The 82-year-old writer was unreachable during the morning
and at the time of the announcement was still unaware she had been awarded the
prize.
"With great courage and clinical acuity, Annie Ernaux
reveals the agony of the class experience, describing the shame, humiliation,
jealousy or inability to see who you are, achieving something admirable and
enduring," the jury explained.
Annie Ernaux was born in 1940 and grew up in the small town
of Yvetot in Normandy, where her parents had a grocery shop and a café. Her
path to becoming a writer was long and difficult.
"In her writing, the winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize in
literature, Annie Ernaux, consistently and from different angles, examines a
life marked by strong disparities in relation to gender, language and
class," says the jury about this author.
Annie Ernaux made her debut in 1974 and has written more
than 30 literary works, the last of which was published already this year.
"Annie Ernaux manifestly believes in the liberating power of writing. Her
work is uncompromising and written in simple, clear language," explains
the statement.
Last year's Nobel Prize went to Tanzanian-born British
writer Abdulrazak Gurnah. Peter Handke, Olga Tokarczuk Kazuo Ishiguro, Bob
Dylan and Mario Vargas Llosa have been some of the authors, from many different
backgrounds and genres, laureated in recent years. Portuguese writer José
Saramago was the winner in 1998.
The announcement of the Nobel Prize for Medicine, awarded
this Monday to the Swedish Svante Pääbo, marked the start of the 2022 Nobel
season, which culminates on 7 October with the Nobel Peace Prize, a highly
anticipated category this year, at a time of war in Europe.
In between, prizes for Chemistry (Carolyn R. Bertozzi,
Morten Meldal, Barry Sharpless) and Physics (Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and
Anton Zeilinger) have already been awarded. On 10 October the winner of the
Sveriges Riksbank Prize (the Swedish central bank) in Economic Sciences, in
memory of Alfred Nobel, the patron of the prizes, will also be known, according
to the respective internet site.
All categories will be announced in Stockholm, except the
Nobel Peace Prize which, as usual, will be awarded by the Norwegian Nobel
Committee and will be held at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo next
Friday, 7 October.