NO NOBEL LITERATURE PRIZE AFTER #MeToo TURMOIL
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. Swedish Academy says it needs to
‘commit time to recovering public confidence’ after string of resignations and
wide-ranging scandal
A cultural
impresario accused of using his influence to coerce women into having sex.
Powerful associates who are said to have covered for him, playing down his
misconduct or looking the other way. Newly emboldened victims, who have come
forward with accounts of his misbehavior.
"We find it
necessary to commit time to recovering public confidence in the Academy before
the next laureate can be announced," its 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 Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter -- in the wake of the
global #MeToo campaign -- published the testimonies of 18 women claiming to
have been raped, sexually assaulted or harassed by an influential culture figure
with long-standing ties to the Academy.
Jean-Claude Arnault,
the French husband of Academy member and poet Katarina Frostenson, has denied
the allegations, but disagreements within the Academy on how to deal with the
issue sowed deep discord among its 18 members.
The organisation
found itself split between the first woman permanent secretary Sara Danius and
her supporters bidding for reform and another camp defending Frostenson,
prompting six members to quit in recent weeks.
Danius resigned on
April 13 after failing to receive enough support within the Academy. Frostenson
was also among the six who resigned.
"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.
THE STRONG WOMAN
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 members dealing ugly blows to each
other in the media: Horace Engdahl called Danius "the worst"
permanent secretary in the Academy's history.
There was, however,
broad public support in Sweden for Danius, with many donning a pussy-bow
blouse, her signature garment, in protest the following day.
"The strong
woman who tried to clean up the Swedish Academy was forced to leave. I'm
speechless," Annie Loof, leader of the Swedish Centre party tweeted at the
time.
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.
"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 told.
NEPOTISM AND MACHO VALUES
Resigning member
Kjell Espmark told Dagens Nyheter that the Academy's "high goals had given
way for nepotism, attempts to cover up serious violations, stale macho values
and arrogant bullying".
He is one of four
others who resigned and asked the Nobel Foundation, which manages the assets
for all prizes through Alfred Nobel's will, to create a crisis commission to
solve the Academy's woes. The foundation said it was discussing the possibility
of doing so.
Technically, Academy
members have been appointed for life and have not been able to resign, though
they could leave their chairs "empty" by not participating in
meetings and decisions.
However, the Academy
is currently down to 10 active members while its statutes stipulate that 12 are
needed to elect new members.
In order to ensure
the venerable body's survival, the Academy's patron, Sweden's King Carl XVI
Gustaf, announced Wednesday he had changed the statutes, making it possible for
members to resign and be replaced.
The Academy has cut
all ties with Arnault's cultural centre Forum in Stockholm, which it had
subsidised for years and which was a key meeting point for the country's
cultural elite.
The venue, co-owned
by Arnault and his wife, is now closed. Prosecutors have dropped parts of the
investigation against him concerning rape and assault allegations due to lack
of evidence or the statute of limitations.
An internal report
commissioned by the Academy revealed conflicts of interest, as well as the fact
that Academy members had leaked Nobel winners' names.
Meanwhile, Sweden's
Economic Crimes Bureau last week said it was investigating a case linked to the
Academy, likely linked to the subsidies paid to Arnault.
The scandal comes on
the heels of heavy criticism the Academy received in some circles for awarding
the 2016 prize to US singer-songwriter Bob Dylan.
In 2017, it honoured
British author Kazuo Ishiguro in a much less controversial choice.
SOURCE: AFP
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