The Citizen (KZN)

#MeToo sinks Nobel prize

- Stockholm

– The 2018 Nobel season opens next week in Stockholm, without a Literature Prize for the first time in 70 years due to a #MeToo scandal.

The Medicine Prize laureates will be revealed by the Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute on Monday, but many eyes will at the same time be turned to a Stockholm courthouse for the verdict against a Frenchman charged with rape who has close ties to the Swedish Academy.

The Academy, which has awarded the prestigiou­s literary distinctio­n since the Nobels were first awarded in 1901, has been torn apart by an acrimoniou­s dispute over how to manage its affiliatio­n with Jean-Claude Arnault.

In ruins, the Academy has decided to put off this year’s Literature Prize until 2019 when it will award two prizes – the first postponeme­nt since William Faulkner’s 1949 honour was awarded in 1950.

At the centre of the scandal is 72-year-old Arnault, married to Academy member Katarina Frostenson and an influentia­l figure on Stockholm’s culture scene. His cultural club Forum received Academy funding for years.

Six of the Academy’s 18 members, who are appointed for life, no longer actively participat­e in the institutio­n’s work due to the discord, adding to two others who had already stepped aside for other reasons.

Without a quorum of 12 and unable to elect new members the Academy has vowed to undertake massive reforms.

Traditiona­lly known for its integrity and discretion, the Academy’s row has turned into a titillatin­g public spectacle as members regularly exchange vicious blows via the media.

The scandal has been “disastrous to (the Academy’s) reputation,” Swedish literary critic at daily Svenska Dagbladet Madelaine Levy said.

The Nobel Foundation, which manages the finances and the administra­tion of the Nobel Prizes, hopes the Academy will pull itself together in time to award the prize again in 2019.

“I think there is a chance ... but it is too early to judge,” foundation director Lars Heikensten said.

Others are not convinced, amid the widely reported ongoing struggles in the Academy’s reform work. “As things are now I wouldn’t say I am certain,” editor Hakan Bravinger of publisher Norstedts said.

Without the Literature Prize, this year’s other high-profile Nobel is the Peace Prize, to be announced in Oslo next Friday.

As always, the names of potential winners are being tossed about in the run-up to next week’s announceme­nt.

It’s a guessing game rendered more difficult by the fact that the identities of the candidates – 329 – are generally kept secret.

US President Donald Trump has been mentioned as a possibilit­y for his efforts to bring peace to the Korean peninsula. – AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa