All the prizes, everything is controlled by men. “Men and women confided in me, told me they wish they’d written that book,” Ernaux told The New York Times in 2020. It seems, she writes, “less familiar than I had thought.” Instead, it is she who feels the urge to speak. It took her decades to write about one of the most agonizing events of her life — a confusing sexual experience she had in the summer of 1958, when she was 18, which left her feeling ashamed and abandoned, and resulted in depression and an eating disorder. Ernaux has written about her method. This pastiche of images and insights can seem like a haphazard swirl, but it is, Ernaux’s books suggest, the only authentic way to twine the personal and the historical. “For me, the memory of times past is linked to meals and the conversations around them. This week, Unibet, based in Malta, was allowing its customers to bet on the novelists Hilary Mantel and Javier Marías to win. Who won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature? The list of Nobel laureates include Toni Morrison, Gabriel García Márquez and Pablo Neruda. Ernaux looked a little stunned all evening. It’s a work of homespun sociology that, as Rosier puts it, becomes an “indictment of modern consumerism and the way it robs the individual of their autonomy.” The big-box store, Ernaux observes, boxes you in: You just want to pick up some cheese or some cereal, but it stratifies you by class, reduces you to the items on your shopping list, robs you of freedom. She does not feel humiliated. Buchautor Annie Ernaux Annie Ernaux, geboren 1940 in Lillebonne, Frankreich, aufgewachsen in in Yvetot in der Normandie, bezeichnet sich als "Ethnologin ihrer selbst". That same rawness and receptivity is always there. Books by Annie Ernaux on display at the Swedish Academy in Stockholm on Thursday. I dream of a sentence that would contain them both, seamlessly, by way of a new syntax,” she writes. The award was even a surprise to Gurnah himself. (Ernaux) bei Perlentaucher . Yet the academy has a checkered history with Rushdie. The two authors’ work has much in common — both being happy to expose all aspects of their lives — and they have long supported each other. Annie Ernaux unequivocally as a "feminist writer" (205). Author: Annie Ernaux, translated by Tanya Leslie. Pionnière de l’auto-fiction, autrice de « L’Événement » et de tant d’autres livres qui ont permis de lever le voile sur l’intimité des femmes avec beaucoup de pudeur, mais sans fard. PARIS — “Happening,” Audrey Diwan’s film about a 1960s back-street abortion in France, was based on a real-life experience of the French author Annie Ernaux, who chronicled her 1963 abortion in a book of the same name, published in 2000. Ad Choices. – and some English-speaking critics and publishers are now tempted to place it as memoir. Her first book, “Cleaned Out,” from 1974, is a bracing account of her working-class childhood in Normandy, and a back-alley abortion she underwent, published shortly before the procedure became legal in France. President Emmanuel Macron of France praised Ernaux as the voice of “women’s freedom” and of “the century’s forgotten.” Mr. Macron said on Twitter that “for the past 50 years, Annie Ernaux has been writing the novel of the collective and intimate memory of our country.”. She had always been “a great personal inspiration,” he added. Previous recipients have included titans of literature such as Toni Morrison, J.M. . But Ernaux doesn’t give these events a single name. Annie Ernaux. The writer Kate Zambreno will moderate. June 5, 2023 10:29am. After she has travelled to Paris to obtain the abortion, she hears that “a woman who lived round the corner would do it for three hundred francs. It should be a moment of closure. Annie Ernaux: "Il Nobel è caduto sulla mia vita come una bomba" Lo sfogo della scrittrice francese insignita del premio nell'ottobre 2022: «Da allora non riesco più a concentrarmi sulla . She wrote her first book in secret from her husband, who belittled her writing. Reprodução. All her writing comes from the “urgency to save something”, she says, to preserve memories lest they be forgotten and disappear. Books by Annie Ernaux on display at the Swedish Academy in Stockholm after the announcement that Ernaux had received the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature. She had been scheduled to speak at a French bookstore on the Upper East Side; the organizers told me that only a few dozen people had signed up for the event before the prize was announced. “It’s as if she’s carving each sentence onto the surface of a table with a knife.”, It took her decades to write about one of the most agonizing events of her life — a confusing sexual experience she had in the summer of 1958, when she was 18, which left her feeling ashamed and abandoned, and resulted in depression and an eating disorder. No one has ever looked at her with such a “heavy gaze.” They dance at a counsellors’ party. The location does not speak to her. The French author Annie Ernaux has won the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature for "the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements, collective restraints of personal . Her work examines her memories, sometimes revisiting events in later works and reconstructing them, thus revealing the artifice of her own genre. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. “To receive the Nobel Prize is, for me, a responsibility to continue,” she said, “and to be open not only to the problems that I mentioned but to the course of the world, to the desire for peace that has always driven me.” She also highlighted her politics: “Speaking from my condition as a woman,” she said, “it does not seem to me that we, women, have become equal in freedom, in power.”. I still can’t think about it without emotion.”, There were moments when her mother seemed far away and others when she seemed all-knowing. Anthony Cousins, who oversees sports betting operations for Kindred Group, whose brands include Unibet, said by telephone that drawing up the list of favorites for the prize was “more tricky” than for other awards, since the Swedish Academy, which picks the winner, does not release a list of nominees. The Swedish Academy, which decides the prize, lauded “the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory.”, Alex Marshall, Alexandra Alter, Laura Cappelle and Aurelien Breeden, For decades, the French writer Annie Ernaux has dissected the most humiliating, private and scandalous moments from her past with almost clinical precision: “I shall carry out an ethnological study of myself,” she wrote in her 1997 memoir “Shame.”. In France, they have brought Ernaux fame, prizes, and a number of stylistic descendants. “She achieved a hugely important formal revolution in literature, away from metaphors, pretty sentences and characters,” he said. “She was attacked, and she persisted.” Ernaux had never been part of France’s rarefied literary scene, he added. The emotional history, she hopes, will be the most personal one, the truest one. […] anderen, ihre eigene Scham. Ernaux is a brave and interesting choice. Her visionary nonfiction is a profound achievement, and it richly deserves the wide readership this prize will attract. The film’s suspense and sense of lingering fear derive from one central question: Will the people the main character encounters, from doctors to her fellow university students, help or denounce her? stops at my generation. She discovered the fact aged 10, but no one had ever felt able to talk about it. That’s quite a discovery – it wasn’t clear in my head, and through writing, suddenly it became clear.”, One of Ernaux’s recent big-selling books in France, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman, will be published in English early next year – the story of an 18-year-old’s troubling first sexual experiences in 1958 and the shaming of young girls by their peer group. Each looks out levelly at the world; each derives maximum effect from a minimum of words. 1 of 5 stars 2 of 5 stars 3 of 5 stars 4 of 5 stars 5 of 5 stars. . Instead, he said, it “partly” based odds on who had been tipped for the prize before, and then changed those odds as literary fans placed their bets and the company could see who was generating excitement. She is one of the few women on France’s male-dominated high school literature syllabuses. Fred Tanneau/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images. Philippe Besson: ‘I told Macron he had zero chance of becoming president’, The Collection by Nina Leger review – a quest for pleasure, Toni Morrison remembered by Édouard Louis: ‘Her laugh was her revenge against the world’, Lost Proust stories of homosexual love finally published, The Weil Conjectures by Karen Olsson review – maths and mysticism, In brief: Mud and Stars; Call Him Mine; A Certain Idea of France – reviews, Édouard Louis: ‘We didn’t reject literature – it rejected us’, Animalia by Jean-Baptiste Del Amo review – war, violence, sickness and cruelty, Judith Kerr, beloved author of The Tiger Who Came to Tea, dies aged 95. Jonathan Nackstrand/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images. French writer Annie Ernaux delivered her Nobel lecture on Wednesday in Stockholm, Sweden, and spoke of how she hopes her work, which mixes fiction and memoir. First she scandalized Washington. Ernaux does not so much reveal the past—she does not pretend to have any authoritative access to it—as unpack it. Elizabeth A. Harris contributed reporting from New York. This diary, released in English earlier this month, covers 1988-90, tracing an affair between Ernaux and a married Soviet diplomat. This is an author whose bravery extends to occasionally publishing what are actually just her diaries. “I have such admiration for her, not just as a writer, but for her activism,” Eribon said in a telephone call. Ernaux becomes only the 17th woman to have been awarded the prize, which has been given to 119 writers since it was formed in 1901. buy anything from white mice and revolvers to Viagra and dildos.” And here, just a few pages later, is an intimate story of watching one’s children have children of their own. This both does and doesn’t matter: Ten years is a very short time in the greater scheme of History, but immense when life is just beginning. She had initially struggled to find stories to help her process the experience, even starting to write a book herself as a way of filling that gap. Oct. 8, 2022. Her account of living through her descent and hospitalisation is warm and at times funny – “grotesque maybe”, she corrects. Prize share: 1/1. There’s a fair bit of feminism in this idea. So I took that as a central thread. The honors were first awarded in 1901, five years after his death, and celebrate scientific discovery, medical innovation, literary accomplishment and measures toward forging peace. “What is the point of writing,” she says, “if not to unearth things?”, In this attempt at unearthing, her prose combines the spare and the unsparing. In “A Woman’s Story,” she talks about her mother’s death. For decades, Annie Ernaux has made a career of mining her own shame: She is a writer dedicated to re-examining her past and cataloging her humiliations and anxieties with precision. “Annie Ernaux didn’t try to fit into existing definitions of literature, of what is beautiful: she came up with her own.”, Ernaux “often paid for this,” Louis added. Dagens Nyheter, a Swedish newspaper, reported on Tuesday that the listings had been removed after it alerted Unibet to the issue. “I realized that I’d lost a contact lens,” Ernaux writes in “Getting Lost.” “I found it on his penis.” If I’ve read a more memorable pair of sentences in the last five years, I can’t remember them. This Time Tomorrow is a document of the different textures of our common grief. ISBN 9783518427927, Gebunden, 163 Seiten, 20.00 EUR. The book’s tone is thin, bare and chapped, I wrote in my review of it, as if broadcast in mono instead of stereo, in the best sense. It’s as if she invented her own genre and perfected it.”. “Annie Ernaux didn’t try to fit into existing definitions of literature, of what is beautiful: She came up with her own.”. Anamaria Vartolomei, at right, with Louise Orry-Diquéro, left, and Luàna Bajrami in a scene from “Happening.”. Guideline Price: £8.99. Arnault, who was later jailed for rape, was also accused of leaking the names of prize winners to bookmakers. Just ten years after she left camp, the country was overtaken by the sexual revolution. So who are Europe’s betting sites tipping this year? Anders Olsson, the chair of the academy’s Nobel Committee, defended the choice of another European writer, saying at a news conference that there had been a dearth of female winners in the past and that that needed to change. “I realized that I’d lost a contact lens,” Ernaux writes. She found broad commercial success in France in 1992, when she released “Simple Passion,” an explosive book that detailed her affair with a foreign diplomat. Ernaux has told Swedish television that the Nobel is a “great honor” and “responsibility.”. Diwan was drawn to Ernaux’s “Happening” after she had ended a pregnancy. There is nothing bogus or boring about either. The French author of mostly autobiographical work takes the prestigious books prize for the 'courage and clinical acuity' of her writing Annie Ernaux: the 2022 Nobel literature laureate's. “Every time I write, I feel like there has been no book like this before,” she told that audience last October. Ernaux, 82, is the author of 20 or so works of fiction and memoir. Cousins said his company did not reach out to academy members to work out who might win. He tries to sleep with her. Ernaux is speaking about the power of literature to change the world. Revisiting her 18-year-old self, who was shattered by the encounter with an older man, Ernaux examines how her identity as a writer and a woman stem from that moment. Ernaux will also discuss her body of work and her latest novel to appear in English, “Getting Lost,” on Monday evening at Albertine in New York, a bilingual bookstore related to the French Embassy. She feels women’s battle for equal rights has progressed in the last few years, but is far from over. It’s not her first book about lust and obsession. Zu Ehren von Annie Ernaux: Im Literaturhaus diskutieren Iris Radisch und Rainer Moritz über das Werk der Literaturnobelpreisträgerin. “I am trying to be inside. “It was as if all the hurt of her life was resurfacing. Seven Stories, which is based in New York City, has been publishing Ernaux for 31 years, according to its founder, Dan Simon. Politics is “inseparable from writing”, she feels. In “A Girl’s Story,” Ernaux finds herself toggling between the understandings she has reached in her seventies and the confusions she endured as a teen-ager. She seems desperate to put it all on the page: period blood, abortions, contraceptive pills, dirty underwear, erections, and semen. Happening (French: L'Événement) is a 2000 autobiographical novel by Annie Ernaux. At the end of the book, Ernaux describes visiting the camp a few years after working there. Oct. 6, 2022Oct. “Don’t tell us the story of your life, it’s full of holes,” the other counsellors like to say. But none of this investigating is done, one senses, with the expectation of ever truly settling on a truth. Unibet’s users were also placing lots of bets on Jon Fosse, a star Norwegian novelist, whom it lists as the joint eighth favorite. Annie Ernaux on the malaise of the grocery store. Sometimes I don’t know what truth I’m looking for, but it’s always a truth that I’m seeking,” she says. Ellen Mattson on Happening (L'Événement) “If you helped a woman who wanted to have an illegal abortion, you could go to jail. Some authors questioned whether a songwriter was an appropriate choice, even as others praised the Swedish Academy, which awards the prize, for expanding the accepted definition of literature. She is pleased to be desired by someone. The film struck a chord with viewers worldwide and fed into larger debates around the perception of abortion. Past winners have included Toni Morrison, J.M. Exteriors, Fitzcarraldo's latest translation from . Completion, we’re told, is a necessary condition for truth. Ladbrokes, a major British company, has Salman Rushdie, the Booker Prize-winning author of “Midnight’s Children” and “The Satanic Verses,” as its favorite. Loss was omnipresent. French writer Annie Ernaux's new book, "Getting Lost," comprises diary entries from 1988 through 1990; they recount her affair in Paris with a married Soviet diplomat. I am only the archivist,” she writes in her 1988 book, “A Woman’s Story.”. It was about a feeling of “abandonment”, she says. When I got there, the line was around the corner. Ernaux has long been a favorite for the Nobel Prize, which is given for a writer’s entire body of work, and comes with an award of 10 million Swedish krona, or about $911,000. “I found it on his penis.”, S, as she refers to him, is a younger man. The French novelist Annie Ernaux was awarded one of literature’s highest honors for her body of work that has spoken particularly to women and to others who, like her, come from the working class. Even more so at the moment.”. Im Jahr 2022 erhielt sie den Literaturnobelpreis. But it may not be able to avoid controversy this year. Since then, the Nobel Prizes have granted a certain exalted status to its recipients, and a sizable sum — each full share this year is worth 10 million Swedish kronor, or about $907,000, according to the prizes’ website. France’s literary establishment cheered Annie Ernaux’s Nobel Prize on Thursday, but the award spoke to one author in particular: Édouard Louis, the working-class gay writer who became a literary sensation after publishing 2014’s “The End of Eddy,” a thinly veiled account of his brutal childhood. Many end up disappointed, because the bookmakers’ favorites rarely win. . He likes the dumbest game shows. Ernaux has frequently examined and re-examined the same events in her life from different angles. Coetzee and even Bob Dylan. “He’s our biggest liability,” Cousins said. “Two years ago, a reading was staged at the Comédie Française [France’s national theatre], it was always full and there was always someone who fainted, often men,” she says. The Moving Clarity of Annie Ernaux. Synopsis [ edit ] Set in 1963, four years before the legalization of oral contraception in France and twelve years before the Veil Act , the autobiographical narrative describes the troubles a young student faces when seeking out an illegal abortion . While he has said he would accept the new law, he said on the campaign trail in March that abortion was “always a tragedy for a woman.”, “There is this constructed social shame that women are meant to feel,” Diwan said, “and the sense that if we talk about it, we take the risk of calling into question this right, which in the end is never assured.”. “She always found a way to capture in one sentence what I couldn’t say in a page,” Eribon added. I thought that if I wrote, I would avenge my whole people, but no, I would simply have succeeded as an individual. What’s different about Ernaux is that her books for the past 30 years have been meticulously pieced together from observation and memory of real events; everything has to be accurate and factual, down to the very precise words of an era, the words of a song, the exact colour of a jumper, all set within gripping narratives. The French writer and 2022 Nobel Prize awardee Annie Ernaux, whose novels and memoirs have gained her a devoted following (and whose autobiographical L'Événement was adapted just last year into. Where de Beauvoir describes the process in theory, Ernaux renders it in visceral detail: the food that she eats, the food she purges, the sight of blood in her underwear. Annie Ernaux has been named as the recipient of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature. “The