PEN America works tirelessly to defend free expression, support persecuted writers, and promote literary culture. Here are some of the latest ways PEN America is speaking out.

  • At our annual Literary Gala, we honored the indelible songwriting of icon Paul Simon with the PEN/Audible Literary Service Award for his bountiful and unparalleled songs and lyrics over a half century. Simon came to the stage, acoustic guitar in hand, and played and sang โ€œAmerican Tune,โ€ which he wrote in 1972 after the re-election of Richard Nixon and with the Kent State shootings of student protesters fresh in his mind. โ€œThe mood today is uncomfortably similar to that time,โ€ he said.

  • Other honorees included Dow Jones CEO and Publisher of The Wall Street Journal Almar Latour, who has been at the forefront of efforts for more than a year to secure the release of Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich from a Russian prison; mother-daughter Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, who successfully sued to vindicate their reputations after being vilified and falsely accused of election-related malfeasance in 2020, and Vietnamese writer Pham Doan Trang, imprisoned for her ideas about democracy and critiques of state repression.

  • Anh-Thu Vo wrote about this yearโ€™s Freedom to Write honoree, Pham Doan Trang, the imprisoned Vietnamese author and dissident, in Just Security, saying Tran โ€œepitomizes the relentless struggle of many writers and activists for free expression in Vietnam.โ€
  • A delegation of PEN America staff held two very effective days of meetings in Washington with six congressional offices, the State Department, and civil society partners to advocate on Trangโ€™s behalf.

  • PEN America signed a statement from the American Council of Learned Societies expressing concern about university leadersโ€™ response to recent campus protests. โ€œWhile administrators have every right and duty to secure the safety of their campus communities,โ€ the statement reads in part, โ€œsuppressing the expression of unpopular or uncomfortable ideas by students or faculty engaged in peaceful protest does not do justice to the values at the heart of the university.โ€
  • CEO Suzanne Nossel spoke to The New York Times for a piece about PEN America grappling with dissent about the war in Gaza. โ€œDefense of free speech, openness to wide-ranging views, faith in dialogue and a willingness to reckon with complexity โ€” those for me are hallmarks of how weโ€™ve gone about our work,โ€ she said.

See previous PEN America updates