jwl wrote:The Nobel Prize in Literature 2014
Patrick Modiano
Prize share: 1/1
The Nobel Prize in Literature 2014 was awarded to Patrick Modiano "for the art of memory with which he has evoked the most ungraspable human destinies and uncovered the life-world of the occupation".
I'm rather surprised Modiano won. In recent years, the Nobel committee has had a trend towards what is sometimes referred to as "paying off debts". It's rather hard to describe exactly what that means without going deep into the history and politics of the Nobel (note I am specifically referring to the Literature prize here, as this is the one I know the most about; things work differently for the other prizes), but for example, Alice Munro won last year less because of the merits of her work in and of itself and more for the fact that she wrote short stories, a literary form that has long been neglected compared to novels or poetry. Mo Yan, the year before that, won because an East Asian writer hadn't won the prize in over a decade. The year before that Transtromer won because a poet hadn't won the prize in over a decade. The year before that Llosa won because a Spanish language writer hadn't won the prize in two decades. Etc. etc.
I'm not saying that the writer's individual merits aren't taken into account. But there is an immense level of subjectivity involved in rating who the "best" writers in the world are. Historically, the prize has been awarded almost exclusively to Western (i.e. white) men, very often with a bias towards the English language as well (33 of the 111 winners have been English-language; 92 have been from Western Europe; 98 have been men). The past 5-10 years or so, the committee has adopted what could loosely be described as "affirmative action", wherein they try to combat bias by intentionally spreading prizes out to recognize a variety of cultures and forms. That is, if there are a dozen writers who are all considered great and prize-worthy, they are more likely to choose the one that belongs to a category that is considered to have been neglected.
All to to say that many people were expecting the prize to be awarded either to someone from the Muslim/Arab world (such as the poet Adunis or the novelist Assia Djebar), from Africa (particularly Ngugi Wa Thiongo), South America (Ferreira Gullar), or from somewhere in central/eastern Europe (Milan Kundera, Peter Nadas, or Laszlo Krasznahorkai), etc. Modiano was a bit of a left-field choice; a French-speaking writer (Le Clezio) won only a few years ago, and historically France has more laureates than any other country with 15.
Also, just what in the hell does the phrase "uncovered the life-world of the occupation" mean?