Why hasn t Haruki Murakami won the Nobel yet?

Updated on culture 2024-03-25
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    I haven't heard of him, why give it to him. Did you give a gift?

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Japanese writer Haruki Murakami, known as the "little plum" of the Nobel Prize world, has been regarded as the favorite for the Nobel Prize in Literature for seven consecutive years since 2009, but has failed to win the prize.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Haruki Murakami has been nominated several times, no one knows about this, only the Nobel Prize official knows about this, the Nobel Prize nominees list has been kept secret for 50 years, and now only the list of nominees before 1967 can be found on the official website.

    The so-called Haruki Murakami was nominated, how many times he was nominated, this is from the betting **, not before the official Nobel Prize winners are announced every year, the betting ** will publish its own list, which is the most likely to win the winner, as well as the odds. This list is for gambling purposes and has nothing to do with the Nobel Prize official.

    Haruki Murakami has been on this gambling list all year round, and many people take it seriously, thinking that he has really been nominated many times, failed many times, and then was jokingly called an escort.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    As of April 2022, Haruki Murakami has not won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

    As a famous contemporary Japanese writer, Haruki Murakami has won numerous awards in his life, but he has never won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

    For more than ten years, Haruki Murakami has been acting as a background board for the Nobel Prize in Literature, and one of the reasons why Haruki Murakami has been excluded from the Nobel Prize for many years is said to be that Haruki Murakami's works are considered by the jury to be too popular, popular, and petty-bourgeois, and do not conform to the serious and pure literary taste of the Nobel Prize in Literature.

    Awards: In 1996, he won the 47th Yomiuri Literary Award for his novel "Strange Birds".

    In 1999, he won the 2nd Kuwabara Takeo Literary Award for his non-fiction work "In the Promised Place: Underground 2".

    In 2006, he won the Franz Kafka Prize established by the Czech Republic; In the same year, he won the 2nd Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award in Ireland for his short story "The Blind Willow and the Sleeping Beauty".

    In 2007, he won the 1st Waseda University Tsubouchi Pleasure Literature Award.

    In 2009, he won the Jerusalem Literary Prize.

    In 2011, he won the International Award of Catalonia, Spain.

    In 2015, he won the Hans Christian Andersen Literary Award.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Haruki Murakami has not won the Nobel Prize in Literature, but he has been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature for nine consecutive years, but every time he misses it, everyone jokingly calls him "the famous escort".

    From 2006 to 2014 for nine consecutive years. Compared with Mo Yan's work, Murakami's work lacks criticism; Compared to Alice Munro, he is not local enough; Murakami's work lacks a portrayal of society.

    The awarding of the Nobel Prize in Literature seems to be irregular at first glance, and even before Mo Yan won the prize, some people said that the prize discriminated against Chinese. In fact, it can be found that the works of Nobel Prize winners still have some common qualities, one of which is the profound portrayal of society. As a Japanese writer, Murakami's portrayal of Japanese society is obviously not profound enough.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Haruki Murakami did not win the Nobel Prize. Japanese writer Haruki Murakami, known as the "little plum" of the Nobel Prize world, has been regarded as the favorite for the Nobel Prize in Literature for seven consecutive years since 2009, but has failed to win the prize.

    Japanese writer Haruki Murakami, since 2009, has been regarded as the favorite for the Nobel Prize in Literature for seven consecutive years, but has failed to win. Haruki Murakami, who wrote best-selling works such as "Norwegian Wood", "Kafka on the Seaside", and "Listen to the Wind", has repeatedly missed the Nobel Prize in Literature every year.

    Haruki Murakami has won the Catalonia International Prize in Spain, the Jerusalem Literary Prize, the Hans Christian Andersen Literary Award, the Franz Kafka Award in the Czech Republic, and the Yomiuri Literary Award in Japan. Dance!

    Dance! ", and listen to the wind.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Didn't get it.

    Japanese writer Haruki Murakami has been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature for nine consecutive years, but each time he misses out, everyone jokingly calls him "the famous escort". From 2006 to 2014 for nine consecutive years.

    Compared with Mo Yan's work, Murakami's work lacks criticism; Compared to Alice Munro, he is not local enough;

    Murakami's literature, especially in the first 15 years, is the literature of digging holes. In this era, literature in general is expressed as letting loneliness, appreciating loneliness, and playing with loneliness. 1973's "Pachinko" even elevates loneliness to a transcendent self-consciousness through the protagonist's obsessive search for the useless object of pachinko, thus ensuring the superiority of one's own solitude over worldly values such as the pursuit of so-called positive meaning and purpose.

    Some Japanese netizens analyzed the reasons why Haruki Murakami was shortlisted many times but could not win the award, and there are three main reasons for this:

    Reason 1: The content of the work lacks sociality. The Nobel Prize-winning works must be "social", that is, what is the relationship between the content of the work and the social issues in the real world, and how does the work intersect with the changing "history" of human beings in the past, present, and future.

    However, if there is no such "social" and "historical" factor in Murakami's works, the failure to win the award must be due to the "deviation" of the content of Murakami's works.

    Reason 2: Overseas speeches are like shows. At the International Prize of Catalonia ceremony, Murakami's speech was on a more "social topic":

    Why don't the Japanese keep shouting "no" about nuclear weapons, and the theme of the speech given at the Jerusalem award the year before last was "The Wall and the Egg", so why don't these keynote speeches be held frequently in Japan as "tours"? If literature coexists with the people of a country, even if it is recognized by many readers around the world, and even if there is nothing wrong with the content of such a single and independent speech abroad, it will be like a show to a certain extent.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Murakami's works struck me only by the Norwegian forest, Kafka's mediocre language by the sea, and the plot ideas such as entrance stones and other metaphors lack imagination.

Related questions
22 answers2024-03-25

1.Highly recommend The End of the World and Cold Wonderland >>>More

7 answers2024-03-25

1. Although Murakami's structure, writing techniques and language style have obvious traces of Westernization, it is not difficult to find that the depths of his consciousness, interest and emotion are still affected by the "concept of impermanence" impregnated with the philosophy of Buddhism and Zen, the dark view of Japan's inherent beliefs, part of the Confucian moral and ethical outlook, the unity of things and self, and the natural view of joy and sorrow, as well as the resulting sense of melancholy and loneliness, open-mindedness or helplessness. >>>More

22 answers2024-03-25

You're talking about Haruki Murakami in Japan.

Personally, I feel that his ** feelings are more melancholy, and the writing is very delicate, reflecting the emotional confusion and overwhelm of young people in this society. >>>More

11 answers2024-03-25

Fusarium wilt and leaf spot are common diseases of fortune trees, so since there is not enough description to see the details, please check after a detailed comparison of the following symptoms and take appropriate measures. >>>More

10 answers2024-03-25

It is a shrub of the Euphorbiaceae family, which can reach 4-9 meters in height, and is native to the tropical desert regions of East and South Africa. Over the years, plants mutate in order to adapt to their environment. The desert areas of Africa are scorching all year round, rainfall is extremely scarce, and due to severe water shortages, many animals and plants have died in large numbers or even become extinct. >>>More