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This year’s winner of the Nobel Prize in literature is only
one step away from receiving the much-deserved medal. The Swedish
Academy announced on Friday that
the name of the lucky writer will be made public on October 9, thus filling in
the last gap of 2008’s Nobel announcements program.
However, the academy failed to reveal any details about the
big winner of the prize, which is often considered to be the most important
award for writers.
Since 1999, Horace Engdahl has had the annual task of
announcing the recipient of the Nobel Prize in literature to the press. Thus,
the academy’s permanent secretary is due to present this year’s winner as well.
Nevertheless, Horace Engdahl sparked controversy earlier
this week as he told The Associated Press in an interview that the Europeans
dominated the literary world, subtly referring to American writers as
unpromising. “Of course there is powerful literature in all big cultures, but
you can’t get away from the fact that Europe still is
the center of the literary world ... not the United
States,” Engdahl told the AP on Tuesday.
In addition to this, the Swedish
Academy’s permanent secretary said
that the United States
is “too isolated” and “too insular” to represent a major force in literature.
His comments did not remain unanswered, however. For
instance, David Remnick of The New Yorker explained that the Swedish
Academy often overlooked
significant literature figures such as Proust, Joyce or Nabokov and that being
a great writer does not necessarily imply winning a Nobel Prize. Mr. Remnick
even cited contemporary authors like Roth, Updike and DeLillo as worthy of the
award.
The last American author to win the Nobel Prize in
literature was Toni Morrison in 1993.
The announcements are due to start on Monday with the award
in medicine, while the prizes will be handed out on December 10.
Image Credit: Vogler
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