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France’s spirits rose yesterday when Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio, a half-British novelist and one of the country’s most internationally acclaimed writers, won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
The Swedish Academy called Le Clézio an “author of new departures, poetic adventure and sensual ecstasy, an explorer of a humanity beyond and below the reigning civilisation”.
The award to the cosmopolitan, Mauritius-raised Le Clézio, 68, was the second Nobel honour for France this week. Luc Montagnier and Françoise Barre-Sinouss shared the medicine prize with the German Harald zur Hausen for their discovery of the HIV virus.
Since Jean-Paul Sartre dramatically declined the award in 1964 — declaring that “a writer must refuse to allow himself to be transformed into an institution” — only two other French writers have won the literature prize, Claude Simon in 1985 and the Chinese-born Gao Xingjian in 2000.
France had not won two Nobels in the same year since 1952, when Albert Schweitzer won for peace and François Mauriac for literature.
President Sarkozy hailed Le Clézio for bringing honour to France, a country that has been worried for the past two decades that its culture has been declining.
“A great traveller, he embodies the influence of France, its culture and its values in a globalised world,” the President said. “A child in Mauritius and Nigeria, a teenager in Nice, a nomad of the American and African deserts, Jean-Marie Le Clézio is a citizen of the world, the son of all continents and cultures.”
The decision to recognise Le Clézio was in line with the Swedish Academy’s recent taste for European authors, leading up to last year’s prize for Doris Lessing.
Le Clézio, whose work is inspired by Robert Louis Stevenson and other great adventure novelists, achieved fame at 23 when he won the prestigious Renaudot prize with Le Procès Verbal, a novel in the avant-garde nouveau roman style of the time. This was published in English in 1964 as The Interrogation.
He made an international breakthrough in 1980 with Desert. The Nobel Academy said that the work “contains magnificent images of a lost culture in the North African desert contrasted with a depiction of Europe seen through the eyes of unwanted immigrants”.
Le Clézio, who was born in Nice and has lived in England, New Mexico and South Korea, said that he was touched by the honour. He mentioned his British father, a surgeon, and his childhood in Mauritius and Nigeria. “I was born of a mix, like many people currently in Europe,” he said.
Hours before the award, Le Clézio said that a Nobel “was something that makes you rebound, that gives you the desire to keep writing”.
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Chapeau, Jean Marie!
To put the records straight, Le Clézio is half-French and half-Mauritian. Don't take the pick of the bunch. I recommend you pay greater attention to his interview and take a closer look at Mauritian history: I was born in Maur. in '64. Does this make a British of me?
Christiane Adone Resch, Saarlouis, Germany
I wonder why the winner is not from outside Europe now that nobel prize is worldwide although I have to addmit that Clezio deserve the prize. I believe there are many living writers as great as him or even greater than him who have never been considered by the Swedish Academy.
chad, guangzhou, china
Congratulations to Jean-Marie! This is a well deserved and long awaited recognition of a truly brilliant and talented writer.
James Gunnee, London,
Le Clezio pere was a British citizen, only because the Brits had conquered Mauritius a few hundred years before he was born. The family is totally French in its roots. To call him English would be quite incorrect. Stop poaching Nobel Prize honours - shades of 1066 all over.
Jay Bhattacharjee, New Delhi ,
Who? Is French still a world language, or an insular language of an insular nation? Does he need the money left behind by the inventor of dynamite? Do the arts need prizes? Isn't this whole thing the idle pretension of a capitalist society which patronises the arts and diminishes them?
Paul Freeman, London, England
Perhaps you would like to mention the fact that Le Clezio holds dual french and Mauritian citizenships. A lot of the material he uses is based on his experiences in the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius where several of his relatives still reside.
Paul Dawes, Coventry, UK.
Jean Marie Le Clezio has also got Mauritian origins!!!
Shrivan, Coventry,
I'm so happy, he really deserves it! a wonderful writer.
Delia, Paris,Fr.,