1920 Nobel Prize in Literature
{{short description|Award}}
{{Infobox award
| name = 20px 1920 Nobel Prize in Literature
| subheader = Knut Hamsun
| awarded_for =
| presenter = Swedish Academy
| year = 1901
| website = {{official website|https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1920/summary/}}
| holder_label =
| holder =
| image = Portrett av Knut Hamsun (1859-1952) (cropped).jpg
| caption = "for his monumental work, Growth of the Soil."
| host =
| date = {{plainlist|
- 13 November 1920 (announcement)
- 10 December 1920
(ceremony)
}}
| location = Stockholm, Sweden
| previous = 1919
| main = Nobel Prize in Literature
| next = 1921
}}
The 1920 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the Norwegian author Knut Hamsun (1859–1952) "for his monumental work, Growth of the Soil."[https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1920/summary/ The Nobel Prize in Literature 1920] nobelprize.org He was the second Norwegian Nobel laureate in literature after Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson won in 1903.
Laureate
{{main|Knut Hamsun}}
The novel Sult ("Hunger", 1890), widely regarded as the first modern novel in Norwegian literature, marked Knut Hamsun's debut as a writer. In his writings, he basically highlights the simple life lived in harmony with nature and shows an aversion to civilization. He admired Germany, which made him sympathetic to the Nazi invasion of Norway in 1940. After the World War II, he was ordered to forfeit his possessions and placed under psychiatric monitoring for a period. He pioneered psychological literature with techniques of stream of consciousness and interior monologue influencing authors such as Kafka, Mann, Miller and Hesse. Among his famous oeuvres include Mysterier ("Mysteries", 1892), Pan (1894), and Victoria (1898), and published one poetry collection, Det vilde Kor ("The Wild Choir", 1904).[https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1920/hamsun/facts/ Knut Hamsun – Facts] nobelprize.org{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Knut-Hamsun|title=Knut Hamsun {{!}} Norwegian author|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|date=31 July 2023 }}
=''Growth of the Soil''=
The Nobel Prize was given to Hamsun for his 1917 novel Markens Grøde ("Growth of the Soil"), which is regarded as an epic ode to labor and the interdependence of man and nature. The protagonists in the novel are portrayed as actual individuals, but Hamsun gives the settlers' attempts to develop the wilderness heroic aspects in the manner of the classical poet Hesiod. Employing stream of consciousness, the novel exemplified his aversion to modernity and inclination towards primitivism and the agrarian lifestyle.{{cite book|last1=Zagar|first1=Monika|title=Knut Hamsun: The Dark Side of Literary Brilliance |date=2009 |publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=978-0295989457}}{{page needed|date=April 2023}}
Deliberations
=Nominations=
Hamsun only received 3 nominations in total for consecutive two years. He first received his nomination in 1918 from Norwegian art historian Harry Fett, but no award was that year due to the deliberations being disrupted by World War I. He then received two nominations in 1920 once again from Harry Fett and Academy member Erik Axel Karlfeldt.[https://www.nobelprize.org/nomination/archive/show_people.php?id=3853 Nomination archive – Knut P Hamsun] nobelprize.org
In total, the Nobel Committee earned 27 nominations for authors like Thomas Hardy, Grazia Deledda (awarded in 1926), Georg Brandes, John Galsworthy (awarded in 1932), Władysław Reymont (awarded in 1924), Ebenezer Howard and Juhani Aho. Only one author was newly recommended namely the American historian Wilbur Cortez Abbott and Italian writer Grazia Deledda was the only female nominee.[https://www.nobelprize.org/nomination/archive/list.php?prize=4&year=1920 Nomination archive – Literature 1920] nobelprize.org
The authors Paul Adam, Alice E. Bartlett, Alberto Blest Gana, Rhoda Broughton, Giovanni Capurro, Bithia Mary Croker, Richard Dehmel, Paul Ferrier, Mary Evelyn Hitchcock, Matthías Jochumsson, Amanda Kerfstedt, Haralamb Lecca, Alexandru Macedonski, Alexius Meinong, Julia A. Moore, Panas Myrny, Manuel Pérez y Curis, Eleanor H. Porter, Shloyme Zanvl Rappoport (known as S. Ansky), Adolphe-Basile Routhier, Olive Schreiner, Ömer Seyfettin, Helen Ekin Starrett, Maria Antonietta Torriani, Mary Augusta Ward, Max Weber and Wilhelm Wundt died in 1920 died without having been nominated for the prize.
