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| US singer Bob Dylan was controversially awarded the 2016 Literature Nobel Price (AFP) |
STOCKHOLM (AFP) - In tatters after a #MeToo scandal, the Swedish Academy has postponed this year's Nobel Literature Prize, leaving an empty page for 2018 as it attempts to reform the venerable institution.
Created in
1786 by King Gustav III and modelled on its French elder, the Swedish Academy
has selected the winner of the prestigious literary distinction since it was
first awarded in 1901.
The
"Holy Grail" of authors, poets, and playwrights, the Nobel has gone
to some of the greatest writers of all time, from Albert Camus to Samuel
Beckett and Ernest Hemingway.
But the
list of recipients also includes US rock icon Bob Dylan, the 2016 choice
harshly criticised by some who lambasted the Academy for overlooking other
popular and critically-acclaimed authors -- such as American novelist Philip
Roth, who died in May 2017 without getting the nod.
After the
Dylan controversy, the Academy attempted to smooth things over last year with
an uncontroversial laureate, Kazuo Ishiguro, a British author of Japanese
origin whose nomination enjoyed broad consensus.
But just
three weeks after that announcement, the institution again found itself in
controversy, this time in the eye of the #MeToo hurricane.
Frenchman
Jean-Claude Arnault, married to an Academy member, and the head of an
influential cultural club in Stockholm, was accused of rape and sexual assault.
An internal
Academy probe also revealed conflicts of interest between him and the
institution, which had funded his club for years.
Arnault
ultimately faced trial on two counts of raping a woman in 2011. His verdict is
due on Monday, and the prosecution has sought a three-year sentence.
A
haemorrhaging Academy
The Academy
has been deeply divided over how to deal with Arnault and on the reforms it
needs to undertake.
Some of the
18 members, who are appointed for life, have refused to participate in the
Academy's work over the row -- including its first female permanent secretary
Sara Danius -- leaving it without a quorum.
And in the
months since the scandal erupted, the usually-discreet members have exchanged
ugly jibes in the media.
Paralysed
and ridiculed around the world, the scandal forced the Academy's hand: it
announced in May that it would postpone by one year the 2018 Nobel Literature
Prize, a first in 70 years.
The 2018
laureate will be announced at the same time as the 2019 prize.
"I
could see that there were weaknesses in their organisation but I would never
have thought something like this could happen," Lars Heikensten, director
of the Nobel Foundation that finances the prizes, told AFP.
"We
hope that they will be able to clear up their things."
'Ridiculous' and 'chauvinist'
With the
Academy in shambles and no literature prize to look forward to this year, a
group of Swedish cultural figures decided to create their own award pending the
Nobel's return next year.
The
"New Academy Prize in Literature" was devised as a protest to
denounce "bias, arrogance and sexism", and "remind people that
literature and culture at large should promote democracy, transparency, empathy
and respect, without privilege", according to the founders who include
authors, artists and journalists.
It will be
announced on October 12.
The Swedish
Academy, a hermetic circle whose deliberations in Stockholm's cobblestoned Old
Town whose deliberations are kept secret for 50 years, is seen as out-of-touch
with reality and modern times.
"Lifetime
membership and an ageing population also create a difficult situation, with
some members still active at an age where they no longer have the capacity to
work professionally, or understand how the Academy is perceived by the
public," Madelaine Levy, literary critic at daily Svenska Dagbladet, told
AFP.
The public
has lost confidence in the body, perceiving it as "ridiculous" and
"chauvinist", she said.
"The
Academy needs reform, namely more transparency and stricter conflict of
interest regulations."
Publishers
meanwhile fear the Academy's crisis is far from over.
"I'm
keeping my fingers crossed but as things are now I would say I am
uncertain" there will be a Nobel Literature Prize in 2019, Hakan
Bravinger, an editor at Sweden's second-biggest publishing house Norstedts,
told AFP.

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