world is made to be pounced on and enjoyed,” she has written. We asked three members of the literature committee at the Swedish Academy - who decide on the year's Nobel Prize in Literature - to give us their recommendations. “I really don’t feel we remain as we are,” she said. Gamblers have placed bets on the rarefied literary prize for years. “To go all the way to the end of ’58 means agreeing to the demolition of all the interpretations I’ve assembled over the years,” Annie Ernaux writes in “A Girl’s Story” (Seven Stories), published in French in 2016, and now in English, translated by Alison L. Strayer. De Beauvoir wrote to say that she preferred the first.) When I read about the challenges to Roe v. Wade in the United States, they echo this story strongly, because we’re talking about the very same legal mechanisms.”. You can’t really say what the genre is, it’s not autofiction, it’s not, strictly speaking, memoir. Interested in reading a book by 2022 literature laureate Annie Ernaux but don't know where to start? An unsparing account of her abortion in 1963 as a college student, this book includes scenes of Ernaux attempting to carry out the procedure herself with knitting needles. In my diary I would write, “it” or “that thing,” only once “pregnant.”. She likes to blur the line between the two. J. Howard Rosier wrote about it for us this week. She clings to her toiletry bag as a way to not let things slip away. The Swedish Academy, the body that oversees the Nobel Prize in Literature, will announce its choice for the award in Stockholm on Thursday around 1 p.m. Swedish time (7 a.m. Eastern). Ernaux has long been tipped for the prize for her autobiographical books covering issues from a backstreet abortion to her passionate affairs. “It took me a little while to be persuaded,” he told the BBC. Abortion, sex and family secrets: Annie Ernaux, France's great truth teller, t’s rare for a writer to be self-conscious about the number of books lining the walls of their living room, particularly when they are one of France’s greatest living writers. Ernaux, a feminist who once wondered whether she would die “without seeing the women’s revolution”, says she has lived through massive change for women in France and, as a 45-year-old in the 1980s, lived in a way “almost impossible to countenance in the 1950s”. Ernaux has said that memory has been her muse for decades, and even after all these years, she still finds inspiration in it. Gurnah’s books were hard to find a year ago, with many out of print. The act of submerging yourself in an era and telling a story there, “to recreate and rebuild from words and feelings” is clearly a literary act, she believes. After all, our childhood is the matrix for everything.”. “Writing is a path to knowledge.”. Édouard Louis on Annie Ernaux: She ‘came up with her own’ definition of literature. To be in the pure immanence of a moment.”. In 1989, several members resigned over its refusal to condemn the ayatollah’s edict, and it wasn’t until 2016 that the academy issued a statement denouncing the order. The marriage unraveled shortly after the publication of her third book, “A Frozen Woman,” in 1981, which explored her discomfort with marriage and motherhood. Ernaux won the Nobel Prize in Literature in October 2022 for her work charting the lives of women in France from the 1960s onwards, including abortion drama Happening, which formed […] One way to read Ernaux’s book is as an attempt to understand that opaque, painful, essential process of “becoming.” (Ernaux sent her first book to de Beauvoir, and also her second. October 7, 2022. Ernaux promises to keep writing. As our reviewer, Edmund White, wrote: “‘The Years’ is an earnest, fearless book, a ‘Remembrance of Things Past’ for our age of media domination and consumerism, for our period of absolute commodity fetishism.”, Ernaux returns to an episode from 50 years earlier: her first sexual experience, a traumatic one, and its ramifications throughout her life. “I’m a replacement child, I would not have been born if my sister had lived. Soon afterward, the academy announced that it was postponing the 2018 award. Of visitors to the other women who shared her room, she would say: ‘Don’t worry about them, they’re customers and half don’t pay’. Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning, © 2023 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. The sex is torrid, and described with a lemony eye for detail. This epic novel by Naipaul, a Nobel laureate, revolves around one man's lifelong search for a house to call his own. But her total self-possession was also evident. There was a whole generation of twentysomething women whose view of masculine privilege had changed.”