He claimed he was too ill to attend the ceremony (Oodles Answer) & Under intense pressure of Soviet Authorities.
The Nobel Prize in Literature 1958 was awarded to Boris Pasternak for his important achievement both in contemporary lyrical poetry and in the field of the great Russian epic tradition.
Eugene O'Neill is an American playwright and nobel laureate in literature.
The author of ' Gitanjali ' is Rabindranath Tagore. Gitanjali bought him the Nobel prize for literature. Thus, he became the first Asian to receive Nobel Prize.
he was an Irish play writter and the only person to win an nobel prize for literature and an Oscar for the contribution for his film 'pygmalion'... He once quoted "As long as I hve a want , I have reason for living . Satisfaction is death."
Yes, the Nobel Peace Prize is a noun, a compound, proper noun, the name of a specific thing. All of the words of a proper noun are capitalized.
Peer
Boris Pasternak was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958. However, due to political pressures from the Soviet government, he was forced to decline the award.
Boris Leonidovich Pasternak won The Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958.
Boris Pasternak, the author of "Doctor Zhivago," declined the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958 due to pressure from the Soviet government. They feared that his acceptance would worsen relations with the Soviet authorities and put his family in danger.
Boris Pasternak turned down the 1958 Nobel Prize for Literature for his novel "Doctor Zhivago" due to pressure from the Soviet government. He feared that accepting the prize would put his safety and that of his family at risk.
Jean-Paul Sartre, a French writer and philosopher, refused the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964. He declined the award due to his belief that writers should not align themselves with institutions or accept accolades that could compromise their independence.
The French writer Jean-Paul Sartre refused the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1964, the only person ever to have done so. He explained that his personal belief was that writers should not accept awards which could prejudice their artistic freedom. Le Duc Tho also refused the Peace Prize in 1973 4 others were obliged to decline by their governments, including Boris Pasternak (Literature Prize 1958)
Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1978.
Yes, there have been a few instances where the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded posthumously. One such example is Erik Axel Karlfeldt, who was awarded the prize in 1931 after his death in 1931. Another example is Boris Pasternak, who was awarded the prize in 1958, but declined it, and it was later awarded to him posthumously in 1989.
Doctor Zhivago.
French writer Jean-Paul Sartre .
Jean-Paul Sartre, a French philosopher, and Boris Pasternak, Russian writer, both refused to accept the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964 and 1958 respectively. Sartre rejected the award because he did not want to be institutionalized and constrained by any external honors, while Pasternak declined due to pressure from the Soviet government.
Jean-Paul Sartre refused the award. It is also recorded that probably on the advice of his government, the Soviet author Boris Pasternak ( Dr. Zhivago fame) either turned down the award or was forced to do so by the Soviet government.