Turkey's best-known novelist Orhan Pamuk, who faced trial this year for insulting his country, won the 2006 Nobel prize for Literature on Thursday in a decision some critics called politically charged.
"I am very glad and honoured. I am very pleased," the Turkish writer told Sweden's Svenska Dagbladet newspaper when asked how he felt about winning the 10 million Swedish crown ($1.36 million) prize. "I will try to recover from this shock."
The Swedish Academy declared Pamuk the winner on a day when, to Turkey's fury, the French lower house of parliament approved a bill making it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide.
In a what was seen as a test case for freedom of speech in Turkey, Pamuk was tried for insulting "Turkishness" after telling a Swiss paper last year that 1 million Armenians had died in Turkey during World War One and 30,000 Kurds had perished in recent decades.
Though the court dismissed the charges on a technicality, other writers and journalists are still being prosecuted under the article and can face a jail sentence of up to three years.
"With all due respect to Orhan Pamuk, whose books I read and like, I believe his comments on the Armenian genocide have been influential in his winning this prize," said Suat Kiniklioglu, an Ankara-based political analyst.
Pamuk, 54, shot to fame with novels that explore Turkey's complex identity through its rich imperial past. But his criticism of modern Turkey's failure to confront darker episodes of that past has turned him more recently into a symbol of free thought both for the literary world and for the European Union, which Ankara wants to join.
EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn celebrated Pamuk's award as a triumph for free speech. "Today's Nobel Prize is good news for world literature, but also good news for artistic freedom and for freedom of expression," he said in a statement.
Pamuk's best-known novels include "My Name is Red" and "Snow", works that focus on the clash between past and present, East and West, secularism and Islamism - problems at the heart of Turkey's struggle to develop.
Academy head Horace Engdahl stressed on Thursday that politics did not colour the selection process. Still, picks such as Pamuk and 2005 winner Harold Pinter, a vocal US critic, have led some to question this. "I think you can say there is more than literature at stake here ... Perhaps it's always been a mixture between what's on the printed page and what the writer stands for politically," Ian Jack, editor of literary periodical Granta, told Reuters.
Pamuk's most recent work, "Istanbul: Memories of a City", intersperses personal reminiscences of childhood and youth with reflections on the city's Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman past. "Istanbul's fate is my fate. I am attached to this city because it has made me who I am," he says.
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