Nobel laureates in literature and their works. Which of the Russian writers was nominated for the Nobel Prize, but did not become a laureate

Nobel Prize- one of the most prestigious world awards is awarded annually for outstanding scientific research, revolutionary inventions or a major contribution to culture or society.

November 27, 1895 A. Nobel made a will, which provided for the allocation of certain funds for the award awards in five areas: physics, chemistry, physiology and medicine, literature and contribution to world peace. And in 1900 the Nobel Foundation was created - a private, independent, non-governmental organization with an initial capital of 31 million Swedish kronor. Since 1969, at the initiative of the Swedish Bank, awards have also been made economics awards.

Since the inception of the awards, strict rules have been in place for the selection of laureates. The process involves intellectuals from all over the world. Thousands of minds are working to get the Nobel Prize for the most worthy of the applicants.

In total, five Russian-speaking writers have received this award so far.

Ivan Alekseevich Bunin(1870-1953), Russian writer, poet, honorary academician of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1933 "for the strict skill with which he develops the traditions of Russian classical prose." In his speech at the award ceremony, Bunin noted the courage of the Swedish Academy, which honored the émigré writer (he emigrated to France in 1920). Ivan Alekseevich Bunin is the greatest master of Russian realistic prose.


Boris Leonidovich Pasternak
(1890-1960), Russian poet, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958 "for outstanding services in modern lyric poetry and in the field of great Russian prose." He was forced to refuse the award under the threat of expulsion from the country. The Swedish Academy recognized Pasternak's refusal of the prize as forced and in 1989 presented a diploma and a medal to his son.

Mikhail Aleksandrovich Sholokhov(1905-1984), Russian writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1965 "for the artistic power and integrity of the epic about the Don Cossacks at a turning point for Russia." In his speech during the awards ceremony, Sholokhov said that his goal was to "exalt a nation of workers, builders and heroes". Starting as a realistic writer who is not afraid to show the deep contradictions of life, Sholokhov, in some of his works, became a prisoner of socialist realism.

Alexander Isaevich Solzhenitsyn(1918-2008), Russian writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1970 "for the moral strength gleaned from the tradition of great Russian literature." The Soviet government considered the decision of the Nobel Committee "politically hostile", and Solzhenitsyn, fearing that after his trip, returning to his homeland would be impossible, accepted the award, but did not attend the award ceremony. In his artistic literary works, as a rule, he touched on acute socio-political issues, actively opposed communist ideas, the political system of the USSR and the policies of its authorities.

Joseph Alexandrovich Brodsky(1940-1996), poet, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987 "for a multifaceted work, marked by sharpness of thought and deep poetry." In 1972 he was forced to emigrate from the USSR, he lived in the USA (the world encyclopedia calls him American). I.A. Brodsky is the youngest writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. The features of the poet's lyrics are the understanding of the world as a single metaphysical and cultural whole, the identification of the limitations of a person as a subject of consciousness.

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The Nobel Prize in Literature began to be awarded in 1901. Several times the awards were not held - in 1914, 1918, 1935, 1940-1943. Current laureates, chairmen of authors' unions, professors of literature and members of scientific academies can nominate other writers for the award. Until 1950, information about the nominees was public, and then they began to name only the names of the winners.


For five consecutive years, from 1902 to 1906, Leo Tolstoy was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

In 1906, Tolstoy wrote a letter to the Finnish writer and translator Arvid Järnefelt, in which he asked him to convince his Swedish colleagues “to try to make sure that they don’t award me this prize,” because “if this happened, it would be very unpleasant for me to refuse.”

As a result, the prize was awarded in 1906 to the Italian poet Giosue Carducci. Tolstoy was glad that he was spared the prize: “Firstly, it saved me from a great difficulty - to manage this money, which, like any money, in my opinion, can only bring evil; and secondly, it gave me the honor and great pleasure to receive expressions of sympathy from so many persons, although not familiar to me, but nevertheless deeply respected by me.

In 1902, another Russian, a lawyer, judge, orator and writer Anatoly Koni, also ran for the award. By the way, Koni had been friends with Tolstoy since 1887, he corresponded with the count and met him many times in Moscow. On the basis of Koni's memoirs about one of Tolstov's cases, "Resurrection" was written. And Koni himself wrote the work "Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy".

