Chinese Nobel laureate Mo Yan awarded Oxford honorary fellowship

Source:Xinhua Published: 2019/6/13 18:23:41

Chinese writer and Nobel laureate Mo Yan was awarded on Wednesday an honorary fellowship by Regent's Park College, University of Oxford, in recognition of his contribution to Chinese and world literature.

The college principal Robert Ellis presented a gown and stole to Mo at the ceremony. They unveiled together a new international writing center named after Mo.

Two contemporary Chinese writers Su Tong and Yu Hua were invited to work as writers in residence for the international writing center.

Mo, renowned for his imaginative and humanistic fiction, was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature. He is also a professor at Beijing Normal University.

He expressed his gratitude to Oxford college and recalled his love of literature since his childhood. He also told the audience in his speech that he was greatly influenced by William Shakespeare's masterpieces and would focus on play writing in the following years.

Mo told the Xinhua News Agency that he expects the international writing center in Oxford to further enhance China-UK literature cooperation and talent exchange.

Ellis told Xinhua that as the college has strengthened its relationships with Beijing Normal University in the last few years, "it is the very right thing to do for somebody in the university not only to honor Mo Yan's great achievements as a writer, but also we want to recognize him and welcome him into our college community."

"It is a great honor for us to associate him with us and we hope he too will gain from the association with our college," the principal added.

He noted that Regent's Park College, located at the center of Oxford, has historical ties with China and the newly inaugurated Mo Yan International Writing Center is "a very exciting development."

"We hope to strengthen our collaboration with Beijing Normal University and hope it will nurture new writers and young people will be stimulated," he said.

Ellis believes the interchange between Oxford and Chinese universities will continue to bring advantages to both sides.

"One of the advantages of the relationships is the way it will deepen understanding between people from different cultures and different economic and political systems. That is also gained through conversations we have because of the quality writing of Mo Yan. So, to read his books, the Red Sorghum Clan, for instance, is for readers from the West to understand China in a new way," he said.

The college also unveiled a portrait of Mo, which was commissioned to join those of other honorary fellows.

Mo was born in 1955 and grew up in Gaomi in East China's Shandong Province. He is the first Chinese national to win the Nobel literature award.




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