Global Times - Weekend

Nobel Literature Prize junked 3

Academy faces sexual harassment crisis

- AFP

For the first time in almost 70 years there will be no Nobel Literature Prize this year, after the Swedish Academy that selects the laureate failed to contain a deep crisis stemming from the anti-sexual harassment #MeToo campaign.

“We find it necessary to commit time to recovering public confidence in the Academy before the next laureate can be announced,” the Academy’s interim permanent secretary Anders Olsson said in a statement Friday, adding that two prizes would be announced in 2019.

The body has been in turmoil since November when, in the wake of the global #MeToo campaign, Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter published the testimonie­s of 18 women claiming to have been raped, sexually assaulted or harassed by Jean-Claude Arnault, an influentia­l figure on the Swedish culture scene.

Arnault, the French husband of Academy member and poet Katarina Frostenson, has denied the allegation­s.

The revelation­s have sowed deep discord among the Academy’s 18 members about how to handle the matter, and in recent weeks, six of them have resigned, including permanent secretary Sara Danius.

“The active members of the Swedish Academy are of course fully aware that the present crisis of confidence places high demands on a long-term and robust work for change,” Olsson said.

Seen as bearers of high culture, the Academy, founded in 1786, is traditiona­lly known for its integrity and discretion, with its meetings and decisions shrouded in secrecy.

But the row has turned into a titillatin­g public spectacle, with Academy members dealing ugly blows to each other in the media.

Member Horace Engdahl, for example, called Danius “the worst” permanent secretary in the Academy’s history.

The last time the institutio­n delayed a prize announceme­nt was in 1949, when William Faulkner received the prize a year later, when Bertrand Russell was also honoured.

The same scenario, in which two laureates are announced in one year, has also occurred on four other occasions.

“I think it’s wise, this is the best decision they could make. They’ll have a chance to restore [the Academy] this year and fill the empty seats, and come back with a strong Academy that can award the prize,” Dagens Nyheter’s literature critic Maria Schotteniu­s said.

Several Academy members had recently suggested the 2018 prize could be postponed because of the crisis, which has dragged the body’s reputation through the mud.

“This is a disaster for the Swedish Academy’s reputation... [that] they didn’t manage to handle this better,” Jens Liljestran­d of the Expressen newspaper told TT news agency.

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