Koni himself was nominated for an award for his biographical essay on Dr. Haase, who devoted his life to the struggle to improve the lives of prisoners and exiles. Subsequently, some literary critics spoke of Koni's nomination as a "curiosity".

In 1914, the writer and poet Dmitry Merezhkovsky, the husband of the poetess Zinaida Gippius, was nominated for the award for the first time. In total, Merezhkovsky was nominated 10 times.

In 1914, Merezhkovsky was nominated for the prize after the release of his 24-volume collected works. However, this year the prize was not awarded due to the outbreak of the World War.

Later, Merezhkovsky was nominated as an émigré writer. In 1930 he was again nominated for the Nobel Prize. But here Merezhkovsky finds himself in competition with another outstanding Russian émigré literature, Ivan Bunin.

According to one of the legends, Merezhkovsky offered Bunin to conclude a pact. “If I get the Nobel Prize, I will give you half, if you - you give me. Let's split it in half. Let's insure each other." Bunin refused. Merezhkovsky was never awarded the prize.

In 1916, Ivan Franko, a Ukrainian writer and poet, became a nominee. He died before the award could be considered. With rare exceptions, Nobel Prizes are not awarded posthumously.

In 1918, Maxim Gorky was nominated for the prize, but again it was decided not to present the award.

The year 1923 becomes "fruitful" for Russian and Soviet writers. Ivan Bunin (for the first time), Konstantin Balmont (pictured) and again Maxim Gorky were nominated for the award. Thanks for this to the writer Romain Rolland, who nominated all three. But the award is given to the Irishman William Gates.

In 1926, a Russian émigré, Tsarist Cossack General Pyotr Krasnov, became the nominee. After the revolution, he fought with the Bolsheviks, created the state of the All-Great Don Army, but was later forced to join Denikin's army, and then retire. In 1920 he emigrated, until 1923 he lived in Germany, then in Paris.

Since 1936, Krasnov lived in Nazi Germany. He did not recognize the Bolsheviks, he helped anti-Bolshevik organizations. During the war years, he collaborated with the Nazis, considered their aggression against the USSR as a war exclusively with the Communists, and not with the people. In 1945 he was captured by the British, handed over by the Soviets and in 1947 hanged in the Lefortovo prison.

Among other things, Krasnov was a prolific writer, he published 41 books. His most popular novel was the epic From the Double-Headed Eagle to the Red Banner. Slavic philologist Vladimir Frantsev nominated Krasnov for the Nobel Prize. Can you imagine if in 1926 he miraculously won the prize? How would you argue now about this person and this award?

In 1931 and 1932, in addition to the already familiar nominees Merezhkovsky and Bunin, Ivan Shmelev was nominated for the award. In 1931, his novel Praying Man was published.

In 1933, the first Russian-speaking writer, Ivan Bunin, received the Nobel Prize. The wording is "For the strict skill with which he develops the traditions of Russian classical prose." Bunin did not really like the wording, he wanted more to be awarded for poetry.

On YouTube, you can find a very murky video in which Ivan Bunin reads out his address on the Nobel Prize.

After the news of the award, Bunin stopped by to visit Merezhkovsky and Gippius. “Congratulations,” the poetess told him, “and I envy you.” Not everyone agreed with the decision of the Nobel Committee. Marina Tsvetaeva, for example, wrote that Gorky deserved much more.

Bonus, 170331 kroons, Bunin actually squandered. The poet and literary critic Zinaida Shakhovskaya recalled: “Having returned to France, Ivan Alekseevich ... apart from money, began to arrange feasts, distribute “allowances” to emigrants, and donate funds to support various societies. Finally, on the advice of well-wishers, he invested the remaining amount in some kind of “win-win business” and was left with nothing.

In 1949, emigrant Mark Aldanov (pictured) and three Soviet writers at once were nominated for the award - Boris Pasternak, Mikhail Sholokhov and Leonid Leonov. The award was given to William Faulkner.

In 1958, Boris Pasternak received the Nobel Prize "for significant achievements in modern lyric poetry, as well as for continuing the traditions of the great Russian epic novel."

Pasternak received the award, having previously been nominated six times. It was last nominated by Albert Camus.

