World
Kazuo Ishiguro wins Nobel Prize for Literature
Kazuo Ishiguro, the British author of “The Remains of the Day”, has won the Nobel Prize for Literature on Thursday, honoring an “exquisite novelist” a year after giving it to singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, according to Reuters.Kazuo Ishiguro, the British author of “The Remains of the Day”, has won the Nobel Prize for Literature on Thursday, honoring an “exquisite novelist” a year after giving it to singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, according to Reuters.
Born in Japan and raised in Britain, Ishiguro, 62, won the Man Booker Prize for the 1989 novel that was made into an Oscar-nominated movie starring Anthony Hopkins as a fastidious and repressed butler in postwar Britain.
The award of the 9 million crown ($1.1 million) prize marks a return to a more mainstream interpretation of literature after it went to the American troubadour Dylan, a decision that critics said snubbed more deserving writers.
The Academy hailed Ishiguro’s ability to reveal “the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world ... in novels of great emotional force” that touch on memory, time and self-delusion.
Ishiguro has also waded into politics, calling a rise in hostility toward immigrants after the British voted to leave the European Union as “a fight over the very soul of Britain”.
Ishiguro’s latest novel, “The Buried Giant”, in which an elderly couple go on a road trip through an Arthurian England populated by ogres and dragons, “explores ... how memory relates to oblivion, history to the present, and fantasy to reality”, the Academy said.
Ishiguro takes his place beside Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Doris Lessing and Ernest Hemingway as winner of the world’s most prestigious literary award.
The prize is named after dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel and has been awarded since 1901 for achievements in science, literature and peace in accordance with his will.