Times-Herald

Annie Ernaux awarded Nobel Prize in literature

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PARIS (AP) — French author Annie Ernaux, who has fearlessly mined her experience­s as a working-class woman to explore life in France since the 1940s, won this year's Nobel Prize in literature Thursday for work that illuminate­s the murky corners of memory, family and society.

Ernaux 's books probe deeply personal experience­s and feelings – love, sex, abortion, shame – within a society split by gender and class divisions.

The author strongly defended women's rights to abortion and contracept­ion in some of her first comments after winning the prize.

"I will fight to my last breath so that women can choose to be a mother, or not to be. It's a fundamenta­l right," she said at a news conference in Paris. Ernaux's first book, "Cleaned Out," was about her own illegal abortion before it was legalized in France.

Ernaux also spoke about the importance of continuing to fight for women's rights, and her hope for peace because of her childhood during World War II.

The Swedish Academy said Ernaux, 82, was recognized for "the courage and clinical acuity" of books rooted in her small-town background in the Normandy region of northwest France.

Anders Olsson, chairman of the Nobel literature committee, said Ernaux is "an extremely honest writer who is not afraid to confront the hard truths."

"She writes about things that no one else writes about, for instance her abortion, her jealousy, her experience­s as an abandoned lover and so forth. I mean, really hard experience­s," he told The Associated Press after the award announceme­nt in Stockholm. "And she gives words for these experience­s that are very simple and striking. They are short books, but they are really moving."

One of France's most-garlanded authors and a prominent feminist voice, Ernaux said she was happy to have won the prize, which carries a cash award of 10 million Swedish kronor (nearly $900,000) — but "not bowled over."

"I am very happy, I am proud. Voila, that's all," Ernaux told journalist­s outside her home in Cergy, a working-class town west of Paris that she has written about.

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: "Annie Ernaux has been writing for 50 years the novel of the collective and intimate memory of our country. Her voice is that of women's freedom, and the century's forgotten ones."

While Macron praised Ernaux for her Nobel, she has been unsparing with him. A supporter of left-wing causes for social justice, she has poured scorn on Macron's background in banking and said his first term as president failed to advance the cause of French women.

Ernaux is the first female French Nobel literature winner and just the 17th woman among the 119 Nobel literature laureates. More than a dozen French writers have captured the literature prize since Sully Prudhomme won the inaugural award in 1901. The most recent French winner before Ernaux was Patrick Modiano in 2014.

Her more than 20 books chronicle events in her life and the lives of those around her. They present uncompromi­sing portraits of sexual encounters, abortion, illness and the deaths of her parents.

Olsson said Ernaux's work was often "written in plain language, scraped clean." He said she had used the term "an ethnologis­t of herself" rather than a writer of fiction.

 ?? Submitted Photo ?? The SUCCESS Program has begun their Real Men Read initiative led by LaTwon Whitby. Above, SUCCESS program youth paired up with Coach Marcus Britt, Coach Trey Thompson, Coach Jim Bailey and Coach James Millbrooks to read stories teaching children how to be loving, adoring, caring and kind to themselves.
Submitted Photo The SUCCESS Program has begun their Real Men Read initiative led by LaTwon Whitby. Above, SUCCESS program youth paired up with Coach Marcus Britt, Coach Trey Thompson, Coach Jim Bailey and Coach James Millbrooks to read stories teaching children how to be loving, adoring, caring and kind to themselves.

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