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Iraq War Critic Wins Nobel Prize For Literature

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  • Iraq War Critic Wins Nobel Prize For Literature

    IRAQ WAR CRITIC WINS NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE
    By Ramsay Short

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Oct 14 2005

    BEIRUT: In the end the winner surprised everyone. Harold Pinter,
    the British playwright and fierce critic of the Iraq War, of Israel
    and that nation's treatment of Palestinians, took the 2005 Nobel Prize
    for Literature ahead of the bookmaker's favorites - Syrian poet Adonis
    and Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk.

    The Swedish Academy, which has awarded the prize since 1901, said
    Pinter, whose plays include "The Birthday Party," "The Dumb Waiter,"
    and his breakthrough "The Caretaker," was a writer who "uncovers the
    precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression's
    closed rooms" and is the foremost representative of drama in post-war
    Britain.

    Pinter, who has just turned 75, was born in the London borough
    of Hackney, the son of a Jewish dressmaker. During his youth he
    experienced anti-Semitism, which had been important in his decision
    to become a dramatist.

    Very much a liberal, in recent years he has been a virulent detractor
    of the British and American-led war on Iraq, and a consistent literary
    thorn in the side of Premier Tony Blair.

    The Nobel jury added Pinter - who even has his own adjective,
    Pinteresque, which is used to describe a particular atmosphere and
    environment in drama - had "restored theater to its basic elements:
    an enclosed space and unpredictable dialogue where people are at the
    mercy of each other and pretense crumbles."

    Adonis (real name Ali Ahmad Said), who fled Lebanon in the 1980s and
    now lives in Paris, had been the best guess to win the prize among
    Nobel watchers with the online betting Web site Ladbrokes giving him
    odds of 7-4.

    The fiction writer, Pamuk, whose last novel "Snow" received huge
    acclaim worldwide, followed close behind Adonis. Pamuk is facing
    prison in Turkey after he was charged with insulting Turkish identity
    for supporting Armenian claims that they were the victims of genocide
    under the Ottomans in 1915.

    Earlier this year Pinter famously called the war in Iraq, "a bandit
    act, an act of blatant state terrorism, demonstrating absolute
    contempt for the concept of international law [and] an arbitrary
    military action inspired by a series of lies upon lies and gross
    manipulation of the media and therefore of the public." He also said
    it was "an act intended to consolidate American military and economic
    control of the Middle East masquerading - as a last resort (all other
    justifications having failed to justify themselves) - as liberation."

    The Academy, founded in 1786 by King Gustav III to advance the
    Swedish language and its literature, is made up of several writers
    as well as linguists, literary scholars, historians and a lawyer,
    all of whom serve for life.

    Pinter and other Nobel prize winners will receive their awards,
    on December 10 at a ceremony in Stockholm. The playwright will take
    home $1.3 million.
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