Pages in topic: [1 2] > | Harold Pinter awarded the 2005 Nobel Literature Prize 投稿者: Aurora Humarán (X)
| Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ...
Nobel literature prize announcement delayed
Speculation mounts that academy members deeply divided on selection
[...]
By tradition, the 18-member group that makes up the 219-year-old institution, announces on a Tuesday that it will name the winner the following Thursday at 7 a.m. EDT.
[...]
Ahead of the academy's likely announcement next week, several authors, including Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates have been tout... See more Nobel literature prize announcement delayed
Speculation mounts that academy members deeply divided on selection
[...]
By tradition, the 18-member group that makes up the 219-year-old institution, announces on a Tuesday that it will name the winner the following Thursday at 7 a.m. EDT.
[...]
Ahead of the academy's likely announcement next week, several authors, including Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates have been touted by Nobel watchers, along with Margaret Atwood of Canada and Nuruddin Farah of Somalia.
Other perennials include Peruvian-born Mario Vargas Llosa. Europeans have won the literature prize in nine of the past 10 years, so the experts think the academy may look elsewhere this year.
Last year, the prize went to Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek. In 2003, it went to South African writer J.M. Coetzee.
Other names bandied about as winners, or at least strong favorites for the 2005 prize, include Syrian poet Ali Ahmad Said, known as Adonis; Korean poet Ko Un; and Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9592009/
[Edited at 2005-10-13 11:53] ▲ Collapse | | |
My guess it will be between Somalia, Syria or Korean nominees this year.
Aurora Humarán wrote:
Ahead of the academy's likely announcement next week, several authors, including Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates have been touted by Nobel watchers, along with Margaret Atwood of Canada and Nuruddin Farah of Somalia.
Last year, the prize went to Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek. In 2003, it went to South African writer J.M. Coetzee.
Other names bandied about as winners, or at least strong favorites for the 2005 prize, include Syrian poet Ali Ahmad Said, known as Adonis; Korean poet Ko Un; and Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9592009/
[Edited at 2005-10-09 16:10] | | | Vito Smolej ドイツ Local time: 09:33 2004に入会 英語 から スロヴェニア語 + ... SITE LOCALIZER Field day for Canadian / female would not hurt... | Oct 9, 2005 |
like Alice Munro, M.Atwood, JC Oates, Annie Proulx. Actually JC and AP are NEARLY Canadian, so I guess Governor General should step in;)
smo | | | Resistance... | Oct 9, 2005 |
Names like Nuruddin Farah, Mahmoud Darwish should crop up in one's mind...I thought Coetzee got it somewhat early, though he was undoubtedly a good choice.
Why should they ignore Ngugi Wa Thiongo? Ngugi is personally a symbol of resistance to oppression.
They got Wole Soyinka but they ignored someone who was his contemporary and friend, and perhaps greater, Chinua Achebe.
It is said that those who get the Nobel Prizes [atleast this is true of Literature] ar... See more Names like Nuruddin Farah, Mahmoud Darwish should crop up in one's mind...I thought Coetzee got it somewhat early, though he was undoubtedly a good choice.
Why should they ignore Ngugi Wa Thiongo? Ngugi is personally a symbol of resistance to oppression.
They got Wole Soyinka but they ignored someone who was his contemporary and friend, and perhaps greater, Chinua Achebe.
It is said that those who get the Nobel Prizes [atleast this is true of Literature] are great but those who do not get it are greater.
Notable non-awardees include Leo Tolstoy and Alejo Carpentier. And you might add Mario Vargas Llosa. [Poor man, just because he fought an election for President in Peru (and lost it) does not mean you never give him the Nobel Prize.]
Roomy Naqvy ▲ Collapse | |
|
|
Ever read Pearl S. Buck? | Oct 9, 2005 |
I haven't and don't plan to because there is so much to read and so little time. I've never seen Pearl Buck on any serious reading list.
Pearl Buck won it in 1938 and forever after had to endure being everyone's favourite example of the Nobel committee's stupidity.
http://www.robertfulford.com/Bellow.html
"Universal Interest" (the 1930s)
In line with the requ... See more I haven't and don't plan to because there is so much to read and so little time. I've never seen Pearl Buck on any serious reading list.
Pearl Buck won it in 1938 and forever after had to endure being everyone's favourite example of the Nobel committee's stupidity.
http://www.robertfulford.com/Bellow.html
"Universal Interest" (the 1930s)
In line with the requirement "the greatest benefit on mankind", the Academy of the 1930s tried a new approach, equating this "mankind" with the immediate readership of the works in question. A report of its Committee stated "universal interest" as a criterion and the Academy decided on writers within everybody's reach, from Sinclair Lewis to Pearl Buck, repudiating exclusive poets like Paul Valéry and Paul Claudel.
http://nobelprize.org/literature/articles/espmark/
As to the early prizes, the censure of bad choices and blatant omissions is often justified. Tolstoy, Ibsen and Henry James should have been rewarded instead of, for instance, Sully Prudhomme, Eucken and Heyse.
http://nobelprize.org/literature/articles/espmark/ ▲ Collapse | | | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER
Vladimir Dubisskiy wrote:
My guess it will be between Somalia, Syria or Korean nominees this year.
I agree with Vladimir. I would add Margaret Atwood to the list of candidates with more chances.
