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The Nobel Prize for Literature was awarded to French writer
Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio, renowned by his long and successful career. The
French Nobel Prize winner is the author of 40 books, of which only 12 have been
translated into English, a series of novels and essays and a collection of
children’s books. Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio is considered a cosmopolitan
man, a true citizen of the world, blessed with the talent to depict his
knowledge and stories to others willing to learn. There is something altruistic
about a man who wishes to share his experience, and the better and wiser that
man is, the more altruistic his act of sharing is.
The fact that the prize was given to a French writer raised
spirits in America,
the decision being widely criticized. Horace Engdahl, the Swedish Academy’s
permanent secretary, responded that American writers are too insular and too
keen on American popular culture to have won the Nobel Prize. He also said that
this is not a competition between nations, but one between individuals. And so
it is. Or is it? Nicolas Sarkozy commented upon the matter claiming that this
is a great accomplishment for France
and, generally, for the French speaking world.
The last American writer to have won The Nobel Prize for
Literature was Toni Morrison in 1993. Even so national pride has always been at
stake regarding the Nobel Prizes. This year, the award for literature was given
to a man worthy of the prize, being the right and most logical selection of a
man that can represent the world though his work.
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