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1933 Nobel Prize in Literature

The 1933 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to Ivan Bunin (1870–1953) "for the strict artistry with which he has carried on the classical Russian traditions in prose writing". Bunin was the first Russian author to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Laureate

Ivan Bunin was a poet and prose writer, best known for his short stories and novellas such as The Gentleman from San Francisco (1916) and Mitya's Love (1924). Bunin is regarded as one of the best stylists in the Russian language.

Nominations

Ivan Bunin was nominated for the prize 18 times starting in 1923, when he was nominated by the 1915 Nobel laureate Romain Rolland. In 1933 five nominations were submitted for Bunin. In total the Nobel committee received 47 nominations for 29 individuals including Frans Eemil Sillanpää (awarded in 1939), Johannes V. Jensen (awarded in 1944), Paul Valéry, Karel Capek, Coelho Neto, Olav Duun and Upton Sinclair.

Prize decision

The decision to award Ivan Bunin the 1933 Nobel Prize in Literature was preceded by a long campaign. Starting in 1923, the Armenia-born Mihaïl Handamirov, a lecturer in the Russian language and literature at Lund University, particularly pushed for a prize to Bunin. Handamirov hired the accomplished translators Sigurd Agrell and Ruth Wedin Rothstein to introduce Bunin's work in Swedish and made sure that Agrell, in his capacity as professor, continuously and eloquently nominated Bunin for the prize. Gradually, positive opinions about Bunin's worthiness to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature accumulated in the relevant Swedish literary circles, and in 1933 the Nobel committee decided to award him the prize.

Award ceremony

At the award ceremony in Stockholm on 10 December 1933, Per Hallström, permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, said:

References