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From Pasternak To Pamuk, The Nobel Award For Literature Has Had Poli

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  • From Pasternak To Pamuk, The Nobel Award For Literature Has Had Poli

    FROM PASTERNAK TO PAMUK, THE NOBEL AWARD FOR LITERATURE HAS HAD POLITICAL SUB-PLOTS
    Eunice de Souza

    Mumbai Mirror, India
    Oct 25 2006

    >From time to time we hear that the Nobel Prize for Literature has been
    awarded for "political reasons." Governments which say this usually
    mean that there was an ulterior motive for giving the prize to one
    of their critics. Ordinary people who say this normally mean that,
    other things being equal, a particular writer has been chosen at a
    particular time to draw attention to a problem or a crisis in his
    country of origin.

    Pasternak, who won the prize in 1957, gained a great reputation in the
    West, but was reviled in the Soviet Union. The diplomat K P S Menon,
    who was posted in Soviet Russia at the time, describes the event and
    the abuse which followed. Pasternak was described as "a pig which
    fouls its own sty", and an official said it "would be an insult to
    a pig to be compared with Pasternak." The Americans thought of the
    prize as a "slap in the face for Communism, for Dr Zhivago, which
    is a saga of the revolutionary period , is by no means an euology of
    the revolution." Eventually, Pasternak declined the prize, because,
    as he said, "of the meaning attached to it in the community in which
    I live." In a moving letter Pasternak wrote to Khrushchev, he said,
    "For me emigration is impossible. I am bound to Russia by my birth,
    life and work. I cannot think of existence separately and outside
    her. Whatever may be my mistakes and delusions, I could not have
    imagined that I would find myself in the centre of such a political
    campaign as is being carried on around my name in the West." In the
    end, he was not forced into exile, but allowed to continue in peace.

    But when he died, it was some days before newspapers mentioned the
    fact. Members of the Writers' Union did not attend the funeral,
    but hundreds of students recited his verses at his grave.

    Where Harold Pinter was concerned, it was generally thought that it
    was because of his campaign against the war in Iraq and all the lies
    that had justified it. In fact, Pinter has campaigned against a great
    many things, the Nato bombing of Kosovo, the abuse of human rights in
    Turkey and many others. He visited Turkey with Arthur Miller in 1985,
    and the highlight of his trip is said to be the moment he was thrown
    out of the US embassy in Ankara. His biographer Michael Billington
    writes, "Pinter remains to his credit, a permanent public nuisance,
    a questioner of accepted truths, both in life and art. In fact, the
    two persistently inter-act." True, but the plays are full of silences,
    and the political speeches passionately articulate. Pinter's Nobel
    Prize speech, Art, Truth and Politics says that politicians quite
    naturally have no interest in the truth, but if we are to survive
    with dignity, "defining the real truth of our lives and societies is
    a crucial obligation."

    And now, Orhan Pamuk. Unsurprisingly, given his criticism of the
    Turkish government's refusal to call the massacre of the Armenians
    genocide, Armenian writers were extremely happy that he won the
    prize. A spokesman said it was "both a literature prize and about
    morality." In Turkey, however, he was thought to have "blatantly
    belittled Turkishness." The case against him was dropped only because
    of Turkey's hopes of joining the EU. Again, Pamuk has been known
    for years. Perhaps the Nobel committee chose this year because of
    the worsening Islam-West conflict. "No other writer addresses that
    relationship with such humanity and wit," a journalist said when the
    prize was announced, while another said it was "a rare if conspicuous
    convergence of political motivation with literary merit."
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