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Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa.
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Twenty-eight years later, the Nobel Prize in Literature returned to South America - yesterday at 19 o'clock, the 2010 Nobel Prize in Literature was announced at the Swedish Academy, and Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa won the prize.
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Mario Vargas Llosa is a writer and poet with dual Peruvian and Spanish citizenship. He has written **, scripts, essays, poems, literary criticism, political essays, and has also directed stage plays, films, hosted radio and television programs, and engaged in politics. The treacherous and strange ** techniques and rich and profound content brought him the title of "Master of Structural Realism", which is mostly translated as Yousa or Rosa in Taiwan.
Mario is the first name, Vargas is the father's surname, and Llosa is the mother's surname, representing Mario's father's and mother's families, respectively.
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1. The winner of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Literature is Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa.
2. About the author:
Mario Vargas Llosa (born 1936) in Arequipa, Peru, is a writer and poet with dual Peruvian and Spanish citizenship. He has written more than 30 works, including **, plays and essays, and his representative works include "The City and the Dog" (1963), "The Green House" (1965) and "Long Talk in the Bar" (1969).
He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010.
The award was given "for his cartographic-like depiction of power structures and his poignant portrayal of the individual's image of resistance, defiance, and frustration."
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Peruvian poet and writer Mario Vargas Llosa
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Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa.
The winning entry is The City and the Dog.
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Peruvian-Spanish (dual nationality) famous writer Maria Vargas Llosa
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In 2010, a Chinese writer who opposed the Chinese Communist Party won the Nobel Prize.
But for the sake of face, China erased this glorious Nobel Prize winner.
Because this gentleman is in prison and writes n literary works.
The world, Europe, and the United States have all persuaded China to release people, but what is the attitude of the so-called Communist Party?
It can well be imagined. Do you dare to put it? Shame on you, don't let it go, how to face other countries in the future.
If you win the Nobel Prize, you won't be killed. With the title, you can only be born in prison.
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Mario Vargas Llosa.
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Mario Vargas Llosa
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The winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature is Mo Yan. Mo Yan, formerly known as Guan Moye, was born on February 17, 1955, and his ancestral home is Gaomi, Shandong, and he is the first Chinese writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. Since the 1980s, he has risen to prominence with a series of vernacular works, full of complex feelings of nostalgia and resentment, and is classified as a literary writer seeking roots.
The 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature was announced on October 11 at 1 p.m. Stockholm time. Peter Enlund, permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy of Letters, announced at the Nobel Prize Jury of the Swedish Academy of Letters that Chinese writer Mo Yan has won the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature. The Swedish Academy said in a press release on the same day:
From a historical and social perspective, Mo Yan uses the fusion of reality and fantasy to create an evocative sensory world in his works.
Nobel Prize in Literature Judge.
1. In an exclusive interview with Xinhua News Agency, Swedish sinologist Ma Yueran said that Mo Yan is a very good writer, his works are very imaginative and humorous, and he is very good at telling stories. This Mo Yan award will further introduce Chinese literature to the world.
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The winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature is Mo Yan.
Mo Yan, whose real name is Guan Moye, is currently a professor at Beijing Normal University and the director of the International Writing Center. In October 2012, he became the first Chinese Nobel Prize winner in literature. In 2021, he became a distinguished professor of Hebei University.
Mo Yan's works are rooted in ancient and profound civilizations, with infinitely rich and scientifically rigorous imagination space, and his writing thinking is novel and unique, showing the tragedies and wars experienced by China's vast cultural melting pot in modern history with fierce and tender language, reflecting the life of an era full of love, pain and unity.
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Mo Yan didn't just win the Nobel Prize in Literature for a certain work. Many people mistakenly believe that Mo Yan won the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature for "Frog", which was not even available in English and Swedish in 2012, but Mo Yan won the Lifetime Achievement Award. Cluster rows.
