Norwegian Jon Fosse wins Nobel Prize in Literature

norwegian writer Jon Fosse got it Nobel Prize in Literature. He has written novels, stories, poems, children’s books, essays, and is best known for his plays. Credited with being translated into more than 40 languages one of the greatest contemporary playwrights of the world.

Nordica publishing house will publish his latest novel translated into Spanish on September 9. ‘Morning and afternoon’, Translated by Cristina Gómez-Baggethun and Kirsti Baggethun, it is a life story from the birth of a baby to the end of the life of a man named Johannes. Compared to Ibsen or Beckett, In his works, the most basic emotions are shown simply. Critics criticized his narrative voice “a fierce poetic simplicity.” Editorial by Conatus It is the label with the largest number of Fosse titles translated into Spanish.

Born on September 29, 1959 in the city of Haugesund (southwest), Fosse is a versatile writer who is not widely accessible to the public. However, he is one of the living writers whose plays are most staged in Europe. Fosse’s work Minimalist, based on simple language that conveys its message through rhythm, melody and silence. Fosse appeared on the European stage as a playwright with his play “Someone Will Come”.

first reaction

When he heard the news, Fosse “was driving through the countryside, Towards the fjord north of Bergen in Norway”, Following the announcement, Swedish Academy Permanent Secretary Mats Malm said the following. “In December we had the opportunity to start talking about practical issues and Nobel week,” he added.

Prize amount

The announcement took place in Stockholm. The award is equipped with: 920,000 euros It is considered the most important literary award in the world. The Academy’s reference point is Alfred Nobel’s testament, which stated that the prize should reward an author whose literary work is evidence of “a powerful ideal”. The jury decided among the five remaining finalists Secretly for fifty yearsAccording to the strict rules of the Swedish Academy.

Following the #MeToo scandal that affected the Academy in 2018 and the subsequent controversy over the award given to Austrian Peter Handke, who defended the Serbs in the wars in the Balkans in the 1990s, the Swedish Academy sought to renew itself.

Last year the award was given to Annie Ernaux, a French woman whose work demonstrates the liberation of a woman of humble origins and has become a feminist icon. Last year, British novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah, who was born in Tanzania, was blessed and explored the torments of exile, anti-colonialism and racism.

“In recent years, there has been an awareness that people cannot stay in the same place. Eurocentric perspective“I think more equality is needed and the award reflects its time,” said Carin Franzén, professor of literature at Stockholm University.

Since the creation of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Out of a total of 119 award winners, only 17 women won the award. The most recent Nobel winners were Annie Ernaux (France), Abdulrazak Gurnah (United Kingdom), poet Louise Glück (United States), Peter Handke (Austria), Olga Tokarczuk (Poland), Kazuo Ishiguro (United Kingdom), singer Bob. Dylan (United States), Svetlana Alexievich (Belarus), Patrick Modiano (France) and Alice Munro (Canada).


Source: Informacion

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