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Swedish Academy The Permanent Secretary |
Press Release
The Australian Patrick White has
been awarded the 1973 Nobel Literature Prize "for an epic and
psychological narrative art which has introduced a new continent
into literature", as it says in the Swedish
Academy's citation. White's growing fame is based chiefly on
seven novels of which the earliest masterly work is The Aunt's
Story, a portrayal imbued with remarkable feeling of a
lonely, unmarried, Australian woman's life during experiences
that extend also to Europe and America. The book with which White
really made his name, however, was The Tree of Man, an
epically broad and psychologically discerning account of a part
of Australian social development in the form of two people's long
life together, and struggle against outward and inward
difficulties.
Another aspect of Australia is shown in Voss, in which a
fanatical explorer in the country's interior meets his fate: an
intensive character study against the background of the
fascinating Australian wilds. The writer displays yet another
kind of art in Riders in the Chariot, with special
emphasis on his cystic and symbolic tendencies: a sacrificial
drama, tense, yet with an everyday setting, in the midst of
current Australian reality. From contrasting viewpoints, The
Solid Mandala gives a double portrait of two brothers, in
which the sterilely rational brother is set against the fertilely
intuitive one, who is almost a fool in the eyes of the
world.
White's last two books are among his greatest feats, both as to
size and to frenzied building up of tension. The
Vivisector is the imaginary biography of an artist, in which
a whole life is disclosed in a relentless scrutiny of motives and
springs of action: an artist's untiring battle to express the
utmost while sacrificing both himself and his fellow-beings in
the attempt. The Eye of the Storm places an old, dying
woman in the centre of a narrative which revolves round, and
encloses, the whole of her environment, past and present, until
we have come to share an entire life panorama, in which everyone
is on a decisive dramatic footing with the old lady.
Particularly, these latest books show White's unbroken creative
power, an ever deeper restlessness and seeking urge, an onslaught
against vital problem that have never ceased to engage him, and a
wrestling with the language in order to extract all its power and
all its nuances, to the verge of the unattainable. White's
literary production has failings that belong to great and bold
writing, exceeding, as it does, different kinds of conventional
limits. He is the one who, for the first time, has given the
continent of Australia an authentic voice that carries across the
world, at the same time as his achievement contributes to the
development, both artistic and, as regards ideas, of contemporary
literature.