In the Soviet Union, the persecution of the writer immediately began. At the initiative of Suslov (pictured), the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU adopts a resolution labeled "Top Secret" "On B. Pasternak's slanderous novel."

"Recognize that the awarding of the Nobel Prize to Pasternak's novel, which slanderously depicts the October Socialist Revolution, the Soviet people who made this revolution, and the building of socialism in the USSR, is an act hostile to our country and an instrument of international reaction aimed at fomenting the Cold War" , the resolution said.

From a note by Suslov on the day the prize was awarded: "Organize and publish a collective performance by the most prominent Soviet writers, in which they evaluate the award of the prize to Pasternak as a desire to ignite the Cold War."

The persecution of the writer began in the newspapers and at numerous meetings. From the transcript of the all-Moscow meeting of writers: “There is no poet more distant from the people than B. Pasternak, a poet more aesthetic, in whose work the pre-revolutionary decadence preserved in its original purity would sound like this. All the poetic work of B. Pasternak lay outside the real traditions of Russian poetry, which always warmly responded to all events in the life of its people.

Writer Sergei Smirnov: “Finally, I was offended by this novel, as a soldier of the Patriotic War, as a man who had to cry over the graves of his dead comrades during the war, as a man who now has to write about the heroes of the war, about the heroes of the Brest Fortress, about others wonderful war heroes who revealed the heroism of our people with amazing power.

"Thus, comrades, the novel Doctor Zhivago, in my deep conviction, is an apology for betrayal."

Critic Kornely Zelinsky: “I have a very heavy feeling from reading this novel. I felt literally spat upon. My whole life seemed spat upon in this novel. Everything that I have invested in for 40 years, creative energy, hopes, hopes - all this was spat on.

Unfortunately, Pasternak was smashed not only by mediocrity. Poet Boris Slutsky (pictured): “A poet must seek recognition from his people, and not from his enemies. The poet must seek glory in his native land, and not from an overseas uncle. Gentlemen, the Swedish academicians know about the Soviet land only that the Battle of Poltava, which they hate, and the October Revolution, which they hate even more, took place there (noise in the hall). What is our literature to them?

Writers' meetings were held throughout the country, at which Pasternak's novel was denounced as slanderous, hostile, mediocre, and so on. Rallies were held at the factories against Pasternak and his novel.

From a letter from Pasternak to the Presidium of the Board of the Union of Writers of the USSR: “I thought that my joy at the award of the Nobel Prize to me would not remain alone, that it would touch the society of which I am a part. In my eyes, the honor given to me, a modern writer living in Russia and, consequently, to the Soviet one, shown at the same time to all Soviet literature. I am sorry that I was so blind and deluded.”

Under enormous pressure, Pasternak decided to withdraw the prize. “Because of the significance that the award awarded to me has received in the society to which I belong, I must refuse it. Do not take my voluntary refusal as an insult,” he wrote in a telegram to the Nobel Committee. Until his death in 1960, Pasternak remained in disgrace, although he was not arrested or expelled.

It is now Pasternak is being erected monuments, his talent is recognized. Then the hunted writer was on the verge of suicide. In the poem "Nobel Prize" Pasternak wrote: "What did I do for dirty tricks, / I am a murderer and a villain? / I made the whole world cry / Over the beauty of my land." After the publication of the poem abroad, the Prosecutor General of the USSR Roman Rudenko promised to bring Pasternak under the article "Treason to the Motherland." But not attracted.

In 1965, the Soviet writer Mikhail Sholokhov received the prize - "For the artistic power and integrity of the epic about the Don Cossacks at a turning point for Russia."

The Soviet authorities viewed Sholokhov as a "counterweight" to Pasternak in the fight for the Nobel Prize. In the 1950s, lists of nominees were not yet published, but the USSR knew that Sholokhov was being considered as a possible contender. Through diplomatic channels, the Swedes were hinted that the USSR would highly appreciate the presentation of the award to this Soviet writer.

In 1964, the prize was awarded to Jean-Paul Sartre, but he refused it and expressed regret (among other things) that the prize was not awarded to Mikhail Sholokhov. This predetermined the decision of the Nobel Committee next year.

