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Wednesday, Nov. 13
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Britain’s Doris Lessing wins 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature at age 87

APTOPIX BRITAIN NOBEL PRIZE LITERATURE

STOCKHOLM, Sweden – British writer Doris Lessing won the 2007 Nobel Prize in literature, the Swedish Academy said Thursday, citing her “skepticism, fire and visionary power” in dozens of works, notably her classic “The Golden Notebook.”\nLessing, who at 87 is the oldest person to win the Nobel Literature prize, could not be reached to be told of her award, the academy’s permanent secretary Horace Engdahl told The Associated Press. Lessing’s agent, Jonathan Clowes, said she was out shopping in London.\n“We are absolutely delighted and it’s very well-deserved,” Clowes said.\nLessing was born to British parents who were living in what is now Iran. The family later moved to Rhodesia, which is now Zimbabwe. She dropped out of school at age 13.\nShe made her debut with “The Grass Is Singing” in 1950. Her other works include the semi-autobiographical “Children Of Violence” series, largely set in Africa.\nHer breakthrough was the 1962 “Golden Notebook,” the Swedish Academy said.\n“The burgeoning feminist movement saw it as a pioneering work and it belongs to the handful of books that inform the 20th century view of the male-female relationship,” the academy said in its citation announcing the prize.\nLessing is the second British writer to win the prize in three years. In 2005, Harold Pinter received the award. Last year, the academy gave the prize to Turkey’s Orhan Pamuk.\nLessing’s family moved to a farm in southern Rhodesia in 1925, an experience she described in the first part of her autobiography “Under My Skin” that was released in 1944.\nBecause of her criticism of the South African regime and its apartheid system, she was prohibited from entering the country between 1956 and 1995. Lessing, who was a member of the British Communist Party in the 1950s, had been active in campaigning against nuclear weapons.\nThe literature award was the fourth of this year’s Nobel Prizes to be announced and one of the most hotly anticipated given the sheer amount of guessing it generated in the weeks leading up to award.\nThe awards – each worth $1.5 million – will be handed out by Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf at a ceremony in Stockholm on Dec. 10.

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