Arab Times

Guadeloupe­an author wins alternativ­e prize

Calls to resign

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STOCKHOLM, Oct 13, (Agencies): Guadeloupe­an author Maryse Conde on Friday won an alternativ­e award formed in protest to the Nobel Literature Prize, postponed this year over a rape scandal that came to light as part of the #MeToo movement.

The New Academy Prize in Literature was formed in protest to denounce what its founders called the “bias, arrogance and sexism” of the venerable Swedish Academy, which selects Nobel laureates.

The Swedish Academy was plunged into turmoil in 2017 over its ties to Frenchman Jean-Claude Arnault, who was jailed for two years in early October for rape.

Conde “describes the ravages of colonialis­m and post-colonial chaos in a language which is both precise and overwhelmi­ng,” the New Academy – founded by more than 100 Swedish writers, artists and journalist­s – said more than a week after the Nobel Literature Prize would have been announced.

Swedish librarians nominated 47 authors who were later voted on by nearly 33,000 people from around the world, leaving four authors – two women and two men – on the short list.

A jury then picked Conde from the list, which also included Vietnamese-Canadian writer Kim Thuy, British author Neil Gaiman and Japan’s Haruki Murakami.

Murakami withdrew his nomination last month, telling organizers he wanted to focus on work and avoid the spotlight.

“I’m very happy and proud of this prize. Please allow me to share it with my family, my friends and above all with the people of Guadeloupe, who will be thrilled and touched seeing me receive this prize,” the 81-year-old Conde, who is often among authors tipped for the Nobel prize, said in a video message.

Part of France, Guadeloupe is “only mentioned when there are hurricanes or earthquake­s,” added the writer whose work explores racial, gender and cultural issues in a historical context.

The Nobel scandal erupted in November 2017 when Arnault, who is married to a member of the Swedish Academy and has close ties to the organizati­on, was accused of sexually assaulting several women.

Earlier this month, a Stockholm court found him guilty on one count of rape while acquitting him of another other.

The revelation­s have sparked resignatio­ns from Academy members and left the prestigiou­s body deeply divided over how to manage its ties with Arnault and his wife, poet Katarina Frostenson.

“It all started with accusation­s of sexual assault and sexual harassment, leaks, corruption... one day we heard the Swedish Academy was to cancel the Nobel prize in literature,” said Alexandra Pascalidou, one of the New Academy’s founders.

“Why was literature... why were the authors going to pay the price? Why were they to be punished for what happened?” she told an audience in Stockholm.

The award carries prize money of up to one million kronor (around 97,000 euros, $113,000) raised from crowdfundi­ng and donations and will be handed out at a December 9 ceremony, one day before the Nobel banquet.

Conde

STOCKHOLM:

Also:

The body that awards the Nobel Prize in Literature has asked the wife of the man at the centre of a rape scandal to resign from the Swedish Academy as it tries to rebuild its reputation, a member said on Friday.

This year’s prize-giving was postponed after allegation­s of sexual misconduct surfaced against JeanClaude Arnault, husband of academy member Katarina Frostenson, and the academy’s discovery that the names of some prize-winners had been leaked prompted several members to resign or withdraw from work.

Arnault was sentenced this month to two years in prison for rape. He denied all accusation­s and is appealing the verdict.

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