Tag: Nobel prize

  • ‘Jonathan deserves Nobel prize’

    ‘Jonathan deserves Nobel prize’

    A former Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to former President Goodluck Jonathan on Students and Youth Matters, Comrade Jude Imagwe, yesterday berated former Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva for his alleged anti-Jonathan comment.

    Sylva was said to have remarked that “Jonathan’s conceding of defeat is not an achievement”.

    The former governor added that the former President should not be given a hero’s status for his action.

    Imagwe who spoke in Benin, the Edo State capital, after a thanksgiving at the St John Vianney Catholic Church, Ohoghobi, said Jonathan’s singular act disappointed doomsday prophets, who had predicted that Nigeria would be plunged into bloodshed after the 2015 general elections.

    He said those who said Jonathan was not qualified to lead the nation were unpatriotic Nigerians, who do not wish the country well.

    Imagwe said: “I feel that if there is anything higher than a Nobel Peace Prize, that is what Jonathan deserves.

    “This is because at a time when people prophesised doom for Nigeria, his singular action restored peace.

    “At that time, the beneficiary would not have done what Jonathan did by conceding defeat.

    “At that time, people were running away from the country for fear of what the enemy had prophesied. But his utterances returned peace.

    “Any man who says he is not qualified for the Nobel Peace Prize is being unpatriotic and insincere.

    “The man (Sylva) himself knows he is not truthful to himself and to the country.”

  • Un panel: Global warming human-caused, dangerous

    The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has sent governments a final draft of its synthesis report, which combines three earlier, gigantic documents by the Nobel Prize-winning group.

    There is little in the report that wasn’t in the other more-detailed versions, but the language is more stark and the report attempts to connect the different scientific disciplines studying problems caused by the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and gas.

    The 127-page draft, obtained by The Associated Press, paints a harsh warning of what’s causing global warming and what it will do to humans and the environment.

    It also describes what can be done about it.”Continued emission of greenhouse gases will cause further warming and long-lasting changes in all components of the climate system, increasing the likelihood of severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems,” the report says.

    The final report will be issued after governments and scientists go over the draft line by line in an October conference in Copenhagen.

    Depending on circumstances and values, “currently observed impacts might already be considered dangerous,” the report says.

    It mentions extreme weather and rising sea levels, such as heat waves, flooding and droughts.

    It even raises, as an earlier report did, the idea that climate change will worsen violent conflicts and refugee problems and could hinder efforts to grow more food.

    And ocean acidification, which comes from the added carbon absorbed by oceans, will harm marine life, it says.

    Without changes in greenhouse gas emissions, “climate change risks are likely to be high or very high by the end of the 21st century,” the report says.

    In 2009, countries across the globe set a goal of limiting global warming to about another 2 degrees Fahrenheit above current levels. But the report says that it is looking more likely that the world will shoot past that point.

    Limiting warming to that much is possible but would require dramatic and immediate cuts in carbon dioxide pollution.

    The report says if the world continues to spew greenhouse gases at its accelerating rate, it’s likely that by mid-century temperatures will increase by about another 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) compared to temperatures from 1986 to 2005.

    And by the end of the century, that scenario will bring temperatures that are about 6.7 degrees warmer (3.7 degrees Celsius).

  • Soyinka’s Nobel Prize at 27

    Soyinka’s Nobel Prize at 27

    The immortal words of Elbert Hubbard aptly describe the literary liberation of a country and continent reputed to be an habitat for illiteracy. Hubbard said: “The world is moving so fast these days that the man who says it can’t be done is generally interrupted by someone doing it.”

    Prof Akinwande Oluwole Soyinka won the coveted Nobel Prize in Literature in October 1986. Thus, he became the first African and Nigerian to be awarded the much-respected prize.

    Soyinka had his first play, A Dance of the Forest, published in the late 1950s and since then he has been engraving the yet-to-be-mined African literary treasury on the pages of world literature. With his grey beard and hair, Soyinka’s literary prominence soars like a bizarre hunter, becoming the giant of creative minds in our history.