During the presentation, Mikhail Sholokhov did not bow to King Gustav Adolf VI, who presented the award. According to one version, this was done on purpose, and Sholokhov said: “We, the Cossacks, do not bow to anyone. Here in front of the people - please, but I will not be in front of the king and that's it ... "

1970 - a new blow to the image of the Soviet state. The prize was awarded to the dissident writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

Solzhenitsyn holds the record for the speed of literary recognition. From the moment of the first publication to the award of the last prize, only eight years. Nobody has been able to do this.

As in the case of Pasternak, Solzhenitsyn immediately began to persecute. In the magazine Ogonyok, a letter appeared from the popular American singer Dean Reed, who convinced Solzhenitsyn that everything was in order in the USSR, but in the USA it was a complete seam.

Dean Reed: “It is America, not the Soviet Union, who wages wars and creates a tense environment of possible wars in order to enable their economy to operate, and our dictators, the military-industrial complex to amass even more wealth and power from the blood of the Vietnamese people, our own American soldiers and all the freedom-loving peoples of the world! A sick society is in my homeland, and not in yours, Mr. Solzhenitsyn!

However, Solzhenitsyn, who went through prison, camps and exile, was not too frightened by the censure in the press. He continued literary creativity, dissident work. The authorities hinted to him that it would be better to leave the country, but he refused. Only in 1974, after the release of the Gulag Archipelago, Solzhenitsyn was deprived of Soviet citizenship and forcibly expelled from the country.

In 1987, the award was received by Joseph Brodsky, at that time a US citizen. The prize was awarded "For comprehensive creativity, saturated with clarity of thought and passion of poetry."

US citizen Joseph Brodsky wrote the Nobel speech in Russian. She became part of his literary manifesto. Brodsky spoke more about literature, but there was also a place for historical and political remarks. The poet, for example, put the regimes of Hitler and Stalin on the same level.

Brodsky: “This generation - the generation that was born just when the Auschwitz crematoria were operating at full capacity, when Stalin was at the zenith of god-like, absolute, by nature itself, it seemed, sanctioned power, appeared in the world, apparently to continue what theoretically, it should have been interrupted in these crematoria and in the unmarked common graves of the Stalinist archipelago.

Since 1987, the Nobel Prize has not been awarded to Russian writers. Among the contenders, Vladimir Sorokin (pictured), Lyudmila Ulitskaya, Mikhail Shishkin, as well as Zakhar Prilepin and Viktor Pelevin are usually named.

In 2015, the Belarusian writer and journalist Svetlana Aleksievich sensationally receives the award. She wrote such works as "War has no woman's face", "Zinc Boys", "Charmed by Death", "Chernobyl Prayer", "Second Hand Time" and others. A rather rare event in recent years, when the award was given to a person who writes in Russian.


The Nobel Committee has been silent about its work for a long time, and only after 50 years does it reveal information about how the prize was awarded. On January 2, 2018, it became known that Konstantin Paustovsky was among the 70 candidates for the 1967 Nobel Prize in Literature.

The company was very worthy: Samuel Beckett, Louis Aragon, Alberto Moravia, Jorge Luis Borges, Pablo Neruda, Yasunari Kawabata, Graham Greene, Wisten Hugh Auden. That year the Academy awarded the Guatemalan writer Miguel Angel Asturias "for his living literary achievements, deeply rooted in the national traits and traditions of the indigenous peoples of Latin America."


The name of Konstantin Paustovsky was proposed by a member of the Swedish Academy, Eivind Junson, but the Nobel Committee rejected his candidacy with the wording: "The Committee would like to emphasize its interest in this proposal for a Russian writer, but for natural reasons it should be put aside for the time being." It is difficult to say what "natural causes" we are talking about. It remains only to cite the known facts.

In 1965, Paustovsky was already nominated for the Nobel Prize. It was an unusual year, because among the nominees for the award were four Russian writers at once - Anna Akhmatova, Mikhail Sholokhov, Konstantin Paustovsky, Vladimir Nabokov. In the end, Mikhail Sholokhov received the prize, so as not to irritate the Soviet authorities too much after the previous Nobel laureate Boris Pasternak, whose award caused a huge scandal.

The prize for literature was first awarded in 1901. Since then, six authors writing in Russian have received it. Some of them cannot be attributed either to the USSR or to Russia in connection with questions of citizenship. However, their instrument was the Russian language, and this is the main thing.

