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Chronicler of Soviet life wins Literature Nobel

STOCKHOLM:Belarussian author Svetlana Alexievich has won the Nobel Prize for Literature for her portrayal of life in the former Soviet Union which the Swedish Academy said was “a monument to suffering and courage in our time”.

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Stockholm, October 8 

Belarussian author Svetlana Alexievich has won the Nobel Prize for Literature for her portrayal of life in the former Soviet Union which the Swedish Academy said was “a monument to suffering and courage in our time”.

Alexievich’s work includes chronicles of the lives of Soviet women during the Second World War as well as of the consequences of the 1986 nuclear disaster in Chernobyl and the Russian war in Afghanistan told from the perspective of ordinary citizens.

She collected hundreds of interviews of people impacted by these tumultuous events, putting them together in works that the academy said were like a “musical composition.” “By means of her extraordinary method — a carefully composed collage of human voices — Alexievich deepens our comprehension of an entire era,” the academy said on Thursday in awarding the 8 million crown ($972,000) prize.

Alexievich, born in 1948 in Ukraine, worked as a teacher and a journalist after finishing school. She lived in exile abroad for many years, including in Sweden, Germany and France, due to her criticism of the Belarus government.

“Real people speak in my books about the main events of the age such as the war, the Chernobyl disaster, and the downfall of a great empire,” she said in a biographical text published on her website.

“But I don’t just record a dry history of events and facts, I’m writing a history of human feelings.” Her books include “Voices from Chernobyl — Chronicle of the Future”, and “Zinky Boys — Soviet voices from a forgotten war”, a portrayal of the Soviet Union’s war in Afghanistan.

Alexievich’s documentary style of writing first became popular in the former Soviet Union in the 1980s. But she has long been an uncomfortable writer for the authorities due to her humanistic, emotional tales of peoples’ fates entangled in major historic developments.

One of her best-known works is “War’s Unwomanly Face”, which took several years to get published as Soviet authorities saw it as subversive and undermining the myth of the Soviet army’s victory in World War Two.

In the book, Alexievich offers an unusual account of the war, moving away from military narrative and telling the tales of Soviet women who took on male roles, fought on the front lines, killed and got killed, but still looked at the shattered world around them from a feminine perspective, focusing on human suffering and basic emotions free of any pathos. — Reuters

14th woman to win the coveted prize

Svetlana Alexievich is only the 14th woman to win the prize, which has been awarded 107 times. Alexievich is 67. The average age of the winners in literature been 64. The oldest winner was Doris Lessing, who was 88 when she won the prize in 2007. The youngest was Rudyard Kipling, best known for “The Jungle Book,” who won at age 42.

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