The 'Society of Authors' (UK) is a
trade union for professional writers that was founded in
1884 to protect the rights of
writers and fight to retain those rights (with particular attention to
copyright protection and, later, the establishment of
Public Lending Right).
It has counted amongst its members and presidents numerous notable writers and
poets including
Tennyson (first president),
George Bernard Shaw,
John Galsworthy,
Thomas Hardy,
H. G. Wells,
J. M. Barrie and
E. M. Forster.
[1]
Bernard Shaw was an early member who took a prominent part in action and discussions, founding the
League of Dramatists in
1931 as part of the Society. The
Authors' Lending and Copyright Society was also formed after much action by the Society.
In
1958 The Translators Association (TA) was established as a specialist group within the Society of Authors.
Prizes for fiction and non fiction include:
[2]
★ The
Betty Trask Award;
★ The
Cholmondeley Awards;
★ The
Encore Award;
★ The
Eric Gregory Awards;
★ The
McKitterick Prize;
★ The
Olive Cook Award;
★ The
Richard Imison Award;
★ The
Sagittarius Prize;
★ The
Somerset Maugham Awards
★ The
Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award;
★ The
Tom-Gallon Award;
★ The
Travelling Scholarships.
References
External link
★
Society of Authors