Ivan Bunin becomes the first Russian Nobel Prize in Literature in 1933, taking the top on his fifth attempt. As subsequent history will show, this will not be the longest path to the Nobel.


The award was presented with the wording "for the rigorous skill with which he develops the traditions of Russian classical prose."

In 1958, the Nobel Prize went to a representative of Russian literature for the second time. Boris Pasternak was noted "for significant achievements in modern lyric poetry, as well as for continuing the traditions of the great Russian epic novel."


For Pasternak himself, the award brought nothing but problems and a campaign under the slogan “I didn’t read it, but I condemn it!”. It was about the novel "Doctor Zhivago", which was published abroad, which at that time was equated with a betrayal of the motherland. Even the fact that the novel was published in Italy by a communist publishing house did not save the situation. The writer was forced to refuse the award under the threat of expulsion from the country and threats against his family and loved ones. The Swedish Academy recognized Pasternak's refusal of the prize as forced and in 1989 presented a diploma and a medal to his son. This time there were no incidents.

In 1965, Mikhail Sholokhov became the third recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature "for the artistic power and integrity of the epic about the Don Cossacks at a turning point for Russia."


It was the "correct" award from the point of view of the USSR, especially since the state supported the writer's candidacy directly.

In 1970, the Nobel Prize in Literature went to Alexander Solzhenitsyn "for the moral strength with which he followed the immutable traditions of Russian literature."


The Nobel Committee made excuses for a long time that its decision was not political, as the Soviet authorities claimed. Supporters of the version about the political nature of the award note two things - only eight years have passed from the moment of the first publication of Solzhenitsyn to the award of the award, which cannot be compared with other laureates. Moreover, by the time the prize was awarded, neither The Gulag Archipelago nor The Red Wheel had been published.

The fifth Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987 was the émigré poet Joseph Brodsky, awarded "for his all-encompassing work, imbued with clarity of thought and poetic intensity."


The poet was forcibly sent into exile in 1972 and had American citizenship at the time of the award.

Already in the 21st century, in 2015, that is, 28 years later, Svetlana Aleksievich receives the Nobel Prize as a representative of Belarus. And again, there was some scandal. Many writers, public figures and politicians were rejected by the ideological position of Aleksievich, others believed that her works were ordinary journalism and had nothing to do with artistic creativity.


In any case, a new page has opened in the history of the Nobel Prize. For the first time, the prize was awarded not to a writer, but to a journalist.

Thus, almost all decisions of the Nobel Committee concerning writers from Russia had a political or ideological background. This began as early as 1901, when Swedish academics addressed a letter to Tolstoy, calling him "the venerable patriarch of modern literature" and "one of those powerful penetrating poets, which in this case should be remembered first of all."

The main message of the letter was the desire of academicians to justify their decision not to award the prize to Leo Tolstoy. Academicians wrote that the great writer himself "never aspired to such an award." Leo Tolstoy thanked in response: “I was very pleased that the Nobel Prize was not awarded to me ... This saved me from a great difficulty - to manage this money, which, like any money, in my opinion, can only bring evil.”

Forty-nine Swedish writers, led by August Strindberg and Selma Lagerlöf, wrote a letter of protest to the Nobel academicians. All in all, the great Russian writer was nominated for the award for five years in a row, the last time it was in 1906, four years before his death. It was then that the writer turned to the committee with a request not to award him the prize, so that he would not have to refuse later.


Today, the opinions of those experts who excommunicated Tolstoy from the prize have become the property of history. Among them is Professor Alfred Jensen, who believed that the philosophy of the late Tolstoy was contrary to the will of Alfred Nobel, who dreamed of an "idealistic orientation" of his works. And "War and Peace" is completely "devoid of understanding of history." The secretary of the Swedish Academy, Karl Virsen, even more categorically formulated his point of view on the impossibility of awarding the prize to Tolstoy: "This writer condemned all forms of civilization and insisted in return for them to adopt a primitive way of life, cut off from all the establishments of high culture."