    The prize was a glorious dawn, especially at a time in Africa when fate was being worshiped as a god and failure was seen as the compulsory cover page of any book coming out of the African literary and arts factory. The Abeokuta-born playwright confirms the words of George Bernard Shaw, who said: “The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.” Soyinka’s feat has motivated Africa’s upcoming writers.

    However, celebrating Soyinka’s Nobel Prize at 27 when our campuses are shut because of strike seems to be not-so-good news for Nigeria. Do we know how many Soyinkas Nigeria could have produced had its education system functioned properly?

    Singapore education system has been described as one of the best in the world. Surprisingly, one would have expected bulky curricula like we have in Nigeria but no. According to the homepage of the Singaporean Ministry of Education, the country has been moving in towards a system that is flexible and diverse. The aim is to provide students with greater choice to meet the current reality. Being able to choose what and how they learn will encourage their students to be more knowledgeable. But we are lagging behind.

    Joseph Addision says: “Education is a companion which no misfortune can depress, no crime can destroy, no enemy can alienate, no despotism can enslave.” Without education, what would become of a man? He would be a slave of knowledge; his reasoning would be savagery.

    But in Nigeria, we seem to be seeing opportunity in illiteracy. For four months, the lecturers have gone on strike. Students are complaining, parents are not happy but government and lecturers seem not concerned. Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) boasts of four-month strike, but can we, undergraduates, boast of four-months of individual intellectual development?

    Four months of having not reading any books. Four months of being out of the classroom. Four months of having not attending life-changing seminars. Four months of waste in our education system. Four months of not thinking big ideas! When the strike is eventually called off, are we not going to celebrate four months of academic indolence?

    But out of this, we should be hopeful with the feat of the likes of Soyinka whose achievements have continued to inspire right-thinking youths. May God continue to spare his life and make him an inspiration to the next generation of writers that will take the country to high places.

    To every aspiring writer, match your inspiration with necessary perspiration, for inspiration without perspiration is a daydream; perspiration without inspiration is a night mare. A greater Soyinka is in you; but are you willing to pay a greater price than Soyinka paid?

     

    •Opeoluwa, 400-Level Law, OAU Ile-Ife

     

  • 82-year-old wins Nobel prize

    82-year-old wins Nobel prize

    Alice Munro, the renowned Canadian short-story writer whose visceral work explores the tangled relationships between men and women, small-town existence and the fallibility of memory, won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday.

    Announcing the award in Stockholm, the Swedish Academy said Ms. Munro, 82, who has written 14 story collections, was a “master of the contemporary short story.” She is the 13th woman to win the prize.

    The selection of Ms. Munro was greeted with an outpouring of enthusiasm in the English-speaking world, a temporary relief from recent years when the Swedish Academy chose winners who were obscure, difficult to comprehend or overtly political.

    Ms. Munro, widely beloved for her spare and psychologically astute fiction that is deeply revealing of human nature, appeared to be more of a purely literary choice. She revolutionised the architecture of short stories, often beginning a story in an unexpected place then moving backward or forward in time, and brought a modesty and subtle wit to her work that admirers often traced to her background growing up in rural Canada.

    Her collection Dear Life, published last year, appears to be her last. She told The National Post in Canada this year that she was finished writing, a sentiment she echoed in other interviews.

    She also seemed to have finished paying attention to major literary awards, if she ever did in the first place. On Thursday morning, the Swedish Academy was unable to locate Ms. Munro before it made the announcement public, according to the Twitter account for the Nobel Prize. A phone message was left instead.

    Ms. Munro, who lives in Clinton, a town in Ontario, eventually found out that she had won while visiting her daughter in Victoria, British Columbia, who woke her at 4 a.m. with the news. Sounding a bit groggy, and at times emotional, she spoke with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation just a few minutes later by telephone.

    “It just seems impossible,” she said. “It seems just so splendid a thing to happen, I can’t describe it. It’s more than I can say.”

    She later added, “I would really hope this would make people see the short story as an important art, not just something you played around with until you got a novel.”

