| Annie Ernaux | ||||
"for the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory" | ||||
| Date |
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| Location | Stockholm, Sweden | |||
| Presented by | Swedish Academy | |||
| Website | Official website | |||
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The2022 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the French authorAnnie Ernaux (born 1940) "for the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory".[1][2] It was announced by theSwedish Academy on 6 October 2022.[3][4][5] Ernaux was the 16th French writer – the first Frenchwoman – and the17th female author, to receive theNobel Prize in Literature.[6][7]
Ernaux started her literary career in 1974 withLes Armoires vides ("Cleaned Out"), an autobiographical novel. Very early in her career, she turned away from fiction to focus onautobiography, combining historic and individual experiences. In her different viewpoints, she consistently examines a life marked by strong disparities regarding gender, language and class. Her path to authorship was long and arduous, and all her oeuvres are written in plain language. Her books are followed by a wide readership, and are reviewed in most local and national newspapers in France, as well as being the subject of many radio and television interviews and programmes, and a large and growing international academic literature. Her famous works includeLa Place ("A Man's Place", 1983),L'événement ("Happening", 2000),Se perdre ("Getting Lost", 2001),L'Occupation ("The Possession", 2002), andLes Années ("The Years", 2008).[8]

Following the announcement, Carin Klaesson interviewed Nobel Committee chairmanAnders Olsson. Asked why Ernaux was the 2022 laureate in Literature, he gave the following statement:
"She's a wonderful writer. She has really renewed literature in many ways. On one hand, I mean, she has her foot in theFrench tradition, the heritage ofMarcel Proust, and these kinds of search for the roots of her experience in childhood and so forth that are very important for her. But also she guides these search in a quite new direction and in a more social context, and that is a wonderful inner portraits of appearance for instance. She gives also back these heritage, of these poor and ambitious people living in the countryside, and she does it with so clear, a certain look that is unwavering. It's a very strong prose, both brief and uncompromising at the same time."[9]


Interviewed by Claire Paetku, correspondent of the Nobel Prize's Outreach, Annie Ernaux confessed she learned about her win at around one o'clock while she was in her kitchen listening to her radio. She turned on the radio wanting to know who won the 2022 Nobel prize, but to her surprise it was actually her who was being mentioned as the latest laureate.[10] She described her initial feeling "like... you are in the desert and there is a call that is coming from the sky."[10] Asked what would be her message for young writers, especially for those who are writing in their native language, she said:
"I think that when we write, what is really important is that we need to read a lot. Sometimes young people say, 'Oh no, I don't read... I write!' Well, no. That's not possible. You need to read a lot. And the second message I would give them is not to strive to write well, but rather to write honestly. It's not the same thing."[10]
At a public press conference, she told journalists the following statement regarding her responsibility with the prize:
"The Nobel [prize], it hasn't sunk in yet, but it's true I feel I have a new responsibility. This responsibility is about carrying on the fight against injustice, whatever it is. I use the term 'injustice' but it has different levels. Everything that is a form of injustice towards women, towards those I call the dominated ones. I can tell you I will fight until my last breath so that women be able to choose to become mothers or to choose not to. It's a fundamental right.Contraception and the right toabortion are the core of women's freedom because it is a societal choice, it is a political choice and that's why in some countries, in some regions of theUnited States, in some states they're aware of this and that's why they want to maintain the centuries-old domination of women."[11][12]
Right after theSwedish Academy announced Ernaux as the recipient of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature, it immediately received numerous praises from literary societies and critics. Jacques Testard, fromFitzcarraldo Editions which publishes the English translations of her works, described her as "exceptional and unique" and a "very important feminist" writer of the contemporary times.[2][13] "With her interest in memory and in writing a life", said Testard, "Proust is quite an obvious antecedent" for Ernaux.[2]
Despite her being unsparing with PresidentEmmanuel Macron, pouring scorn on his background in banking and said his first term as president failed to advance the cause of French women, the politician continued congratulating her for her literary achievement, saying throughTwitter: "Annie Ernaux has been writing for 50 years the novel of the collective and intimate memory of our country. Her voice is that of women's freedom, and the century's forgotten ones."[14][13]