Among those who became a nominee, but did not have the honor of giving the Nobel lecture, there are many big names.
This is Dmitry Merezhkovsky (1914, 1915, 1930-1937)


Maxim Gorky (1918, 1923, 1928, 1933)


Konstantin Balmont (1923)


Pyotr Krasnov (1926)


Ivan Shmelev (1931)


Mark Aldanov (1938, 1939)


Nikolai Berdyaev (1944, 1945, 1947)


As you can see, the list of nominees includes mainly those Russian writers who were in exile at the time of the nomination. This series has been replenished with new names.
This is Boris Zaitsev (1962)


Vladimir Nabokov (1962)


Of the Soviet Russian writers, only Leonid Leonov (1950) was on the list.


Anna Akhmatova, of course, can only be considered a Soviet writer conditionally, because she had the citizenship of the USSR. The only time she was in the Nobel nomination in 1965.

If you wish, you can name more than one Russian writer who has earned the title of Nobel Prize winner for his work. For example, Joseph Brodsky in his Nobel lecture mentioned three Russian poets who would be worthy to be on the Nobel podium. These are Osip Mandelstam, Marina Tsvetaeva and Anna Akhmatova.

The further history of the Nobel nominations will surely reveal many more interesting things to us.


On December 10, 1933, King Gustav V of Sweden presented the Nobel Prize in Literature to the writer Ivan Bunin, who became the first Russian writer to receive this high award. In total, the award, established by the inventor of dynamite Alfred Bernhard Nobel in 1833, was received by 21 natives of Russia and the USSR, five of them in the field of literature. True, historically, the Nobel Prize was fraught with big problems for Russian poets and writers.

Ivan Alekseevich Bunin handed out the Nobel Prize to friends

In December 1933, the Paris press wrote: Without a doubt, I.A. Bunin - in recent years - the most powerful figure in Russian fiction and poetry», « the king of literature confidently and equally shook hands with the crowned monarch". The Russian emigration applauded. In Russia, the news that a Russian emigrant received the Nobel Prize was treated very caustically. After all, Bunin negatively perceived the events of 1917 and emigrated to France. Ivan Alekseevich himself experienced emigration very hard, was actively interested in the fate of his abandoned homeland, and during the Second World War he categorically refused all contacts with the Nazis, having moved to the Maritime Alps in 1939, returning from there to Paris only in 1945.


It is known that Nobel laureates have the right to decide for themselves how to spend the money they receive. Someone invests in the development of science, someone in charity, someone in their own business. Bunin, a creative person and devoid of "practical ingenuity", disposed of his bonus, which amounted to 170,331 crowns, completely irrationally. The poet and literary critic Zinaida Shakhovskaya recalled: “ Returning to France, Ivan Alekseevich ... apart from money, began to arrange feasts, distribute "allowances" to emigrants, and donate funds to support various societies. Finally, on the advice of well-wishers, he invested the remaining amount in some kind of “win-win business” and was left with nothing.».

Ivan Bunin is the first of the émigré writers to be published in Russia. True, the first publications of his stories appeared already in the 1950s, after the death of the writer. Some of his novels and poems were published in his homeland only in the 1990s.

Dear God, what are you for?
He gave us passions, thoughts and worries,
Thirst for business, glory and comfort?
Joyful cripples, idiots,
The leper is the happiest of all.
(I. Bunin. September, 1917)

Boris Pasternak refused the Nobel Prize

Boris Pasternak was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature "for significant achievements in modern lyric poetry, as well as for continuing the traditions of the great Russian epic novel" annually from 1946 to 1950. In 1958, last year's Nobel laureate Albert Camus again proposed his candidacy, and on October 23, Pasternak became the second Russian writer to be awarded this prize.

The writers' environment in the poet's homeland took this news extremely negatively, and already on October 27, Pasternak was unanimously expelled from the Writers' Union of the USSR, at the same time submitting a petition to deprive Pasternak of Soviet citizenship. In the USSR, Pasternak was associated with receiving the award only with his novel Doctor Zhivago. The Literary Gazette wrote: “Pasternak received “thirty pieces of silver”, for which the Nobel Prize was used. He was rewarded for agreeing to play the role of bait on the rusty hook of anti-Soviet propaganda ... An inglorious end awaits the resurrected Judas, Doctor Zhivago, and his author, whose lot will be popular contempt ".