    Waking up to the news that Ms. Munro was the winner, her admirers were jubilant, especially in Canada.

    Stephen Harper, the prime minister, issued a statement praising Ms. Munro as the first Canadian woman to win the Nobel in literature. “Canadians are enormously proud of this remarkable accomplishment, which is the culmination of a lifetime of brilliant writing,” he said.

    On Twitter, congratulations rolled in from publishers, literary magazines and fellow writers including Margaret Atwood and Nathan Englander.

    “A true master of the form,” Salman Rushdie wrote.

    Readers used Twitter to send messages with Munro quotations. (“The constant happiness is curiosity” was one favorite.) Some people wondered if Ms. Munro’s honor was an indication that the short story was entering a golden age; most Nobel winners tend to focus on novels or poems.

    Ms. Munro knew that she wanted to be a writer from the time that she was a teenager and wrote consistently while she helped her first husband, James Munro, run a bookstore and raise their three daughters.

    She said she fell into writing short stories, the form that would make her famous, somewhat by accident.

    “For years and years, I thought that stories were just practice, till I got time to write a novel,” she told The New Yorker in 2012. “Then I found that they were all I could do, and so I faced that. I suppose that my trying to get so much into stories has been a compensation.”

    Her first collection, “Dance of the Happy Shades,” was published when she was 37.

    Throughout her career, she has drawn from the setting of her home of rural Ontario and frequently expanded on themes of sex, desire, work, discontent and aging. One of her collections, “The Love of a Good Woman,” won a National Book Critics Circle Award in 1998.

    The Nobel, one of the most prestigious and lucrative prizes in the world, is given to a writer for a lifetime’s body of work, rather than a single novel, short story or collection. The winner receives eight million Swedish kronor, or about $1.2 million.

    Winners in recent years have included Mo Yan of China, in 2012; the Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer, in 2011; Mario Vargas Llosa, the Peruvian writer, in 2010; and, in 2009, Herta Müller, a Romanian-born German novelist and essayist.

    Each year, a handful of the same names are floated as contenders, including the Americans Joyce Carol Oates and Philip Roth and the Japanese author Haruki Murakami. Mr. Roth and Ms. Munro were the subject of even more intense speculation than usual this year because they had made similar recent pronouncements that they were finished with writing.

    The announcement continues a losing streak for American writers, who have been passed over for 20 years. The last American to win the prize was Toni Morrison, in 1993.

    While both are celebrities in Canada, Ms. Munro’s public profile stands in contrast to that of Ms. Atwood, the country’s other internationally known writer. Ms. Munro rarely speaks out on public issues, while Ms. Atwood uses her fame, and Twitter, to comment on causes like the environmental impact of Canada’s oil sands.

    But Ms. Munro’s low profile has not made her any less well known in Canada.

    In a statement released by her American publisher, Knopf, she paid tribute to the Canadian literary circle.

    “When I began writing, there was a very small community of Canadian writers and little attention was paid by the world,” she said. “Now Canadian writers are read, admired and respected around the globe.

    She said she was thrilled to be chosen for the prize, adding, “I hope it fosters further interest in all Canadian writers.”

    In an interview with The New York Times this year, Ms. Munro said that now that she is in her 80s, she isn’t as concerned about aging.

    “I worry less than I did,” she said. “There’s nothing you can do about it, and it’s better than being dead. I feel that I’ve done what I wanted to do, and that makes me feel fairly content.”

    Speaking to a reporter after the announcement of the prize, Peter Englund, the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, said that Ms. Munro is capable of a “fantastic portrayal of human beings.” Whether she is really finished writing, he said, is up to her.

    “She has done a marvelous job,” Mr. Englund said. “What she has done is quite enough to win the Nobel Prize. If she wants to stop writing, that’s her decision.”

    In a brief interview with Nobelprize.org, Ms. Munro explained that she had decided to stop writing because she had been working since she was about 20 years old.

    “That’s a long time to be working, and I thought, maybe it’s time to take it easy,” she said. “But this may change my mind.”

    •Culled from New Yorker