In 2012, Mo Yan won the Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first Chinese writer to win the prize. When the Nobel Prize in Literature was announced in 2012, the Nobel Prize in Literature jury specifically mentioned five of Mo Yan's works: "Frog", "Red Sorghum", "Sandalwood Punishment", "Rich Breasts and Fat Buttocks", "Wine Country", "Life and Death Fatigue", all of which have become widely circulated literary classics.
Experienced. On July 14, 2007, he published the anthology "Say It, Mo Yan", which is divided into three volumes, comprehensively showing Mo Yan's mental journey.
In 2008, he won the Dream of the Red Chamber Award at Hong Kong Baptist University and the Newman Award for Chinese Literature in the United States for "Fatigue of Life and Death".
In 2009, he published the long story "Frog", which tells the life experience of the "aunt" of a rural female doctor who has been engaged in obstetrics and gynecology for more than 50 years, reflecting the ups and downs of rural fertility history in New China in the past 60 years.
In July 2011, he won the Korean Manhae Culture Award, becoming the first Chinese writer to win the award. In August, "Frog" won the Mao Dun Literature Award; In November, he was elected vice chairman of the 8th National Committee of the Chinese Writers Association.
On October 11, 2012, he won the Nobel Prize in Literary Excellence, becoming the first Chinese writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. In November, he won the Golden Lion Award for Screenwriting for the drama "Our Jing Ke".
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Mo Yan won the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature for "Frog". In 2011, he won the Mao Dun Literature Award for "Frog". He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012.
The award was awarded for its fusion of folktales, history and contemporary society through hallucinatory realism.
"Frog" is a long-form masterpiece that Mo Yan has been brewing for more than ten years, has been working for four years, changed his manuscript three times, and has painstakingly created a masterpiece that touches the most sore part of the soul of the Chinese people.
**Composed of four long letters and a play written by playwright Tadpole to Japanese writer Yoshito Sugitani, it tells the life story of an aunt, a rural obstetrician and gynecologist, and mercilessly dissects the humble soul of contemporary intellectuals in vivid and touching detail as it shows the same skin beam of the 60-year turbulent fertility history of rural China.
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The winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Literature was Gabriel García Márquez. He is a Colombian homemaker, journalist, and cultural celebrity beloved by literary readers around the world. He has a unique style of creation, and is known as a representative of "magical realism", and has been nominated for the Nobel Prize for Funny and Disgusting Studies many times.
Márquez's representative works include "Love in the Time of Cholera", "One Hundred Years of Solitude", "Love of the Mountain Hands in the Age of Cholera", "The Man by the Ancient Tree", etc., which have been widely praised for their depth, breadth and significance, and have had an important impact on world literature.
Mo Yan (February 17, 1955), formerly known as Guan Moye, was born in Gaomi County, Shandong Province, and is a famous contemporary Chinese writer. Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, The Open University of Hong Kong, Adjunct Professor of Qingdao University of Science and Technology. Since the mid-1980s, he has risen to prominence with a series of vernacular works, full of complex emotions of "nostalgia" and "resentment", and is classified as a writer of "root-seeking literature". >>>More
Patrick Modiano (1945- ) was born on July 30, 1945 in Boulogne-Billancourt, France, and is unanimously recognized by French critics as one of the most talented writers in France today. His works include "Star Square", "Night Watch", "Ring Road", "La Combe Lucien", "The Bleak Villa", "Family Handbook", "Dark Shop Street", "Youth", "The Path of Memory", "Such Brave Boys", "Disappearing Block". >>>More
Also Shanghai Shanshan Hanshe Hanshe Hanshe Huazi.
Yasunari Kawabata and Kenzaburo Oe.
Mullis was born in North Carolina in December 1944.
In 1972, Mullis received his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, where his research focused on how to synthesize proteins and study their structure. After two years as a postdoctoral fellow, Mullis then moved to work at Cetus, a biotechnology company. Mullis worked as a DNA chemist at Cetus for 7 years. >>>More