The mass campaign launched against Pasternak forced him to refuse the Nobel Prize. The poet sent a telegram to the Swedish Academy, in which he wrote: Because of the significance that the award awarded to me has received in the society to which I belong, I must refuse it. Do not take my voluntary refusal as an insult».

It is worth noting that in the USSR until 1989, even in the school curriculum on literature about Pasternak's work, there was no mention. The director Eldar Ryazanov was the first to decide to massively acquaint the Soviet people with the creative work of Pasternak. In his comedy "The Irony of Fate, or Enjoy Your Bath!" (1976) he included the poem "There Will Be No One in the House", transforming it into an urban romance, performed by the bard Sergei Nikitin. Later, Ryazanov included in his film "Office Romance" an excerpt from another poem by Pasternak - "To love others is a heavy cross ..." (1931). True, he sounded in a farcical context. But it is worth noting that at that time the very mention of Pasternak's poems was a very bold step.

Easy to wake up and see
Shake verbal rubbish from the heart
And live without clogging in the future,
All this is not a big trick.
(B. Pasternak, 1931)

Mikhail Sholokhov, receiving the Nobel Prize, did not bow to the monarch

Mikhail Aleksandrovich Sholokhov received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1965 for his novel The Quiet Flows the Flows Flows the Flows Flows and went down in history as the only Soviet writer to receive this award with the consent of the Soviet leadership. The diploma of the laureate says "in recognition of the artistic strength and honesty that he showed in his Don epic about the historical phases of the life of the Russian people."


Gustav Adolf VI, who presented the award to the Soviet writer, called him "one of the most outstanding writers of our time." Sholokhov did not bow to the king, as prescribed by the rules of etiquette. Some sources claim that he did it intentionally with the words: “We, the Cossacks, do not bow to anyone. Here in front of the people - please, but I will not be in front of the king ... "


Alexander Solzhenitsyn was deprived of Soviet citizenship because of the Nobel Prize

Alexander Isaevich Solzhenitsyn, commander of a sound reconnaissance battery, who rose to the rank of captain during the war years and was awarded two military orders, was arrested in 1945 by front-line counterintelligence for anti-Sovietism. Sentence - 8 years in camps and life exile. He went through a camp in New Jerusalem near Moscow, Marfinskaya "sharashka" and the Special Ekibastuz camp in Kazakhstan. In 1956, Solzhenitsyn was rehabilitated, and since 1964 Alexander Solzhenitsyn devoted himself to literature. At the same time, he worked immediately on 4 major works: The Gulag Archipelago, The Cancer Ward, The Red Wheel and In the First Circle. In the USSR in 1964 they published the story "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich", and in 1966 the story "Zakhar-Kalita".


On October 8, 1970, Solzhenitsyn was awarded the Nobel Prize "for the moral strength gleaned from the tradition of great Russian literature." This was the reason for the persecution of Solzhenitsyn in the USSR. In 1971, all the writer's manuscripts were confiscated, and in the next 2 years, all his publications were destroyed. In 1974, the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR was issued, according to which, for the systematic commission of actions incompatible with belonging to the citizenship of the USSR and damaging the USSR, Alexander Solzhenitsyn was deprived of Soviet citizenship and deported from the USSR.


Citizenship was returned to the writer only in 1990, and in 1994 he and his family returned to Russia and became actively involved in public life.

Nobel Prize winner Joseph Brodsky in Russia was convicted of parasitism

Iosif Alexandrovich Brodsky began to write poetry at the age of 16. Anna Akhmatova predicted a hard life for him and a glorious creative destiny. In 1964, in Leningrad, a criminal case was opened against the poet on charges of parasitism. He was arrested and sent into exile in the Arkhangelsk region, where he spent a year.


In 1972, Brodsky turned to Secretary General Brezhnev with a request to work in his homeland as a translator, but his request remained unanswered, and he was forced to emigrate. Brodsky first lives in Vienna, in London, and then moves to the United States, where he becomes a professor at New York, Michigan and other universities in the country.


On December 10, 1987, Joseph Brosky was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature "for his comprehensive work, saturated with the clarity of thought and the passion of poetry." It is worth saying that Brodsky, after Vladimir Nabokov, is the second Russian writer who writes in English as his native language.

The sea was not visible. In the white mist
swaddled on all sides of us, absurd
it was thought that the ship was going to land -
if it was a ship at all,
and not a clot of fog, as if poured
who whitened in milk.
(B. Brodsky, 1972)

Interesting fact
At different times, such famous personalities as Mahatma Gandhi, Winston Churchill, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Benito Mussolini, Franklin Roosevelt, Nicholas Roerich and Leo Tolstoy were nominated for the Nobel Prize at various times, but never received it.

Literature lovers will definitely be interested - a book that is written with disappearing ink.

The Nobel Prize in Literature is the most prestigious international award. Established from the fund of the Swedish chemical engineer, millionaire Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833-96); according to his will, is awarded annually to the person who has created an outstanding work of "ideal direction". The choice of the candidate is carried out by the Royal Swedish Academy in Stockholm; a new laureate is determined at the end of October of each year, and on December 10 (the day of Nobel's death) the Gold Medal is awarded; at the same time, the laureate delivers a speech, usually a programmatic one. Laureates also have the right to deliver a Nobel lecture. The amount of the premium fluctuates. Usually awarded for the entire work of the writer, less often - for individual works. The Nobel Prize began to be awarded in 1901; in some years it was not awarded (1914, 1918, 1935, 194043, 1950).

Winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature:

Nobel Prize winners are writers: A. Sully-Prudhom (1901), B. Bjornson (1903), F. Mistral, H. Echegaray (1904), G. Sienkiewicz (1905), J. Carducci (1906), R. Kipling (1906), SLagerlöf (1909), P. Heise (1910), M. Maeterlinck (1911), G. Hauptmann (1912), R. Tagore (1913), R. Rolland (1915), K.G.V. von Heydenstam (1916), K. Gjellerup and H. Pontoppidan (1917), K. Spitteler (1919), K. Hamsun (1920), A. France (1921), J. Benavente y Martinez (1922), U .B.Yates (1923), B.Reymont (1924), J.B.Shaw (1925), G.Deledza (1926), C.Unseg (1928), T.Mann (1929), S.Lewis (1930) ), E.A. Karlfeldt (1931), J. Galsworthy (1932), I.A. Bunin (1933), L. Pirandello (1934), Y. O'Neill (1936), R. Martin du Gard (1937 ), P. Bak (1938), F. Sillanpää (1939), I.V. Jensen (1944), G. Mistral (1945), G. Hesse (1946), A. Gide (1947), T.S. Eliot (1948), W. Faulkner (1949), P. Lagerquist (1951), F. Mauriac (1952), E. Hemingway (1954), H. Laxness (1955), H. R. Jimenez (1956), A Camus (1957), B.L. Pasternak (1958), S. Quasimodo (1959), Saint-John Perse (1960), I. Andrich (1961), J. Steinbeck (1962), G. Seferiadis (1963) , J.P. Sartre (1964), M.A. Sholokhov (1965), S.I. Agnon and Nelly Zaks (1966), M.A. Asturias (1967), J. Kawabata (1968), S. Beckett (1969), A.I. Solzhenitsyn (1970), P. Neruda (1971), G. Böll (1972), P. White (1973), H. E. Martinson, E. Jonson (1974), E. Montale (1975), S. Bellow (1976), V. Alexandre (1977), I. B. Singer (1978), O. Elitis (1979), C. Milos (1980), E. Canetti (1981), G. Garcia Marquez (1982), W. Golding (1983), J. Seyfersh (1984), K. Simon (1985), V. Shoyinka (1986), I. A. Brodsky (1987), N. Mahfouz (1988), K.H.Sela (1989), O.Paz (1990), N.Gordimer (1991), D.Walcott (1992), T.Morrison (1993), K.Oe (1994), S.Heaney (1995) , V. Shimbarskaya (1996), D. Fo (1997), J. Saramagu (1998), G. Grass (1999), Gao Xingjiang (2000).

Among the winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature are the German historian T. Mommsen (1902), the German philosopher R. Eiken (1908), the French philosopher A. Bergson (1927), the English philosopher, political scientist, publicist B. Russell (1950), the English political figure and historian W. Churchill (1953).

The Nobel Prize was refused by: B. Pasternak (1958), J. P. Sartre (1964). At the same time, L. Tolstoy, M. Gorky, J. Joyce, B. Brecht were not awarded the prize.