
Polari Prize organisers cancel book prize over trans controversy
What is the Polari Prize?
Founded in 2011, The Polari Prize is open to writers born or based in the UK or Ireland who write about the experiences of LGBTQ+ life. It started out as a single annual prize for best first book, which recognised debut works. In 2019, a second award was introduced for overall book of the year.
What did John Boyne write in his article?
In an article in the Irish Independent on 27 July, Boyne, who is gay, offered his support to Harry Potter author Rowling, who has in recent years been outspoken with her views about the tension between trans rights and the protection of women's spaces.Boyne described himself as a "fellow Terf" - which stands for trans-exclusionary radical feminist - and said Rowling had been "pilloried" for her stance.He suggested that women who had publicly disagreed with Rowling in recent years were "astonishingly complicit in their own erasure", and compared them to a commander's wife in the patriarchal regime in The Handmaid's Tale who is "ready to pin a handmaiden down as her husband rapes her"."Rowling's critics claim she is transphobic, the greatest sin of our time, and use the usual tedious hyperbole to demonise her," Boyne wrote.He said that her supporters, however, were encouraged by her "advocacy" on issues such as women being "entitled to safe spaces".
Which authors objected to Boyne's inclusion?
The longlist for the Polari Prize was announced on 1 August, and over the subsequent days several other nominated authors withdrew in protest at Boyne's inclusion. Sacha Coward said he could not "continue in good faith" to participate in the event, which he said was supposed to "celebrate inclusion, not exclusion and division". Fellow nominee Mae Diansangu said Boyne had "disgusting views".Another longlisted writer, Jason Okundaye, wrote an article in the Guardian describing Boyne's views as "abhorrent", withdrawing his nomination because he felt "misled about the principles underpinning the organisation".More than 10 longlisted authors pulled out, out of a total of 24. The figures in the publishing industry who signed the open letter said they were "profoundly disappointed" by Boyne's inclusion, saying his comments were "inappropriate and hurtful" and "incompatible with the LGBTQ+ community's most basic standards of inclusion".One of the prize's own judges, Nicola Dinan, who won the First Book award last year, also resigned from this year's panel in protest.However, the only trans author on the longlist, Dr Avi Ben-Zeev, said he would remain on the list, telling PinkNews he supported others who had withdrawn, but adding there was "nothing more trans-exclusionary... than to see people like me disappear... if I walk away, I'm erasing my trans story".
How have John Boyne and the Polari Prize responded?
Following Dinan's resignation, the Polari Prize said it "completely understands and respect her decision".However, Boyne at this point remained on the longlist, with organisers noting in a statement: "Even within our community, we can at times hold radically different positions on substantive issues. This is one of those times."It said the prize was "committed to inclusion", adding that "while we do not eliminate books based on the wider views of a writer, we regret the upset and hurt this has caused".Boyne then released a statement standing by his views and thanking the Polari Prize for "standing strong in the face of extraordinary intimidation".He said he had received "an extraordinary amount of bullying and intimidation", which had pushed him "close to the edge".He also encouraged the authors who had withdrawn to return to the longlist, suggesting that, if they did so, he would ask the prize's judges not to choose his own book to progress to the shortlist.But on Monday, Polari announced this year's prize would not be going ahead."What was supposed to be a celebration of exceptional LGBTQ+ literature has been overshadowed by hurt and anger, which has been painful and distressing for all concerned," organisers said in a statement, apologising to "everyone who had been affected".Polari said it had consulted authors, judges, stakeholders and funders, and had "decided to pause the prize this year while we increase the representation of trans and gender non-conforming judges on the panels" and undertake a governance and management review.It concluded by saying it would "endeavour to find a way forwards in good faith".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Mail
17 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Carl Williams' daughter doesn't look like this anymore! Infamous gangster's only child Dhakota is unrecognisable as she enjoys European holiday
