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Why is the Nobel Prize so elusive for Haruki Murakami?

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тАЬHarukistsтАЭ once again held their collective breath, and once again they were left disappointed.

The long-held prayers of die-hard fans of bestselling Japanese author Haruki Murakami went unanswered Thursday when the Swedish Academy awarded this yearтАЩs Nobel Prize in literature to Tanzania-born novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah.

Murakami, who is best known for his 1987 bestseller тАЬNorwegian Wood,тАЭ first emerged as a viable contender for the worldтАЩs most prestigious literary award around 2007, when prominent betting site Ladbrokes placed him as one of the top contenders. Since then, his name has become something of a fixture on the list of hopefuls, inflating fansтАЩ expectations and turning frenzied speculation about his Nobel possibility into an annual affair.

This year, too, there was a bit of hype surrounding the 72-year-old. A day before the Thursday announcement, Murakami was the second favorite among bookmakers to take the accolade, with Ladbrokes giving him odds of 10 to 1 тАФ on par with acclaimed Canadian author Margaret Atwood, best known for her dystopian 1985 novel тАЬThe HandmaidтАЩs Tale.тАЭ

But once again the academy went in a different direction, reigniting the question: Why is the Nobel literary award so elusive for the famed author?

Over the years, critics have cited a number of possible reasons, with the most prominent being the lack of political statements in his work.

In recent years, the Swedish Academy has been said to gravitate toward authors whose works are politically laudable, favoring authors who shed light on the downtrodden and those who fight oppressive rulers or tackle contemporary social issues head-on.

Such elements underlie the works of this yearтАЩs laureate, too.

Gurnah, whose work focuses on colonialism and the trauma of the refugee experience, bagged the prize тАЬfor his uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fate of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents,тАЭ the Nobel committee said.

It added his novels тАЬrecoil from stereotypical descriptions and open our gaze to a culturally diversified East Africa unfamiliar to many in other parts of the world.тАЭ

In 2015, Belarusian author Svetlana Alexievich was honored for her тАЬpolyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time.тАЭ Her reportage-style work covered topics from the 10-year Soviet war in Afghanistan to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

French author Patrick Modiano, who clinched the prize in 2014, was honored for тАЬthe art of memory with which he has evoked the most ungraspable human destinies and uncovered the life-world of the (Nazi) Occupation.тАЭ

тАЬWhen authors under consideration for the prize write in all these different languages and come from all these different cultural backgrounds, what makes a difference at the end of the day is whether or not their works include some political significance that resonatesтАЭ with the committee, said Koichiro Sukegawa, a Japanese literature professor at Gifu WomenтАЩs University who has long studied Murakami.

Novelist Haruki Murakami attends a news conference in Tokyo in September. | AFP-JIJI

This, he said, gives authors such as Atwood and Kenyan writer Ngugi Wa ThiongтАЩo тАФ another perennial Nobel favorite тАФ a competitive edge over Murakami: Atwood is often associated with feminism, while Ngugi was jailed in the 1970s after penning an anti-establishment play that was thought to pose a threat to the status quo at the time.

тАЬBut such elements are rather absent in MurakamiтАЩs works,тАЭ Sukegawa said.

In fact, MurakamiтАЩs recent behavior, the professor said, may give the Swedish Academy the impression that he is drifting further away from his commitment to political rectitude.

In March, the author collaborated with Japanese retail giant Uniqlo, which, amid accusations of forced labor of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, had come under fire for allegations that its shirts were made with cotton from the region. Fast Retailing, UniqloтАЩs parent company, has denied its products are tied to any human rights violations.

Murakami has also faced controversy for the way his novels portray women and sex.

His vivid depictions of sex scenes involving a male protagonist and an underage girl in his 2009 three-volume novel тАЬ1Q84,тАЭ for example, are cited by some critics as a potential red flag for the Swedish Academy.

тАЬThe sexualization of an underage girl, as well as detailed descriptions of the voluptuousness of her body, can be considered problematic per todayтАЩs literary context,тАЭ Sukegawa said.

A line from the trilogy тАФ тАЬa freshly made ear and a freshly made vagina look very much alikeтАЭ тАФ later resulted in the novelist being nominated for British magazine Literary ReviewтАЩs annual Bad Sex Award, which is designed to expose тАЬthe most egregious passage of sexual description in a work of fiction.тАЭ

Also palpable in MurakamiтАЩs works is a penchant for Western consumer culture. Protagonists in his novels often live stylish lives тАФ listening to Western music, sporting cool clothes and eating pasta and sandwiches.

Sukegawa says the worldтАЩs intelligentsia tends to look skeptically at these examples of commercialism, but rather than distance himself from it, Murakami actively pens works that stoke Asian readersтАЩ admiration for it.

тАЬMurakami debuted in an era in which being able to consume these things was considered proof of someoneтАЩs social status, and he has thrived on that premise,тАЭ Sukegawa said.

тАЬBut that era is becoming passe тАж I think his career is now at a crossroads, in that unless he experiments with something new, the chances of him winning a Nobel will remain slim.тАЭ

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