Chinese writer Mo Yan wins literature award

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In this file photo, Chinese writer Mo Yan speaks during an interview at a teahouse in Beijing. Mo won the Nobel Prize for literature Thursday. (AP)
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Mo is probably best known to English-language readers for “Red Sorghum,” thanks in part to Zhang Yimou’s acclaimed film adaptation. The novel has sold nearly 50,000 copies in the U.S., according to the publisher Penguin Group (USA), a strong number for a translated work. Most of Mo’s books in the U.S. have been released by Arcade Publishing, whose founder, the late Richard Seaver, had previously worked with Samuel Beckett, Henry Miller and other writers who faced battles with censors.

“Dick Seaver was Mo Yan’s champion from the beginning and admired this exceptional writer’s unique and original voice,” Seaver’s widow, Jeannette Seaver, said in a statement. “He was constantly reading passages to me.”

Mo has said that censorship is a great spur to creativity.

“In our real life there might be some sharp or sensitive issues that (censors) do not wish to touch upon,” he said in an interview with the literary magazine Granta earlier this year. “At such a juncture a writer can inject their own imagination to isolate them from the real world or maybe they can exaggerate the situation — making sure it is bold, vivid and has the signature of our real world.”

Even so, Mo, who started writing while in the army, has steered clear from criticizing the government in public. He has been accused of refusing to appear with dissident writers at overseas literary seminars. The award stirred the criticisms anew.

“Some are opposed to his winning the Nobel Prize because he serves as a vice chair of the China Writers’ Association and helps the government in censorship. But some are supportive, arguing literature should not be linked to politics but be valued on its own merit,” said Murong Xuecun, the pen name of author Hao Qun, who has become more outspoken about censorship in recent years.

Yu Jie, an essayist and close friend of imprisoned Nobel laureate Liu who fled to the U.S. this year, was more acid. “This reflects the West’s disregard for China’s human rights problems. Mo Yan’s win is not a victory for literature. It’s a victory for the Communist Party,” Yu said on his Twitter feed.

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