Heinrich Mann Prize 2026 awarded to Mithu M. Sanyal
3/27/2026, 7 PM

Award Ceremony

Essayist Mithu M. Sanyal is this year's recipient of the Heinrich Mann Prize. According to the jury, the Akademie der Künste is honouring “one of the most prolific and original essayists of her generation” with this award.

With Mithu M. Sanyal, Anh-Linh Ngo, Eva Menasse, Melika Foroutan and Nathalie Mälzer

  • Location:Pariser Platz, Plenary Hall
  • ElevatorWheelchair accessible
  • Date:3/27/2026
  • Time:7 PM
  • Languages: German
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  • Free admission

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    Welcome, award presentation and reading of the jury's statement:
    Anh-Linh Ngo, vice-president of the Akademie der Künste

    Laudatory speech:
    Eva Menasse, author, journalist and member of the Literature Section

    Reading (excerpt from anti-militarist essays by Heinrich Mann):
    Melika Foroutan, actress

Mithu M. Sanyal
Mithu M. Sanyal
© Carolin Windel

The jury, consisting of Omri Boehm, Eva Menasse and last year's Heinrich Mann Prize winner Mely Kiyak, justified their choice as follows:

“Mithu M. Sanyal is one of the most prolific and original essayists of her generation. She combines the diligence of a scholar with the talent of a political commentator. Added to this is the lively and original language of the writer.

Sanyal's topics are enormously diverse. She writes knowledgeably about literature: Her book on Emily Brontë is worth mentioning, as is her passionate attempt to rescue the literature of Enid Blyton. Here, in the discussions about whether Enid Blyton's books are still acceptable for children and young people today because of their outdated view of society, Mithu M. Sanyal demonstrates her holistic approach to analysis and commentary in a particularly impressive way: She comes from a background in feminist research and her portfolio includes work on racism, the history of colonialism and general minority issues, as well as various foreign policy conflicts, on which she has a wealth of historical and current knowledge; particular examples include India and Pakistan, the British Empire, and Israel and Palestine.

Her essays are characterised by a sympathetic, never apodictic tone; she wants to convince her readers, not overwhelm them; even if one remains of a different opinion on some issues despite her many good arguments, it is easy to accept her perspectives as intellectually enriching.

This is because she allows her readers to participate transparently in her decision-making process: as with any good essayist, one can watch her think; she weighs the pros and cons of her theses against each other in a comprehensible manner. She does not consider it her duty to decide in every case; she has the openness and intellectual freedom to leave some questions unanswered for the time being. In view of increasing media irreconcilability and social division, Mithu M. Sanyal's gentle but emphatic voice on numerous controversial issues of our time is unmistakable and an example of how discussion should be conducted: with the best possible, carefully weighed arguments and without any personal anger.”

The Akademie der Künste's essay prize, worth 10,000 euros, is awarded annually on 27 March, the birthday of the writer Heinrich Mann. The winners in recent years were Mely Kiyak (2025), Lena Gorelik (2024) and György Dalos (2023).

Mithu M. Sanyal

Mithu M. Sanyal was born in Düsseldorf in 1971 to a Polish mother and Indian father. She is a cultural scientist, writer and critic for WDR, DLF, SWR, Der Spiegel, The Guardian, BBC, SZ, FR, FAZ, DIE ZEIT, taz, etc. She is a member of the jury for the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize, among others. Non-fiction books: Vulva (2009, Wagenbach), Vergewaltigung. Aspekte eines Verbrechens (Rape: Aspects of a Crime, 2016, Nautilus) and Mithu Sanyal über Emily Brontë (Mithu Sanyal on Emily Brontë, 2022, KiWi). Her debut novel Identitti (2021, Hanser) was awarded the Ernst Bloch Prize and the Ruhr Literature Prize and was shortlisted for the German Book Prize. Her new novel Antichristie (2024, Hanser) was also nominated for the German Book Prize and received the Erich Pawlu Literature Prize.