Warwick Law School News
Warwick Law School News
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Andrew Williams wins the Orwell Book prize for political writing
Williams's A Very British Killing was named winner of the £3,000 book award ahead of Colvin, the former Bishop of Edinburgh Richard Holloway, Pankaj Mishra, Raja Shehadeh, Carmen Bugan and Clive Stafford Smith. Organisers called it a "chilling, gripping book" which "unearths damning evidence of what happened" to Mousa, the receptionist who on 15 September 2003 was arrested in Basra and taken to a military base, where guards and army visitors kicked, punched and humiliated him before he was beaten to death.
Judges Nikita Lalwani, Arifa Akbar and Bakewell said that Williams, a law professor at the University of Warwick and director of the Centre for Human Rights in Practice, "had the courage to take on a case that has already received so much press coverage and to turn it into something far bigger and more shocking than we understood it to be".
"He dissects and analyses with a clear-eyed determination to unpick the lies from the truths of this case, yet, for all its forensic detail, the book grips us emotionally, and has as keen a sense of storytelling as a horror story or courtroom drama. Ultimately, the greatest achievement of this incendiary, eloquent and angry book is that it humanises Mousa beyond the iconic and infamous figure he has become in his death. It was written in the spirit of Orwell's journalism," they said.
The Orwell book prize is intended to discover the work which comes closest to George Orwell's ambition "to make political writing into an art". Writing in the Guardian earlier this month, Williams wondered what Orwell himself "would have thought" about the Mousa case. "He wrote once that: 'It seems to me nonsense, in a period like our own, to think that one can avoid writing of such subjects.' His main target then was the evil of totalitarianism," wrote Williams. "But I would like to think his underlying aim was to challenge indifference to the suffering of others. That for me was the real devil which emerged amid the detail of my book."
Williams joins former winners of the prize including Francis Wheen, Fergal Keane and Tom Bingham.