The daughter of notorious underworld figure Carl Williams is currently enjoying a fun summer holiday in Europe. Dhakota Williams shared a series of posts to Instagram as she soaked up the sun in Italy before relaxing in Greece. The 24-year-old looked worlds away from her younger years in the spotlight as she showed off her natural beauty and fuller lips while posing for a several selfies. In one image, Dhakota put on a busty display as she stretched her body on a towel while relaxing in Taormina, Sicily. The Gangland heiress also posted a second video to her Instagram on Tuesday after arriving in Mykonos. She flaunted her figure in a white bikini as she soaked up the sun on a poolside bed. Dhakota was nine years old when her drug kingpin father Carl was bludgeoned to death at Barwon Prison by fellow inmate Matthew Charles Johnson in 2010. Once dubbed the 'Baby Faced Killer,' Williams was jailed for 35 years in 2007 for ordering the murders of three rivals, and more time for conspiring to kill a fourth. In 2022, Dhakota and her mother Roberta joined OnlyFans after revealing their reputations made it difficult to find a 'normal' job. Dhakota also said at the time that her late father would be proud of her signing up to the adult subscription site. 'Is your dad rolling in his grave that you do OnlyFans?' one of her followers asked during an Instagram Q&A. The socialite responded that her infamous dad 'would be so proud of me for being successful and supportive of any path I choose to take'. 'He was very big on doing whatever makes you happy and if you've got it, flaunt it,' she added. Dhakota was nine years old when her drug kingpin father Carl was bludgeoned to death at Barwon Prison by fellow inmate Matthew Charles Johnson in 2010 In 2022, Dhakota and her mother Roberta joined OnlyFans after revealing their reputations made it difficult to find a 'normal' job Dhakota and Roberta previously spoke of why they signed up for OnlyFans, explaining their profile 'makes it hard to get normal jobs'. The pair told The Daily Telegraph they had 'no choice' due to their infamous history. The family was thrust into the attention of mainstream Australia after the lead character in the original season of the crime series Underbelly, played by Gyton Grantley, was based on Carl Williams. The series followed the bloody gangland wars which rocked Melbourne in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Tommy: The Good, The Bad, The Fury... and asks why we need five hours of this spectacularly dense reality star
Tommy: The Good. The Bad. The Fury (BBC3) 'Who the hell,' wondered reality star Tommy Fury in the barber's chair, 'is interested in me getting my hair cut?' This, the sole (and probably accidental) instance of self-awareness from the 26-year-old part-time boxer during Tommy: The Good. The Bad. The Fury, sums up everything that is depressing and baffling about television in the social media age. This 10-part documentary follows Tommy around his soulless Cheshire mansion, goes motoring with him in his flash cars, and hangs around at the gym while he trains for his next fight. Why the Beeb thinks anyone, even on its backwater 'yoof' channel BBC3, needs five hours of Tommy is beyond comprehension. Ella Al-Shamahi, in her BBC2 archaeology series Human last month, managed to cover the entire prehistory of our species in that time. The younger brother of former heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury, he is spectacularly dense. Joey Essex, the boy who elevated stupidity into a performance art, is an intellectual compared to Tommy. He has published his autobiography, of course. Whether he's read it is less certain. Boasting about its sales, he declared the 'auto-book' was doing especially well. He means 'audio book'. Signing photos of himself in younger days for fans, he asked his manager Jake, 'Why don't I look like that any more?' Jake fumbled for a diplomatic answer, and tried a metaphor that Tommy might understand: 'You've had a lot of fights since then — puts miles on the clock. Does your car still look the same as when you bought it?' Tommy pouted: 'Does when it's clean.' The footage has been edited to present him in the best possible light, but his vanity cannot be concealed from the camera. He's evidently touchy about any criticism. When his on-off girlfriend Molly-Mae Hague suggested over breakfast that his pullover looked 'a bit girly', he bristled: 'Why are you throwing insults at 8.30 in the morning about my jumper?' The couple, who met on ITV's Love Island and have a toddler daughter named Bambi, separated last year, though they now appear to have reconciled. Tommy is seen holding his daughter Bambi in a scene from his documentary Tommy denies rumours that he was unfaithful, but admits his heavy drinking drove Molly-Mae away. 'I hold my hands up,' he said, 'drink got a hold of me — 20 shots a night, 20 beers. I used to drink to get black-out drunk.' He blames a hand injury that kept him out of the boxing ring. He drank, he says, to simulate the buzz of fighting. As he returns to training, the implication is that he's kicked the booze — but he did not talk about how he did that, or whether he intends to stay on the wagon. More openness about his drink problem could have given this documentary some value. Instead, we're left watching a vacuous young man getting a haircut. And as even he knows, nobody's interested in that.

Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BBC branded 'childish' as over half of Gregg Wallace's 'recipes are removed from broadcaster's food website' amid star's MasterChef axe
The BBC have been branded 'childish' by frustrated food lovers after over half of Gregg Wallace 's were reportedly removed from the broadcaster's food website. The disgraced MasterChef host, 60, was recently dismissed from the cooking show after more than 40 complaints against him were upheld following a BBC investigation. And in the wake of his axing, it appears that the BBC have taken further action as a number of his recipes appear to have vanished from BBC Food website, leaving some users angry. The Sun reports that six of 11 dishes by the former greengrocer have disappeared since Gregg was sacked last month. Fallen dishes are said to include a sausage and lentil soup, a raspberry marinated rack of lamb and mince pie ice-cream. One fan took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to complain about the removal, sparking a flurry of comments from other disgruntled people. The disgraced MasterChef host, 60, was recently dismissed from the cooking show after more than 40 complaints against him were upheld following a BBC investigation They penned: 'BBC Good Food have removed a recipe I liked from their website because it was from Gregg Wallace. Can't we separate the art from the artist.' To which others replied: ' Yeah, it's frustrating when good content disappears over drama... Shame though, recipes shouldn't need a moral background check.' 'Seems childish. I'm never going to stop listening to Michael Jackson - I don't care about his problematic private life.' 'Can't believe they're actually scrubbing recipes over this - feels like such an overreaction. If the market's already spoken on his content, let it be. Kinda reminds me of @EthanTaylorG7's point about letting audiences decide.' The publication reports that other website users fumed: 'another stupid cancellation by the BBC'. 'Whatever you think of the guy, it was hardly his recipes that were the problem.' Daily Mail have contacted the BBC for comment. It comes days after in its latest episode, with viewers declaring: 'Is this for real?' Just a handful of Gregg's recipes remain on the BBC Food website One fan took to X, formerly known as Twitter , to complain about the removal, sparking a flurry of comments from other disgruntled people Gregg and co-host John Torode were sacked after almost 20 years on the show by the BBC last month after an investigation upheld allegations about their poor behaviour. Wallace had 40 complaints upheld, including one where he was accused of wandering around set naked with a sock on his penis. Torode was found to have used a racist term in 2018. Their final series of MasterChef was filmed before they were both fired. The show's bosses have insisted on keeping them in the final edit - but only if they were on screen less and their banter and jokes were cut down to a minimum. Several contestants asked to be edited out themselves to avoid being on screen with them. Daily Mail revealed that viewers have pointed out 'disgraceful' edits in the new series on BBC One and iPlayer, with many cuts appearing awkward and repetitive, including those of Mr Wallace. In one scene shown last week, stills of Gregg pulling the same face three times in around a minute made it to air - with many suggesting that the BBC and production company Banijay used the same footage of the disgraced host repeatedly through the show. Some of his fans have even claimed the edits, where Gregg gives a semi-gurning smile, were deliberately to embarrass him and 'make him look demented'. TikTok user Gingernat Design shared a particularly unusual example, writing: 'Clever editing fromMasterchef TikTok user Gingernat Design shared a particularly unusual example, writing: 'Clever editing from MasterChef. 'Whether this is to do with the allegations or not I don't know, but it's jokes how they just froze Gregg Wallace for an entire conversation.' The now-viral clip sees a contestant discuss her performance with Torode and Wallace. The same shot of Wallace appears to be used three times in succession - and he is seen with a broad grin fixed on his face. The uncanny scene has horrified fans, who rushed to social media to express their disapproval.



