Mariusz Szczygieł
Mariusz Adam Szczygieł (Polish pronunciation: [ˈmarjuʂ ˈadam ˈʂt͡ʂɨɡjɛw]; born 5 September 1966 Złotoryja, Poland) is a Polish journalist and writer. He is the winner of the 2009 European Book Prize for Gottland and the 2019 Nike Award, the most important prize in Polish literature, for his reportage Nie ma.
Mariusz Szczygieł | |
---|---|
Born | Mariusz Szczygieł 5 September 1966 Złotoryja, Poland |
Occupation | Journalist, writer |
Language | Polish |
Nationality | Polish |
Alma mater | University of Warsaw |
Notable works | Gottland (2006) Nie ma (2018) |
Notable awards | Beata Pawlak Award (2007) European Book Prize (2009) Nike Award (2019) |
Life and career
He graduated in journalism and political science from the University of Warsaw in 2000. At 16, he began writing for the weekly-paper Na przełaj. In spite of communist-era censorship, he published a shocking collection of reportages titled The Shrift, which were about gay and lesbian youth in Poland.[1]
As a TV presenter of the popular program Na każdy temat (On Every Topic), Szczygieł was the first person in Poland to publicly speak the word "orgasm" on screen.
In 2002, he stopped working for TV Polsat and concentrated on writing for Gazeta Wyborcza. Presently, he is the first assistant manager of the weekly supplement Duży Format and assistant manager of its reportage-section.[2]
His work is cited in every anthology of contemporary Polish journalism. Most notable are his studies of the Czechoslovak, and especially Czech, culture and life-style. His popular book Gottland (2006), is, according to Adam Michnik, the first cubistic reportage of the world. It received the European Book Prize as well as Polish Booksellers Prize as an extremely popular book on everything Czech.[3]
His works have been translated into numerous languages including Czech, English, Estonian, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, and Ukrainian.[4]
Personal life
Szczygieł is an outspoken atheist.[5] In 2022 in the book Fakty muszą zatańczyć (The Facts Must Dance) he came out as a gay man.[6]
Awards and honours
- 1993: Polish Journalists' Association Award
- 1996: Kryształowe Zwierciadło Award
- 1997: Polsat TV Award (Best Talk Show category)
- 2000: Award of the Polish Primate
- 2004: Melchior Award
- 2007: Beata Pawlak Award[7]
- 2007: Nike Audience Award for Gottland
- 2007: Angelus Award finalist
- 2009: Prix Amphi in Lille
- 2009: European Book Prize for Gottland
- 2013: Journalist of the Year Award[8]
- 2014: Knight's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta[9]
- 2014: Bene Merito Honorary Badge[10]
- 2019: Nike Award for Nie ma[11]
Works
- Niedziela, która zdarzyła się w środę (Sunday that Happened on Wednesday), Warsaw 1996;
- Na każdy temat – talk show do czytania, with Witold Orzechowski, (On Every Topic), Warsaw 1997;
- Gottland, Berlin 2008;
- 20 lat nowej Polski w reportażach według Mariusza Szczygła (20 Years of New Poland in Reportage Writing), Wołowiec 2009;
- Kaprysik. Damskie historie, Warszawa 2010;
- Zrób sobie raj (Make Your Own Paradise), Wołowiec 2010;
- Láska nebeská, Warsaw 2012;
- Projekt: prawda (Project: Truth), Warsaw 2016;
- Nie ma, Warsaw 2018
- Osobisty przewodnik po Pradze (A Personal Guidebook Through Praga), Warsaw 2020.
In anthologies
- Kraj Raj (The Land Paradise), Warsaw 1993;
- Wysokie Obcasy. Twarze (High Heels. Faces), Warsaw 2003;
- Ouvertyr till livet, Stockholm 2003;
- La vie est un reportage. Anthologie du reportage litteraire polonais, Montricher 2005;
- Von Minsk nach Manhattan. Polnische reportagen, Vienna 2006.
See also
References
- "Mariusz Szczygieł". culture.pl. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł". culture.pl. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł". culture.pl. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł". culture.pl. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Szczygieł odpowiada na list. Wojującym ateuszem nie jestem. Jestem ateistą głęboko wierzącym" (in Polish). 15 October 2019. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł dokonał coming outu. "Dał sobie prawo, by to powiedzieć"" [Mariusz Szczygieł came out. "He gave himself right to say it"]. dziendobry.tvn.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-05-28.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł as the Journalist of the Year according to Press". Archived from the original on August 5, 2020. Retrieved 2022-12-14.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł Dziennikarzem Roku 2013". tvp.info (in Polish). Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Prezydent: "Gazeta" była zaangażowana w walkę o wolność". prezydent.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Mariusz Szczygieł: Nigdy nie zwierzałem się, że jestem człowiekiem z męczącą przypadłością" (in Polish). Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- "Writer Mariusz Szczygieł scoops top Polish literary award". polskieradio.pl. Retrieved 14 December 2022.