Professor Ruth Cruickshank, who specialises in contemporaryFrench fiction atRoyal Holloway, University of London, said: "When a woman wins the Nobel Prize for Literature it is always great news. Thirteen dead and two living white French men (Le Clézio andModiano) have been Nobel laureates since 1901... Ernaux explores memories of life experiences – both extraordinary and relatable – a backstreet abortion; failed affairs whether with a lover in Russia or a man 30 years younger; the death of her parents; breast cancer."[13] American novelistBrandon Taylor joked about Ernaux's win, saying: "Cinema is back. Annie Ernaux is a Nobel laureate. Perhaps modernity is saved."[15] David Levitz of theDW News, described her as "an obscure choice" compared to authorsSalman Rushdie andMichel Houellebecq, despite being the favorite to win in 2021.[16]
French authorÉdouard Louis welcomed Ernaux's win, saying: "she didn't try to fit into existing definitions of literature, of what is beautiful: she came up with her own."[17] He is often compared to her and referred to as her successor due to the similarities of their backgrounds and literary styles. "No one writes in the same way after reading Annie Ernaux," he said.[18] Another admirer was philosopherDidier Eribon, who expressed: "I have such admiration for her, not just as a writer, but for her activism... She always found a way to capture in one sentence what I couldn't say in a page." Eribon first met Ernaux in 2002, shortly after the death ofPierre Bourdieu, a leading French sociologist and globalization critic, becoming close acquaintances thereafter.[19]
Interviewed by aEuronews journalist whether he was disappointed that he was not awarded this year, despite being nominated annually, Albanian novelistIsmail Kadare replied that he had no such feelings. "As you can see," he said, "I have no thoughts. 40 years ago, I might have but not today."[20] Kadare's wife,Helena Kadare, said that they did not know Ernaux and that they had not even heard of her before the ceremony, even though they have been living in France for many years.[21] She said: "We don't know the writer who won the Nobel, even though we live in France. I've never heard her, to be sure, but I haven’t even heard her name before. As long as the Nobel jury is the same and has been saying no [to Kadare] for 40 years, you don’t have to change your opinion about them."[20][21][22]

Ernaux delivered her Nobel lecture on December 7, 2022, and spoke of how she hopes her work, which mixes fiction and memoir, has affected others, or in her own words, "shatter the loneliness of experiences endured and repressed and enable beings to reimagine themselves."[23] She said she took to writing her personal experiences because "a book can contribute to change" and "enable beings to reimagine themselves". She mentionedRimbaud,Flaubert,Proust,Woolf,Camus,Rousseau,Kafka,Hugo and among others as authors who somehow shaped her views and influenced her writing style.[24] In her youth, she began to love a wide array of literary masterpieces due to her mother's passion. She elaborated:
"From the time I could read, books were my companions, and reading was my natural occupation outside of school. This appetite was nurtured by a mother who, between customers, in her shop, read a great many novels, and preferred me reading rather than sewing and knitting. The high cost of books, the suspicion with which they were regarded at my religious school, made them even more desirable.Don Quixote,Gulliver's Travels,Jane Eyre, the tales ofGrimm andAndersen,David Copperfield,Gone with the Wind, and laterLes Misérables,The Grapes of Wrath,Nausea,The Stranger: chance, more than the school's prescriptions, determined what I read."[23]
Ernaux received her Nobel diploma and medal fromCarl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden, on 10 December 2022. Nobel Committee chairmanAnders Olsson described her as an author who regards "language [as] a means to dispel the fog of memory and a knife to uncover the real".[25] He noted:
"Annie Ernaux’s writing is restrained with feelings and expressions of emotion, but passion pulses beneath the surface. Relentlessly, Ernaux exposes the shame that penetrates class experience... An unrelenting gaze and a plain style are [her] characteristics, and that she succeeds in making her pain relevant to all.[25]
In her banquet speech atStockholm City Hall on 10 December 2022, Ernaux hailedAlbert Camus, who was awarded the1957 Nobel Prize in Literature.[26] She said:
"I was seventeen in 1957, when I heard on the radio thatAlbert Camus had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in Stockholm. So I discovered, with a mixture of pride and delight, that the author ofL’étranger andL’homme révolté, two texts that had deeply affected me, had just been honored by the greatest arbiter of distinction in the world. To find myself here, sixty-five years later, fills me with a sense of profound amazement and gratitude. Amazement at the mystery presented by a life’s trajectory and the uncertain, solitary pursuit of its writing. And gratitude for allowing me to join Camus and those other writers, living and dead, whom I admire."[27]

