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I read every Nobel Literature Prize winner from 1929 to 1936, and this is what I found

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  • Опубліковано 13 лип 2024
  • It is the fifth week of my reading challenge - to read all 120 winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature before the 2024 winner is announced.
    In week five of the 120 Nobels reading challenge I introduce you to the Nobel Prizes of the 1930s - years of depression, demons and dread - from Thomas Mann in 1929 to Eugene O'Neill in 1936.
    You will discover the intriguing stories of the only dead man to win the Nobel Prize and the way that Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night came to the stage.
    More details, links to all texts and resources are available at my substack - jeffrich.subst.... Free to join.
    My 120 Nobels Challenge series on substack will show you how the Nobel Prize is a window onto on understanding the world history, world literature and geopolitics.
    You can chat with me about the 120 Nobels Reading Challenge on the Burning Archive channel UA-cam channel comments section and more exclusively at jeffrich.subst...
    Subscribe to my free weekly email to receive insights from world history in a weekly essay on Saturday at jeffrich.subst...
    You can support the Burning Archive by contributing at:
    Buy Me A Coffee www.buymeacoff...
    Or by hitting a thanks button right here on UA-cam.
    Check out ‪@NobelPrize‬ for more details about the process of choosing the Nobel Prize for Literature and profiles of the winners.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22

  • @weavebrain
    @weavebrain Місяць тому +2

    Great job! This is a unique way of integrating history and culture. Out this list of winners, I only read Thomas Mann so this adds a whole bunch of authors to my potential future reading list. Also, thanks for reminding me about the Visconti film, I’m going to rent it this week 🙏🏻

    • @theburningarchive
      @theburningarchive  Місяць тому

      Thank you. It is such an iconic film. I remember screening at the arthouse conemas all the time in the early 1980s

  • @Nopenotme1337
    @Nopenotme1337 Місяць тому

    Thank you for the videos, love the format and the topics covered.

  • @Ged-k7w
    @Ged-k7w Місяць тому

    Good brief summary....injoyed ...

  • @gavleopardi70
    @gavleopardi70 Місяць тому +2

    Joao Guimaraes Rosa, Juan Rulfo, Thomas Hardy, Robert Musil, Franz Kafka, Marcel Proust, Leo Tolstoy, Henrik Ibsen, James Joyce, Hermann Broch, Fernando Pessoa, Georg Trakl, Rainer Marie Rilke, Giuseppe Ungaretti, Italo Svevo, Joseph Roth, Israel Josua Singer, DH Lawrence, Hans Fallada, Miroslav Krleza, Machado De Assis, Natsume Soseki, Shimizaki Toson, Karl Kraus, Ernesto Sabato, Jorge Luis Borges, Arthur Miller, Mikhail Bulgakov, Sherwood Anderson, Friedrich Durrenmatt, Karel Capek, Miroslav Holub, Vasko Popa, Umberto Saba, Horacio Quiroga, Miguel De Unamuno, Marguerite Yourcenar….I could go on… the greatest writers never won this prize and I would recommend you read each one…

    • @weavebrain
      @weavebrain Місяць тому +2

      Agreed, but I’m not sure Jeff’s intention was to focus on literary merit alone👍

    • @Manfred-nj8vz
      @Manfred-nj8vz Місяць тому +1

      May I add just one more name? Nikos Kazantzakis.

    • @theburningarchive
      @theburningarchive  Місяць тому +2

      So true... and I try to work them into the stories as I go along.... That might be next year's project... the 50 greatest writers who did not the Nobel Prize?

    • @moj1338
      @moj1338 Місяць тому

      @@gavleopardi70 Great list, and these are some of the great writers of the global north. There are many more from other parts of the world who also were never acknowledged and still are not.

    • @theburningarchive
      @theburningarchive  Місяць тому +1

      very true. I will have to talk about them in another series.... but I have to finish this one first!