Nobel Prize 2016 Winners |
Saturday night in
Scandinavia, a group of world-famous prizes will be awarded in physics,
chemistry, medicine, literature, economics and world peace, all funded by the
legacy of an industrialist best known for inventing dynamite.
VOA report continues:
For
each of these winners, the prestige of the title “Nobel Prize laureate” — named
for Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor and philanthropist — will accompany their
names henceforth.
This
year the biggest item of contention is the awarding of the literature prize to
American songwriter and musician Bob Dylan for his extensive catalog of lyrics.
Traditionalists who scoffed at the choice said it should have gone to a
traditional author.
Russian-American
novelist Gary Shteyngart, for example, tweeted sarcastically: “I totally get
the Nobel committee. Reading books is hard.”
Novelist
Stephen King spoke in support of Dylan to Rolling Stone magazine this
week: “People complaining about [Dylan’s] Nobel either don’t understand or it’s
just a case of sour grapes.” King went on to add, “There are a lot of deserving
writers who have never gotten the Nobel Prize. And Gary Shteyngart will
probably be one of them.”
Dylan sends a speech
The
reclusive Dylan greeted news of his award two months ago with silence and did
not respond to several attempts by the Nobel committee to contact him. At the
end of October, the 75-year-old songwriter and performer told the Nobel
committee by telephone that he was honored to receive the award, but that he
would be unable to attend the traditional prize ceremony.
A
longtime friend, musician Patti Smith, is expected to perform a tribute to
Dylan, and he has sent a speech to be read afterward.
This
year’s winner of the Nobel Peace Prize is Colombian President Juan Manuel
Santos for his long, ultimately successful effort to make peace between the
Bogota government and Colombia’s FARC rebels. More than a quarter-million
people are believed to have died during five decades of conflicts between the
two sides.
Santos
has said he will donate his prize money — more than US$900,000 — to projects,
foundations or programs that assist war victims and help with reconciliation.
Nobel
prizes have stirred controversy on many previous occasions, but usually for
political reasons. In 2009, U.S. President Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize after he had been in office less than a year, before many of his
administration’s subsequent accomplishments.
Traditional ceremonies
A
series of announcements in early October every year tells the world who the
prizewinners are, and they each receive their awards December 10. The Nobels
for academic subjects — physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and economics
— are given out at a ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden’s capital. The peace prize,
considered the most prestigious honor, is awarded in Oslo, Norway’s capital and
home of the Nobel Institute.
The
laureates are expected to attend a number of events over several days of Nobel
ceremonies and celebrations — public appearances, the prize ceremony, at which
they will be expected to speak, and a banquet. The king and queen of each
country generally attend the ceremonies.
List of winners
In
Stockholm Saturday, three scientists will receive the chemistry prize for their
work in developing molecular machines: Pierre Sauvage of France’s University of
Strasbourg; British-born James Fraser Stoddart, who is a professor at the
United States’ Northwestern University; and Bernard Feringa of the University
of Groningen in the Netherlands. When more than one person wins a prize, the
winners divide the money equally.
The
physics prize goes to three British-born scientists who are professors at U.S.
universities, for their work on exotic states of matter: David Thouless of the
University of Washington, Duncan Haldane of Princeton University and Michael
Kosterlitz of Brown University.
The
prize for medicine or physiology goes to Japanese cell biologist Yoshinori
Ohsumi of the Tokyo Institute of Technology’s Institute of Innovative Research.
He is being honored for his research on the process of autophagy, or how cells
destroy and recycle their components.
And the prize in economic sciences — a separate award established in 1968 and funded by the Swedish national bank in honor of Alfred Nobel — will go to British-born Oliver Hart of Harvard University and Finland-born Bengt Holmstrom of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for their work on contract theory and design.
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