American Decades
Faulkner, William 1897-1962
WRITER
Awards.
A self-described Mississippi farmer was hailed as one of the world's greatest writers in 1950. In June the American Academy of Arts and Letters awarded William Faulkner the Howells Medal, their highest honor to a senior writer, and in November Faulkner was named winner of the 1949 Nobel Prize for literature, which the Swedish Academy had withheld the previous year. In America the choice was roundly criticized. Faulkner was variously described in the popular press as depraved, obscure, insignificant, and irrelevant. As recently as 1945 none of Faulkner's seventeen books had been in print, and his two new novels of the early 1950s, A Requiem for a Nun (1951) and A Fable (1954), did little in the minds of most readers to justify the American Academy's and the Swedish Academy's judgments.
A Requiem for a Nun.
It was unclear to most readers whether A Requiem for a Nun was...
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1950's The Arts
- Overview
- Topics in the News
-
Headline Makers
- Bernstein, Leonard 1918-1990
- Brando, Marlon 1924-
- Dean, James 1931-1955
- De Kooning, Willem 1904
- Faulkner, William 1897-1962
- Hemingway, Ernest 1899-1961
- Kerouac, Jack 1922-1969
- Monroe, Marilyn 1926-1962
- Parker, Charlie 1920-1955
- Pollock, Jackson 1912-1956
- Presley, Elvis 1935-1977
- Salinger, J. D. 1919-
- Williams, Hank 1924-1953
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Arts, 1950–1959
