Nobel Prize in literature is awarded to South Korean author Han Kang for
her "intense poetic prose"
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[October 10, 2024]
By DANIEL NIEMANN and MIKE CORDER
STOCKHOLM (AP) — The Nobel Prize in literature was awarded Thursday to
South Korean author Han Kang for what the Nobel committee called “her
intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the
fragility of human life.”
Han becomes the first South Korean writer to win the Nobel literature
prize.
Nobel committee chairman Anders Olsson praised Han’s “physical empathy
for the vulnerable, often female lives” of her characters.
He said her work “confronts historical traumas and in each of her works
exposes the fragility of human life. She has a unique awareness of the
connections between body and soul, the living and the dead, and in a
poetic and experimental style, has become an innovator in contemporary
prose.”
Han, 53, won the International Booker Prize in 2016 for “The
Vegetarian,” an unsettling novel in which a woman’s decision to stop
eating meat has devastating consequences.
At the time of winning that award, Han said writing novels “is a way of
questioning for me.”
“I just try to complete my questions through the process of my writing
and I try to stay in the questions, sometimes painful, sometimes - well
- sometimes demanding,” she said.
With “The Vegetarian,” she said, ”I wanted to question about being human
and I wanted to describe a woman who desperately didn’t want to belong
to the human race any longer and desperately wanted to reject being
human, (humans) who commit such violence."
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South Korean author Han Kang poses for the media during a news
conference in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, May 24, 2016. Kang has
won the Nobel Prize for Literature. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)
Her novel “Human Acts” was an International Booker Prize finalist in
2018.
The literature prize has long faced criticism that it is too focused on
European and North American writers of style-heavy, story-light prose.
It has also been male-dominated, with just 17 women among its 119
laureates until this year's award. The last woman to win was Annie
Ernaux of France, in 2022.
Six days of Nobel announcements opened Monday with Americans Victor
Ambros and Gary Ruvkun winning the medicine prize. Two founding fathers
of machine learning — John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton — won the
physics prize on Tuesday. On Wednesday, three scientists who discovered
powerful techniques to decode and even design novel proteins were
awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry.
The Nobel Peace Prize will be announced Friday and the economics award
on Oct. 14.
The prize carries a cash award of 11 million Swedish kronor ($1 million)
from a bequest left by the award’s creator, Swedish inventor Alfred
Nobel. The laureates are invited to receive their awards at ceremonies
on Dec. 10, the anniversary of Nobel’s death.
___
Corder reported from The Hague, Netherlands.
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