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Lessing wins
Nobel literature prize
STOCKHOLM (Sweden)—Doris Lessing, author of dozens of works from short
stories to science fiction, including the classic “The Golden Notebook,”
won the Nobel Prize for literature Thursday. She was praised by the
judges for her “skepticism, fire and visionary power.”
The Swedish academy’s announcement was stunning even by the standards of
Nobel judges, who have been known for such surprises as Austria’s
Elfriede Jelinek and Italy’s Dario Fo.
Lessing, 11 days short of her 88th birthday, is the oldest choice ever
for a prize that usually goes to authors in their 50s and 60s. Although
she is widely celebrated for “The Golden Notebook” and other works, she
has received little attention in recent years and has been criticized as
strident and eccentric.
Even Lessing apparently was not expecting to win, the academy’s
permanent secretary Horace Engdahl told The Associated Press. “I’ve
phoned her but there’s been no answer. She was not sitting and waiting
for my call,” Engdahl said. “She doesn’t know yet, and I’m afraid she’s
out taking a stroll somewhere in the park and people will attack her
with the news.”
Lessing’s agent, Jonathan Clowes, said the London-based author was out
shopping when the prize was announced. “We are absolutely delighted and
it’s very well deserved,” Clowes said. However, American literary critic
Harold Bloom called the academy’s decision “pure political correctness.”
“Although Ms. Lessing at the beginning of her writing career had a few
admirable qualities, I find her work for the past 15 years quite
unreadable ... fourth-rate science fiction,” Bloom told The Associated
Press.
A largely self-taught author who ended formal schooling at age 13,
Lessing has drawn heavily from her time living in Africa, exploring the
divide between whites and blacks, most notably in 1950’s “The Grass Is
Singing,” which examined the relationship between a white farmer’s wife
and her black servant. The academy called it “both a tragedy based in
love-hatred and study of unbridgeable racial conflicts.”
A prolific author even in her 80s, Lessing was born to British parents
who were living in what is now Bakhtaran, Iran. Her many works include
short stories, essays and such novels as “The Good Terrorist” and
“Martha Quest,” the latter part of her semi-autobiographical “Children
Of Violence” series.
But to millions she is known for “The Golden Notebook,” published in
1962 and still a feminist classic although Lessing does not consider the
book a political statement.
“The burgeoning feminist movement saw it as a pioneering work and it
belongs to the handful of books that inform the 20th century view of the
male-female relationship,” the academy said in its citation announcing
the prize.
Lessing was also cited for her “vision of global catastrophe forcing
mankind to return to a more primitive life, noting such recent works as
“Mara and Dann” and its sequel, “The Story of General Dann and Mara’s
Daughter, Griot and the Snow Dog,” published in 2005.
“When you look at my life, you can go back to the late 1930s,” she told
the AP in an interview a year ago. “What I saw was, first of all,
Hitler, he was going to live forever. Mussolini was in for 10,000 years.
You had the Soviet Union, which was, by definition, going to last
forever. There was the British empire — nobody imagined it could come to
an end. So why should one believe in any kind of permanence?”
Lessing is the second British writer to win the prize since 2005, when
Harold Pinter received the award. Last year, the academy gave the prize
to Turkey’s Orhan Pamuk. A seasoned traveler of the world, Lessing has
known many homes, from Persia to Zimbabwe to South Africa to London,
where she lives on a quiet block in a neighborhood long favored by
artists and intellectuals. Like Pinter, Pamuk and other recent Nobel
winners, Lessing has a history of political controversy. Because of her
criticism of the South Africa’s former apartheid system, she was
prohibited from entering the country between 1956 and 1995.—Agencies
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