Following the attack on the British authorSalman Rushdie on August 12, 2022,[30][31][32] as he was about to give a public lecture at theChautauqua Institution inChautauqua, New York, U.S., numerous academic institutions and societies started calling the attention of theSwedish Academy'sNobel Committee to bestow him this year'sNobel Prize in Literature.[33][34][35] Among the authors calling to recognize Rushdie were French philosopherBernard-Henri Lévy,[36] French Minister of CultureFrançoise Nyssen, British writersIan McEwan andNeil Gaiman, Indian writersKavery Nambisan andAdil Jussawalla,[35] and Canadian authorMargaret Atwood who declared, "If we don’t defend free speech, we live in tyranny: Salman Rushdie shows us that."[37][38] American journalistDavid Remnick explains why Rushdie deserves the Nobel Prize:
"As a literary artist, Rushdie is richly deserving of the Nobel, and the case is only augmented by his role as an uncompromising defender of freedom and a symbol of resiliency. No such gesture could reverse the wave of illiberalism that has engulfed so much of the world. But, after all its bewildering choices, the Swedish Academy has the opportunity, by answering the ugliness of a state-issued death sentence with the dignity of its highest award, to rebuke all the clerics, autocrats, and demagogues—including our own—who would galvanize their followers at the expense of human liberty. Freedom of expression, as Rushdie’s ordeal reminds us, has never come free, but the prize is worth the price."[33]
Rushdie, known for his controversial 1988 novelThe Satanic Verses which earned him afatwā from Iran's supreme leaderAyatollah Khomeini, has annually been included in theLadbrokes odds.[39][40] Journalist Jeff Simon ofThe Buffalo News expressed the possibility of Rushdie winning the prestigious prize, saying:
"A Nobel for Rushdie wouldn't only be a glorious message from our civilization to all who would decry "the free word"; it would, in effect, be a way of redeeming, in its hour of need, the Nobel Prize for Literature itself... And now just imagine what it might possibly mean this October if they decided, after all, to give the Nobel to [him], who currently lives and works in America but is civilization's very symbol of how much courage is often required of the written word in this world."[34]
It was not until 27 years later when theSwedish Academy, which had been neutral regarding theRushdie affairs, condemned the Iranian death warrant against the British author.[41] Prior to the condemnation, two of the Academy's members,Kerstin Ekman andLars Gyllensten, stopped participating in the Academy's work in protest at its refusal to make an appeal to theSwedish cabinet in support for Rushdie.[42][43]
Rushdie is noted for his literary works such asMidnight's Children (1981),The Moor's Last Sigh (1995),Shalimar the Clown (2005), andJoseph Anton: A Memoir (2012), an account of his life in the wake of the events followingThe Satanic Verses.[39] Since then he has become an icon for "freedom of speech" in the realm of literature.[44][45][46][47]
Following Ernaux's win, many Rushdie supporters as well as some writers expressed disappointment for Rushdie not being awarded despite the campaigns and appeals. If given the chance to win in the future, he will be the second Indian to do so – afterRabindranath Tagore won it forGitanjali way back in1913.[48]
In 2022, the Swedish Academy'sNobel Committee was composed of the following members:[49]
| Committee Members | |||||
| Seat No. | Picture | Name | Elected | Position | Profession |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Anders Olsson (b. 1949) | 2008 | committee chair | literary critic, literary historian | |
| 11 | Mats Malm (b. 1964) | 2018 | associate member permanent secretary | translator, literary historian, editor | |
| 12 | Per Wästberg (b. 1933) | 1997 | member | novelist, journalist, poet, essayist | |
| 13 | Anne Swärd (b. 1969) | 2019 | member | novelist | |
| 9 | Ellen Mattson (b. 1963) | 2019 | member | novelist, essayist | |
| 14 | Steve Sem-Sandberg (b. 1958) | 2021 | member | journalist, author, translator | |