. “For me it represents something huge, on behalf of those I come from,” she added, a reference to her working class background, which is rarely depicted in literature. When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. It, too, is autobiographical, but also functions as a generational memoir of postwar France. President Emmanuel Macron initially opposed a new 14-week limit (up from 12 weeks) passed by France’s Parliament in February. Sheila Heti is the author of 10 books, including "Motherhood . pic.twitter.com/k7ner4g23b. Ernaux says that being a woman meant the attacks were more virulent. Amid the heated speculation in the run-up to that year’s award, the literature prize was called out for lacking diversity among its winners. People said it was as if it came out of nowhere but that’s not true. Ernaux was pushed on by her mother, who had left school aged 12 but was a voracious reader and believed books and learning were the ticket to a different future. Central to her work is an awareness that the most intimate moments of life are always governed by the circumstances in which they occur—that probing the personal will also involve investigating the historical. Other French authors and playwrights to have won include Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre. Critics on the classics: our 1991 review of “Thelma & Louise.”. Annie Ernaux (Goodreads Author), Linda Coverdale (Translator), Tanya Leslie (Translator) 4.13 avg rating — 4,255 ratings — published 1981 — 33 editions. And in one really strange moment, after having spent a night with that man, I went to see her and she suddenly said: “Aren’t you ashamed?”, Ernaux wrote the diary to cope. The bookmakers’ favorite is Salman Rushdie, the Booker Prize-winning author of “Midnight’s Children” who was stabbed in August on a western New York stage in what prosecutors said was a premeditated attack. Harvey, to burn down the hall. What exactly happened between Neanderthals and humans? But it was that “experience of limitation”, that unwritten rule “not to venture above your station in life”, that defined the tough world of factories and farm-workers she grew up in, she says. “I would go so far as to judge my previous books as vague approximations” of reality, Ernaux writes in “A Girl’s Story.” In one, she describes a love affair; in another, the relationship between her parents. “Seduction” is not the right word for what happens next. It’s rarer, and has more amperage, the other way around: Benjamin and Mrs. Robinson, Harry Styles and Olivia Wilde. The ‘exceptional and unique writer’ chronicles her life, including an abortion, love and infidelity. The same relationship was recounted in her novel “Simple Passion.”, Ernaux has characterized her language as “brutally direct, working-class and sometimes obscene.” She has an antagonism toward what she has called “the French tradition of the polished sentence, of ‘good taste’ in literature.”. She has written about the deaths of her parents. Yale University Press is scheduled to publish Ernaux’s “Look at the Lights, My Love,” a diaristic meditation on big-box superstores, as part of its translation series in 2023. The book sold 200,000 copies in its first two months. There are times when you fear it might end, as did Daniel Fish’s 2018 reimagining of “Oklahoma” on Broadway, with the cast drenched in blood. Determining which ones were used at the time and how took “a ridiculous amount of work,” Diwan said, because illegal abortions are so rarely represented in media, and they weren’t recorded. The difficulty of interiority is perhaps one reason that Ernaux, both as a girl and as an adult, can’t help but turn to those around her for cues. By Sheila Heti. “Men and women confided in me, told me they wish they’d written that book,” Ernaux told The Times in 2020. Happening is typical of Ernaux’s style of storytelling; she painstakingly recreates the real events down to the abortionist boiling her instruments on the kitchen stove, the failed attempts, and the eventual, agonising shock expulsion of a fetus in a university toilet and the medical trouble that follows. Can the Nobel Prize in Literature avoid another controversy? One person has suggested the rapper Eminem. In France, Ernaux, who for many years taught literature at secondary school, is seen as perhaps the greatest chronicler of French society in the last 50 years – a kind of guardian of collective memory. “It’s the work of a novelist to tell the truth. Of course, our recollections aren’t continuous, and you can’t always get “inside,” no matter how many angles you try. When the prize returned in 2019, the academy promised a reset but set off another scandal by giving the award to Peter Handke, the Austrian novelist and playwright. John Donatich, the director of Yale University Press, says: “As a great admirer of Annie Ernaux’s extraordinary work, it is a particular pleasure for me to see her receive this global recognition. Und Schweigen. Here is the rise of the Internet, where “we could research the symptoms of throat cancer, recipes for moussaka, the age of Catherine Deneuve, the weather in Osaka . what prosecutors said was a premeditated attack, resigned over its refusal to condemn the ayatollah’s edict.
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