In a 2013 blog post, the great Ursula K. Le Guin quotes a London Times Literary Supplement column by a “J.C.,” who satirically proposes the âJean-Paul Sartre Prize for Prize Refusal.â âWriters all over Europe and American are turning down awards in the hope of being nominated for a Sartre,â writes J.C., âThe Sartre Prize itself has never been refused.â Sartre earned the honor of his own prize for prize refusal by turning down the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964, an act Le Guin calls âcharacteristic of the gnarly and counter-suggestible Existentialist.â As you can see in the short clip above, Sartre fully believed the committee used the award to whitewash his Communist political views and activism.
But the refusal was not a theatrical or âimpulsive gesture,â Sartre wrote in a statement to the Swedish press, which was later published in Le Monde. It was consistent with his longstanding principles. âI have always declined official honors,â he said, and referred to his rejection of the Legion of Honor in 1945 for similar reasons. Elaborating, he cited first the âpersonalâ reason for his refusal
This attitude is based on my conception of the writerâs enterprise. A writer who adopts political, social, or literary positions must act only with the means that are his ownâthat is, the written word. All the honors he may receive expose his readers to a pressure I do not consider desirable. If I sign myself Jean-Paul Sartre it is not the same thing as if I sign myself Jean-Paul Sartre, Nobel Prize winner.
The writer must therefore refuse to let himself be transformed into an institution, even if this occurs under the most honorable circumstances, as in the present case.
There was another reason as well, an “objective” one, Sartre wrote. In serving the cause of socialism, he hoped to bring about âthe peaceful coexistence of the two cultures, that of the East and the West.â (He refers not only to Asia as âthe East,â but also to âthe Eastern bloc.â) Therefore, he felt he must remain independent of institutions on either side: âI should thus be quite as unable to accept, for example, the Lenin Prize, if someone wanted to give it to me.â
As a flattering New York Times article noted at time, this was not the first time a writer had refused the Nobel. In 1926, George Bernard Shaw turned down the prize money, offended by the extravagant cash award, which he felt was unnecessary since he already had âsufficient money for my needs.â Shaw later relented, donating the money for English translations of Swedish literature. Boris Pasternak also refused the award, in 1958, but this was under extreme duress. âIf heâd tried to go accept it,â Le Guin writes, âthe Soviet Government would have promptly, enthusiastically arrested him and sent him to eternal silence in a gulag in Siberia.â
These qualifications make Sartre the only author to ever outright and voluntarily reject both the Nobel Prize in Literature and its sizable cash award. While his statement to the Swedish press is filled with polite explanations and gracious demurrals, his filmed statement above, excerpted from the 1976 documentary Sartre by Himself, minces no words.
Because I was politically involved the bourgeois establishment wanted to cover up my âpast errors.â Now thereâs an admission! And so they gave me the Nobel Prize. They âpardonedâ me and said I deserved it. It was monstrous!
Sartre was in fact pardoned by De Gaulle four years after his Nobel rejection for his participation in the 1968 uprisings. âYou donât arrest Voltaire,â the French President supposedly said. The writer and philosopher, Le Guin points out, âwas, of course, already an âinstitutionââ at the time of the Nobel award. Nonetheless, she says, the gesture had real meaning. Literary awards, writes Le Guin—who herself refused a Nebula Award in 1976 (sheâs won several more since)—can âhonor a writer,â in which case they have âgenuine value.â Yet prizes are also awarded âas a marketing ploy by corporate capitalism, and sometimes as a political gimmick by the awarders [â¦.] And the more prestigious and valued the prize the more compromised it is.â Sartre, of course, felt the sameâthe greater the honor, the more likely his work would be coopted and sanitized.
Perhaps proving his point, a short, nasty 1965 Harvard Crimson letter had many, less flattering things than Le Guin to say about Sartreâs motivations, calling him âan ugly toadâ and a âpoor loserâ envious of his former friend Camus, who won in 1957. The letter writer calls Sartreâs rejection of the prize âan act of pretensionâ and a ârather ineffectual and stupid gesture.â And yet it did have an effect. It seems clear at least to me that the Harvard Crimson writer could not stand the fact that, offered the âmost coveted awardâ the West can bestow, and a heaping sum of money besides, âSartreâs big line was, âJe refuse.ââ
Related Content:
Jean-Paul Sartre Breaks Down the Bad Faith of Intellectuals
Human, All Too Human: 3-Part Documentary Profiles Nietzsche, Heidegger & Sartre
Albert Camus Wins the Nobel Prize & Sends a Letter of Gratitude to His Elementary School Teacher (1957)
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
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Jean-Paul Sartre Rejects the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964: âIt Was Monstrous!â
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