Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pulitzer Prize Winner Jhumpa Lahiri Gets National Humanities Medal From President Obama

IANS, 11 Sep, 2015 12:40 PM
    President Barack Obama presented the 2014 National Medals of Arts and Humanities to Pulitzer Prize winning Indian-American author Jhumpa Lahiri and 20 other distinguished persons at a White House ceremony.
     
    "I always do good with writers and scientists. Those are my crew," said the president in a grey suit and violet tie as he addressed the audience starting with a quote from Emily Dickinson followed by his own joke on the political class.
     
    "One of our great poets, Emily Dickinson, once said that 'truth is such a rare thing, it is delightful to tell it.' The truth is so rare, it is delightful to tell it -- and that's especially true in Washington," he said amid laughter.
     
    "The men and women that we honour today, recipients of the National Medals for the Arts and the Humanities, are here not only because they've shared rare truths, often about their own experience, but because they've told rare truths about the common experiences that we have as Americans and as human beings," Obama said.
     
    "They span mediums and methods. We have artists, actors, writers, musicians, historians, a landscape architect, and a chef," he said.
     
    "Without them there would be no Edible Schoolyard, no Jhumpa Lahiri novels, no really scary things like Carrie and Misery," said Obama amid laughter.
     
    Obama then proceeded to present the medals to each of the recipients as their citations were read by his military aide.
     
    "The 2014 National Humanities Medal to Jhumpa Lahiri for enlarging the human story. In her works of fiction, Dr. Lahiri has illuminated the Indian American experience in beautifully wrought narratives of estrangement and belonging," read the aide as Lahiri received the award amid applause.
     
    The humanities medal honours an individual or organization whose work has deepened the nation's understanding of the human experience, broadened citizens' engagement with history and literature or helped preserve and expand Americans' access to cultural resources.
     
    Lahiri's novel "The Lowland" was among the books Obama took with him while vacationing in Martha's Vineyard, an island summer resort in Massachusetts, last month.
     
    "The Lowland" is a story about two brothers who grew up in Calcutta in the 1960s. After one is killed, the other marries his pregnant widow and moves to the US. The New York Times calls the premise of this novel "startlingly operatic".
     
    Other awardees included artists, historians, writers, a philosopher, scholar, preservationist, food activist and an education course.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US, India in for intensive engagement with 'reenergized strategic partnership'

    US, India in for intensive engagement with 'reenergized strategic partnership'
    US and India are lining up a "pretty ambitious agenda of engagement" to quickly move forward on things discussed during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s US....

    US, India in for intensive engagement with 'reenergized strategic partnership'

    76 mn accounts hacked in August: JP Morgan Chase

    76 mn accounts hacked in August: JP Morgan Chase
    US banking giant JP Morgan Chase has issued updated information about a cyber attack which it suffered in August and that approximately 76 million current....

    76 mn accounts hacked in August: JP Morgan Chase

    5.5 magnitude quake hits Japan

    5.5 magnitude quake hits Japan
    The quake hit off Iwate Prefecture in northeast Japan, but no tsunami alerts along the coast have been issued, Xinhua quoted the the Japan Meteorological....

    5.5 magnitude quake hits Japan

    15 militants killed in Pakistan airstrikes

    15 militants killed in Pakistan airstrikes
    The suspected militants were killed in Jamrud and Bara areas of northwestern Pakistan's Khyber tribal region, Dawn online reported citing the....

    15 militants killed in Pakistan airstrikes

    Hong Kong protests continue, students demand chief executive's ouster

    Hong Kong protests continue, students demand chief executive's ouster
    Pro-democracy protests continued in Hong Kong for the fifth day Thursday with students threatening to take over government buildings unless the territory's chief executive, Leung Chung-ying, resigns by the end of the day.

    Hong Kong protests continue, students demand chief executive's ouster

    Obama 'very pleased' with Narendra Modi's visit

    Obama 'very pleased' with Narendra Modi's visit
    President Barack Obama was "very pleased" with and "enjoyed" Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit as it reflected the depth of the strong relationship between the US and India, according to the White House.

    Obama 'very pleased' with Narendra Modi's visit