class="sortable wikitable mw-collapsible"
|+ class="nowrap" | Official list of nominees and their nominators for the prize | |
! scope=col | No. ! scope=col | Nominee ! scope=col | Country ! scope=col | Genre(s) ! scope=col | Nominator(s) | |
1
|Wilbur Cortez Abbott (1869–1947) |{{flag|United States|1912}} |history |Dana Carleton Munro (1866–1933) | |
2
|Juhani Aho (1861–1921) |{{flag|Finland}} |novel, short story |Yrjö Hirn (1870–1952) | |
3
|Georg Brandes (1842–1927) |{{flag|Denmark}} |literary criticism, essays |{{unbulleted list|20px Selma Lagerlöf (1858–1940)|Sven Hedin (1865–1952)|Adolf Noreen (1854–1925)|Henrik Schück (1855–1947)}} | |
4
|Otokar Březina (1868–1929) |{{flag|Czechoslovakia}} |poetry, essays |Arne Novák (1880–1939) | |
5
|Grazia Deledda (1871–1936) |{{flag|Kingdom of Italy|name=Italy}} |novel, short story, essays |Carl Bildt (1850–1931) | |
6
|Adolf Frey (1855–1920) |{{flag|Switzerland}} |biography, history, essays |Wilhelm Oechsli (1851–1919) | |
7 | John Galsworthy (1867–1933)
|{{flag|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|name=Great Britain}} |novel, drama, essays, short story, memoir |Henrik Schück (1855–1947) |
8
|Arne Garborg (1851–1921) |{{flag|Norway}} |novel, poetry, drama, essays |{{unbulleted list|Marius Hægstad (1850–1927)|Halvdan Koht (1873–1965)|Olof Kolsrud (1885–1945)|Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters}} | |
9
|Ángel Guimerá Jorge (1845–1924) |{{flag|Restoration (Spain)|name=Spain}} |drama, poetry | |
style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|10
|style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|Knut Hamsun (1859–1952) |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|{{flag|Norway}} |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|novel, short story, drama, poetry, essays |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|{{unbulleted list|Harry Fett (1875–1962)|Erik Axel Karlfeldt (1864–1931)}} | |
11
|Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) |{{flag|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|name=Great Britain}} |novel, short story, poetry, drama |{{unbulleted list|Edmund Gosse (1849–1928)|Anders Österling (1884–1981)|Laurence Binyon (1869–1943)|Edith Morley (1875–1964)|John Bailey (1864–1931)|Arthur Quiller-Couch (1863–1944)|G. W. Dahlsten (?)|English Association|Faculty of Arts and Letters of Durham University}} | |
12
|Ebenezer Howard (1850–1928) |{{flag|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|name=Great Britain}} |essays |Christen Collin (1857–1926) | |
13
|Alois Jirásek (1851–1930) |{{flag|Czechoslovakia}} |novel, drama | |
14
|Hans Ernst Kinck (1865–1926) |{{flag|Norway}} |philology, novel, short story, drama, essays |Gerhard Gran (1856–1925) | |
15
|Władysław Reymont (1867–1925) |{{flag|Second Polish Republic|name=Poland}} |novel, short story |Per Hallström (1866–1960) | |
style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|16
|style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|Carl Spitteler (1845–1924) |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|{{flag|Switzerland}} |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|poetry, essays |style="background:gold;white-space:nowrap"|{{unbulleted list|Erik Axel Karlfeldt (1864–1931)|Wilhelm Oechsli (1851–1919)}} |
=Prize decision=
The Nobel committee of the Swedish Academy had strong doubts to award Knut Hamsun. The committee did not find that Hamsun's often decadent and cynical work represented "what is most excellent in an ideal direction", as was outlined in Alfred Nobel's will. Following the publication of his 1917 novel Growth of the Soil and a nomination for Hamsun in 1920 the committee nevertheless found Hamsun worthy of the prize, but struggled to come to a decision. One dissenting member expressed the view that Hamsun lacked "the culture, the considered world-view and humanity" that ought to suit a worthy recipient of the prize, and instead supported a prize to Georg Brandes. To suit the "ideal direction", the committee's solution was ultimately to award Hamsun for the single work Growth of the Soil, rather than for his entire oeuvre.{{cite web|url=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00472441211033394 |title=Out of the ruins: Knut Hamsun’s ‘idealism’ and the inheritance of World War I: The Nobel Prize |author=Tore Rem |publisher=Journal of European Studies, volume 51, issue 3-4 }}
Other contenders for the prize in 1920 included Thomas Hardy, Arne Garborg and John Galsworthy. The Swiss poet Carl Spitteler was voted by the Academy to be awarded the prize for the previous year.Gustav Källstrand Andens Olympiska Spel: Nobelprisets historia, Fri Tanke 2021{{page needed|date=April 2023}}[https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/themes/literature/svensen/index.html The Nobel Prize in Literature: Nominations and Reports 1901–1950] nobelprize.org
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1920/hamsun/photo-gallery/ 1920 Photo Gallery] nobelprize.org
{{Nobel Prize in Literature}}