| Tomas Tranströmer | ||||
"because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality." | ||||
| Date |
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| Location | Stockholm, Sweden | |||
| Presented by | Swedish Academy | |||
| First award | 1901 | |||
| Website | Official website | |||
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The2011Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the Swedish poetTomas Tranströmer (1931–2015) "because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality."[1] He is the seventh Swedish author to become a recipient of the prize afterHarry Martinson andEyvind Johnson werejointly awarded in 1974.[2][3]
Tomas Tranströmer has this ability to draw out the great and wonderful from the mundane. Since his writing debut in the 1950s with17 dikter ("17 Poems", 1954) andHemligheter på vägen ("Secrets on the Way", 1958), Tranströmer's poetry has been characterized by its "everyday roots", and a striving after simplicity that allows room for its reader to marvel and to concentrate.[2] His poems are marked by rich, keen and original imagery. Two of Tranströmer's greatest interests, nature and music, have also left deep impressions on his writing. His famous literary collections includeÖstersjöar ("Baltics", 1974),För levande och döda ("For the Living and the Dead", 1989),Sorgegondolen ("The Sorrow Gondola", 1996), andDen stora gåtan ("The Great Enigma", 2004).[4][3]
Tranströmer had been considered a perennial frontrunner, together with the Syrian poetAdunis, for the award in years past, with reporters waiting near his residence on the day of the announcement in prior years.[5][6] TheSwedish Academy revealed that he had been nominated every single year since 1993.[5]
Other authors tipped to win that same year were the Japanese writerHaruki Murakami, Algerian writerAssia Djebar, American novelistsJoyce Carol Oates,Thomas Pynchon, andCormac McCarthy, Hungarian writerPéter Nádas, Indian poetsRajendra Bhandari andK. Satchidanandan, South KoreanKo Un, Australian poetLes Murray, Romanian novelistMircea Cărtărescu, Somali novelistNuruddin Farah, British fantasy authorJ. K. Rowling, and American singer-songwriterBob Dylan.[7][8]
The Nobel Committee stated that Tranströmer's work received the prize "because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality."[9]
Permanent secretary of the Swedish AcademyPeter Englund said, "He's been writing poetry since 1951 when he made his debut. And has quite a small production, really. He's writing about big questions. He's writing about death, he's writing about history and memory, and nature."[5][10]
Tranströmer's wife, Monica, said he had been notified by telephone four minutes before the announcement was made, and that Tranströmer was "surprised, very surprised".[11]
The choice of Tranströmer was widely celebrated in Sweden. "It is tremendously well deserved", authorBjörn Ranelid said, "He should have been awarded the prize much earlier."Åsa Linderborg, cultural editor ofAftonbladet said "He is easy to read and his themes are universal", describing Tranströmers imagery as "incomparable".[12]Prime Minister of SwedenFredrik Reinfeldt said he was "happy and proud" at the news of Tranströmer's achievement.[13] Meanwhile, international response to the award has been mixed. The choice of Tranströmer was celebrated by Irish poetPaul Muldoon andTeju Cole, while it provoked negative reactions from American commentators who criticized the Swedish Academy foreurocentrism and, despite the fact that Tranströmer's poetry had been translated to more than 50 languages, for awarding "obscure" writers little known outside their home countries.[14] French commentators described Tranströmer as "practically unknown in France" and a surprise choice,[15] while Thomas Steinfeld, cultural editor of GermanSüddeutsche Zeitung said it was "A very good decision", calling Tranströmer "one of the worlds greatest poets".[12] Positive reactions were also heard from around the world, such asJoumana Haddad, cultural editor of the LebaneseAl-Nahar, who welcomed the prize to "a great literary person", and Celal Üster, cultural chief of TurkishCumhuriyet, who was pleased that the prize was awarded to a poet and "a true writer who does not seek attention for himself".[12] Darryll Accone, literature editor of South AfricanMail and Guardian said he was "somewhat puzzled" that the Syrian poetAdonis was not awarded instead of Tranströmer.[12] The prize announcement led to the immediate reissuing of at least two volumes of Tranströmer's poetry in English translation.[16][17]