Au | | | winners and forgettable winners | Oct 9, 2005 |
And some winners just fade into oblivion just as quickly as their stars rise when they're given the money and medal and their hand shaken by the King of Sweden: Agnon, Sachs, Kawabata, Asturias, Martinson, Montale, Undset, Bergson, etc.
Or maybe these are just the authors I can't read in the original language. I'm probably biased towards Anglo-Saxon, Russian, German and South American writers since I can read them directly.
Anecdote: was in Castries, St. Lucia last Marc... See more And some winners just fade into oblivion just as quickly as their stars rise when they're given the money and medal and their hand shaken by the King of Sweden: Agnon, Sachs, Kawabata, Asturias, Martinson, Montale, Undset, Bergson, etc.
Or maybe these are just the authors I can't read in the original language. I'm probably biased towards Anglo-Saxon, Russian, German and South American writers since I can read them directly.
Anecdote: was in Castries, St. Lucia last March on a cruise. This, of course, is where the great narrative poet, Derek Walcott (Nobel: 1992), was born. Went to some local bookstores. Found Omeros and some collected works, printed locally. Cost almost nothing. The books were slumped fornlornly next to howto and diet books. Wondered what Derek would've thought slumped next to a smiling woman with a bowl of bananas and watermelons.
Oh, if one of the criteria for selection is "contribution to mankind", then someone should nominate Joanne Rowling! 103 million books in print plus all the untold millions of children (and their parents) gaga over her. Just imagine the howls of protest. ▲ Collapse | |
|
|
Mats Wiman スウェーデン Local time: 09:33 2000に入会 ドイツ語 から スウェーデン語 + ... 追悼
From a classmate working at the Swedish Academy, I have it that the prize will be announced on a Thursday. Which Thursday will be made public on the preceding Tuesday. Therefore the Academy will inform us tomorrow or Oct 18 (or Oct 25...) and the result will be known on Oct 13, 20 or 27.
The reason for this year's 'delay' is the rule, that their deliberations are to start on the first Thursday after Sept 15. Now, this year the 15th was a Thursday, so the start this year was as late as it c... See more From a classmate working at the Swedish Academy, I have it that the prize will be announced on a Thursday. Which Thursday will be made public on the preceding Tuesday. Therefore the Academy will inform us tomorrow or Oct 18 (or Oct 25...) and the result will be known on Oct 13, 20 or 27.
The reason for this year's 'delay' is the rule, that their deliberations are to start on the first Thursday after Sept 15. Now, this year the 15th was a Thursday, so the start this year was as late as it could.
As you can see, there is no linkage between the other prizes and the literary one.
Mats ▲ Collapse | | | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER Thank you, Mats | Oct 11, 2005 |
I just read that the Academia Argentina de Letras proposed two writers: Magris and our old friend, George Steiner.
I thought that the decision was 100% in the hands of the Academy Jury. Would this mean that certain prestigious institutions can propose candidates to help in the process of selection? Could you ask your 'contact', Mats?
Au ... See more I just read that the Academia Argentina de Letras proposed two writers: Magris and our old friend, George Steiner.
I thought that the decision was 100% in the hands of the Academy Jury. Would this mean that certain prestigious institutions can propose candidates to help in the process of selection? Could you ask your 'contact', Mats?
Au
For those of you who can read Spanish:
http://www.lanacion.com.ar/herramientas/SoloTexto/Nota.asp?nota_id=745699
[Edited at 2005-10-11 12:21] ▲ Collapse | | | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER Another question for Mats | Oct 11, 2005 |
Which is the correct pronunciation of the word 'Nobel'?
Au | | | Mats Wiman スウェーデン Local time: 09:33 2000に入会 ドイツ語 から スウェーデン語 + ... 追悼 This year's Nobel Laureate will be announced on THURSDAY 13, 13:00 CET | Oct 11, 2005 |
according to the Swedish Academy today.
Nobel in Swedish is [Nohbe'll] [Ahlfred Nohbell]
o like 'au' in 'laureate'
I'll see if I can be fast enough on Thursday.
Mats
[Edited at 2005-10-11 20:52] | |
|
|
The Orx or the Complaint | Oct 12, 2005 |
I bet on Margaret Atwood. Just read her stupendous Oryx and Crane. Or even Philip Roth. Who can beat Portnoy's Complaint?! | | | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER
Mats Wiman wrote:
Nobel in Swedish is [Nohbe'll] [Ahlfred Nohbell]
o like 'au' in 'laureate'
Thank you so much, Mats.
I'll see if I can be fast enough on Thursday.
Mats
The microphone is all yours. We'll be waiting for your announcement.
Au (like in /'house/ ) | | | Aurora Humarán (X) アルゼンチン Local time: 04:33 英語 から スペイン語 + ... TOPIC STARTER | Pages in topic: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Harold Pinter awarded the 2005 Nobel Literature Prize Trados Business Manager Lite | Create customer quotes and invoices from within Trados Studio
Trados Business Manager Lite helps to simplify and speed up some of the daily tasks, such as invoicing and reporting, associated with running your freelance translation business.
More info » |
| Wordfast Pro | Translation Memory Software for Any Platform
Exclusive discount for ProZ.com users!
Save over 13% when purchasing Wordfast Pro through ProZ.com. Wordfast is the world's #1 provider of platform-independent Translation Memory software. Consistently ranked the most user-friendly and highest value
Buy now! » |
|
| | | | X Sign in to your ProZ.com account... | | | | | |