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Ted Gioia indulges in a lovely daydream:
"I had a hunch a woman writer living in England would win the Nobel Prize in Literature this year. But I still wasn't prepared for the thrill I experienced when I learned that J.K. Rowling had won the coveted prize. After all, who has done more for the cause of reading in recent decades? The last time a British woman had received this honor was back in 1966 when Dame Agatha Christie shared the award with Jorge Luis Borges. I expect Rowling's acceptance speech will rank among the most memorable. (Although it's hard to imagine anything topping that moment in 1997, when Dr. Hunter S. Thompson mounted the podium in Stockholm to share his surprising sentiments with the audience.) . . ."Well? What do you think of his proposed list of winners? (J.K. Rowling wins it for the year 2007.)
No, this is not the real Nobel Prize in Literature, but the way the award might exist in an alternative universe -- a world in which such honors are exempt from pettiness, politics and tokenism. Imagine a Nobel Prize in which the contributions of Proust, Kafka, Nabokov and Joyce are not forgotten. Imagine a Nobel Prize in Literature in which genre writers have a chance. Imagine a Nobel Prize in Literature that doesn't bend over backward to exclude native born U.S. writers (only three honored during the last 52 years!). Ah, don't just imagine . . . read about it here.
For my part, I'm just happy the committee from the alternative universe honored Philip K. Dick three years before his passing.
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Date: 2007-10-16 03:47 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-16 04:00 pm (UTC)A Nobel prize would bring Rowling no more recognition than she already has; somebody like Orham Panuk (sp?), on the other hand, can benefit from the recognition.
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Date: 2007-10-16 04:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-16 04:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2007-10-16 04:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-16 04:31 pm (UTC)P.
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Date: 2007-10-16 04:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-16 05:01 pm (UTC)I'll be the first to agree that often my response to the NobelLit Prize is a confused, "Who?" - but there's a world of writers out there, and many of them are more than deserving even if their name IS obscure to Western ears. And maybe I'm just being over-sensitive again, but the comment that the committee "bends over backwards" to avoid honouring US-born writers smacks of America's usual self-centredness to me. It shouldn't matter where an author is born. At ALL.
And frankly... J K Rowling is a populist and popular writer, but she is hardly the Best of the Best. She just outsells everyone. Part of the Nobel award is money and fame, and she's already got more of both than a Nobel could possibly bestow on her.
I
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Date: 2007-10-16 05:03 pm (UTC)and also note: not many women, perhaps fewer than the actual nobel list.
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Date: 2007-10-16 06:07 pm (UTC)Also, I thought Doris Lessing *was* a genre writer, at least part-time.
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