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The Very Different Fates of Two Chinese Nobel Prize Winners

Categories: East Asia, China, Freedom of Speech, Human Rights, Literature, Politics, Protest

This year's winner of the Nobel Prize in literature, Mo Yan, has travelled to Stockholm to receive his prize. However in contrast, the 2010 Nobel Prize in Peace winner, Liu Xiaobo, is still in prison in China and his wife Liu Xia under house arrest.

In her first interview in 26 months, Liu Xia finally spoke to the Associated Press journalists who sneaked into her apartment in secret during the security staff's lunch break, bursting into tears and saying, “We live in such an absurd place [1]“.

Indeed, it is absurd. Mo Yan, a pen-name that literally means ‘Don't Speak’, attended the Nobel press conference yesterday on December 6, 2012, and said that censorship is inevitable [2] and that he would not back a petition for Liu Xiaobo. However, 134 Nobel Laureates past and present launched [3] a campaign, urging Chinese President Xi Jinping to release Liu Xiaobo back in early December. Mo Yan is obviously not signed up to the petition list [4].

Liu Xia bursted into tears and said, "We live in such an absurd place". Screen capture from Now TV news. [5]

Liu Xia bursted into tears and said, “We live in such an absurd place”. Screen capture from Now TV news.

While Mo Yan is a winner in every sense, Liu Xiaobo, who has chosen to speak up for democracy and against political injustice, was sentenced to 11 year's imprisonment, and his wife subjected to house arrest for two years. Liu won the Nobel Prize but lost everything.

Actually, the majority of mainland Chinese never had the chance to know that Liu Xiaobo was the first Chinese citizen to receive a Nobel Prize, as the news has never shown up on official media outlets. Similarly, Liu Xia's recent outburst cannot be heard online, as both Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia's names are unsearchable.

Online reactions

On Twitter, some dissidents are elaborating on the absurdity of China. Hu Jia described [6] [zh] his own situation:

上午遭到门口便衣们拦截。当我质问看守们为什么要做奴才,他们的回应居然是“当奴才比当汉奸强。”9月18日我因十八大被开始软禁时,国保们有过类似表述。我问他们今天是否因为刘霞。他们露出得意之情。刘霞发声我被软禁,荒诞吗。

I was stopped by the under-cover police in the morning in my building's entrance. I asked them how you choose to be slaves, they said “slaves are better than traitors”. Since September 18, I was under house arrest because of the 18th national CCP Congress, the security police officers said something like that. Today, I asked them [if the strengthening of security control] was related to Liu Xia, they grinned. One of the consequences when Liu Xia speaks is that I have to be under house detention.

Jian Alan Huang pointed out [7] [zh] that absurdity is the nature of authoritarian country:

在极权社会,每个人都像雨打的浮萍一样无力掌握自己的命运。刘霞无力抗拒2年多的软禁,只能哭诉;冯小刚无力拍摄1962,只能拍一部1942装逼;莫言无力改变审查制度,只能以词藻合法化之聊以自慰。

In an authoritarian society, everyone is like duckweed under the rain and cannot control their fate. Liu Xia can't do anything with her two year's house arrest and can only burst into tears; Fung Xiagang can't produce a movie on 1962 [the Great Leap Forward] and can only produce a film on 1942 [Sino-Japanese War]; Mo Yan can't change the censorship system and can only legitimize it for self-comforting.

Although micro-bloggers cannot talk about Liu Xia on popular forum Sina Weibo, many are speaking out against Mo Yan's cowardice [zh].

红尘三过客:@莫言 说的完全是屁话:“每个国家都有言论审查。”——但世界上只有一个国家将诺奖得主关在狱中。只要有一个作家因为写作而坐牢,这个国家就没有真实的言论自由。“刘大嗑吧不能在自己的国度里自由地生活和出版,那么我们也不能够为今年的诺贝尔文学奖的荣誉感到欣喜。”

@Three passerby in the earthy world [8]: @Mo Yan is talking shit: “every country has censorship” — but only one country in this world puts a Nobel Prize winner in jail. If there is a writer in jail because of writing, this country does not have freedom of speech. If Liu [Xiaobo] can't freely write and publish in his own country, we cannot feel happy and honorable in the result of this year's Nobel Prize in Literature.

浩淼-mma:莫言巧妙的用必然来界定审查的结果,从而得出审查对文学、对言论并无影响,这太无耻了。舞蹈家戴着镣铐的舞蹈,一样比我无任何约束跳的好,但若没有任何束缚,舞蹈家会有更大的发挥空间,会有更大的可能跳出伟大的作品,这是常识,莫言的粉饰只能让人鄙视。

@Hao Miao – mms [9]: Mo Yan used the word ‘inevitable’ to describe censorship and concluded that censorship does not have an adverse effect on literature, this is too shameless. Dancers dancing with their feet chained dance better than those without chains… but the issue at stake is that without the chain, the dancer will perform even better. This is common sense. Mo Yan's rhetoric is disgusting.

郑焰12:作为语言工作者,他偷换了国家机器审查和媒体自我核查的概念。并不高明。显得油滑且蠢。但如此处境的人要想在回国后安全生活,莫不是带着镣铐起舞。

@Zhen Yen12 [10]: As a language worker, he has secretly interchanged censorship by the state and media self-censorship. This is not wise, it makes him look stupid. Yet to make sure he can come home safe, he has to dance with his feet chained.

梦幻似泡影:莫言先生的获奖致辞组织上审查过关了吧。

@Dreamlike shadow [11]: Mo Yan's talk obviously has gone through party censorship.

Wu Zuo Lai, a famous news commentator, used Mo Yan's logic and wrote [12] [zh] a speech for him:

我替莫言写感言:感谢祖国感谢党创造了一个时代的苦难,所谓国家不幸诗人幸,这样的苦难与离奇,超想象,使我的作品获得丰富的土壤,如果中国人民过得与北欧人民一样的幸福,就没有我莫言今天在这儿获奖,感谢苦难,感谢党,对不起我的父老乡亲,因为我只能用文学话说,现实中我如此怯懦,无法面对真相说话,我忏悔!

I am writing the [Nobel Prize] winner's remarks for Mo Yan: Thanks to my country and thanks to the CCP for creating this suffering. This is the ill-fortune for the country but the fortune for the poet. Such suffering and absurdity is out of people's imagination and my work is grown out of such rich soil. If Chinese people were living as happy as the northern Europeans, Mo Yan wouldn't be speaking here for getting the prize. Thanks to all the suffering and thanks to the Party. Sorry to my fellows, I can only speak in literature, in reality I am a coward and I can't speak the truth. I repent for being like this.