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  • Stockholm: Academy Man Quits Over Nobel Winner

    ACADEMY MAN QUITS OVER NOBEL WINNER

    The Local, Sweden
    Oct 11 2005

    A member of the organisation that awards the Nobel Prize in Literature
    has resigned - in protest against last year's winner.

    Swedish Academy member Knut Ahnlund, an author and literature
    professor, says that the award to Elfriede Jelinek has stripped the
    prize of value.

    Two members of the eighteen member academy have refused to take part in
    the organisation's work since 1989. Kerstin Ekman and Lars Gyllensten
    suspended their involvement after fellow academy members refused to
    issue a statement condemning the fatwa against Salman Rushdie.

    Ahnlund writes in Svenska Dagbladet that after a detailed examination
    of Jelinek's work, he considered that her writing was one dimensional -
    a mass of text shovelled together without traces of artistic structure,
    empty of ideas but full of cliches and violent pornography.

    He asks how Jelinek could have been awarded the prize, and which
    faction was behind the decision. He says he believes that certain
    academy members allowed themselves to be impressed by her attacks
    on the Austrian middle-class, but also suspects that most members of
    the committee have not read Jelinek's entire canon of 20-30 books.

    "I speak from experience when I say that you can't do this over a
    week or a month," writes Ahnlund.

    "It is sheer slave-like work."

    Ahnlund argues that last year's literature prize has damaged
    progressive forces and has confused the public's view of literature.

    Ahnlund has been a member of the Swedish Academy since 1983.

    The winner of the Literature Prize will be announced on Thursday -
    a week after the recipients of the medicine, physics, chemistry and
    peace prizes were named.

    The delay in awarding the prize has caused rumours of a split over
    Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, who is facing trial in his homeland
    for saying in a newspaper interview that Turkey was responsible of
    genocide against Armenians and Kurds. The trial comes at a sensitive
    time for Turkey, as it starts negotiations to join the European Union.

    Knut Ahnlund argues that last year's controversial choice could force
    the Academy to choose a winner who will restore the prize's standing.

    http://www.thelocal.se/article.php?ID=2261&date=20051011
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