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Nobel Judge Quits In Disgust - A Year After 'Porn' Winner

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  • Nobel Judge Quits In Disgust - A Year After 'Porn' Winner

    NOBEL JUDGE QUITS IN DISGUST - A YEAR AFTER 'PORN' WINNER
    >>From Charles Bremner in Paris

    The Times, UK
    Oct 12 2005

    MYSTERY surrounded the resignation of a member of the Nobel Academy
    yesterday, 48 hours before the prize for literature is due to
    be awarded, amid speculation of a split over whether to honour a
    dissident Turkish writer.

    Knut Ahnlund said that he had resigned in protest over the award
    last year to the little-known Elfriede Jelinek, of Austria, whose
    work he described as "violent pornography". Mr Ahnlund, 82, did not
    explain why he had waited almost a year before lodging his protest,
    increasing talk of a rift among members over the award for this year.

    The announcement of this year's literary honours had been delayed for
    a week after the academy was reported to have disagreed on whether
    to anoint Orhan Pamuk, 53, who has upset authorities in his country
    by campaigning for official recognition that Turkey had carried
    out genocide against the Armenians after the First World War. He
    has been charged with "public denigration of the Turkish identity",
    and a prize for him would be certain to anger Turkey.

    Mr Ahnlund wrote in the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper that Jelinek's
    work was "a mass of text that appears shovelled together without
    trace of artistic structure". The 2004 prize, he said, "has not
    only caused irreparable damage to all progressive forces, it has
    (also) confused the general view of literature as art. After this
    I cannot even formally remain in the Swedish Academy." Jelinek is
    known to the right-wing Austrian media and political parties as
    "the red pornographer". The conservative US Weekly Standard said
    that the academy had given the prize to "an unknown, undistinguished,
    leftist fanatic". In making last year's decision, the academy cited
    the "musical flow of voices and counter-voices" in her writing,
    which draws heavily on sexuality and violence.

    The Nobel Academy will announce this year's winner tomorrow. In
    addition to Pamuk, other writers tipped for the £760,000 prize
    include Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates, of the United States,
    Margaret Atwood, of Canada, and Nuruddin Farah, of Somalia. Some
    Swedish insiders believe that the academy may award the prize to a
    non-fiction writer. Two British precedents for this exist: Winston
    Churchill, in 1953, and Bertrand Russell, in 1950.

    Yesterday Horace Engdahl, permanent secretary of the academy, played
    down Mr Ahnlund's resignation, saying that he had not taken part in
    the academy's work since 1996.

    The debate over the 2004 award has been in keeping with the disputes
    that have often erupted around the sometimes quirky and politically
    correct choices of the academy, whose 18 members are appointed for
    life. Mr Ahnlund's withdrawal reduces the active membership to 15.

    Two other members, Kerstin Ekman and Lars Gyllensten, left in 1989
    in protest at the academy's failure to express support for Salman
    Rushdie after the fatwa against him by the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
    the late Iranian leader.

    The academy, which has been awarding the prize since 1901, has often
    honoured mainstream authors such as Gabriel García Marquez and Rudyard
    Kipling. It has also courted disfavour with governments by elevating
    anti-establishment writers, and perplexity by anointing figures
    little-known in their own countries. Boris Pasternak, the author of
    Dr Zhivago, was forced by the Kremlin in 1959 to reject the prize,
    which it deemed to have been motivated by anti-Soviet intentions.

    Mr Engdahl said that criticism of the academy came largely from the
    Englishspeaking publishing world. "A French or a German reader, or
    writer or critic, is more likely to have access to the great dialogue
    of literatures that Goethe called Weltliteratur," he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_KaGznGHUdPDheiAp8T1L/A)--
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