fire,” Elwes wrote.
The blazes have thrown Hollywood's carefully orchestrated awards season into disarray.
Awards ceremonies planned for this weekend have been postponed due to the fires. The AFI Awards, which were set to honor “Wicked,” “Anora” and other awards season contenders, had been scheduled for Friday.
The AARP Movies for Grownups Awards, which honor movies and television shows that resonate with older audiences, were set for Friday but have been postponed.
The Critics Choice Awards, originally scheduled for Sunday, have been postponed until Feb. 26.
Each of the shows feature projects that are looking for any advantage they can get in the Oscar race and were scheduled during the Academy Awards voting window.
The Oscar nominations are also being delayed two days to Jan. 19 and the film academy has extended the voting window to accommodate members affected by the fires.