Next summer, we’ll gather to celebrate the twentieth edition of Latitude Festival. Twenty years of festival line ups that celebrate the breadth of the arts.
Thousands of artists have moved us with theatre, with literature, with songs, with laughter, with dance. Together, we’ve experienced moments that simply couldn’t have happened anywhere else.
To celebrate, we’d like to invite you to join us in a conversation about the most important artists, the most important books, the most important theatre shows and more.
Part mission statement, part cultural archive, part collective memory. A cultural and social survey and conversation with you, our audience, to establish in your eyes and our eyes what the most important aspects of modern life and culture have been.
It is young voices that have always created change. Older voices have legislated them usually, but it’s the young voices that have created the pressure for the legislators to respond.
With honesty, courage, and moral clarity, Greta has challenged leaders, and redefined what it means to speak truth to power. Her impact represents the conscience of a generation and a reminder that meaningful change can begin with a single young voice refusing to stay silent.
Malala Yousafzai transformed her personal struggle for girls’ education in Pakistan into a global movement for equality, empowerment, and the right to learn. Her words have echoed in classrooms, parliaments, and on the world stage - a reminder of the strength that comes from conviction and compassion.
Who do you feel is the Most Important Young Voice of the last 20 years?
We will determine the final decision on December 1st this year taking your responses into account and will work our socks off to ensure that the winner(s) will attend the festival next year.
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