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The Newest Nobel Prize Winner Wasted No Time In Slamming Her Country's Dictator

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Sergei Gapon / AFP / Getty Images

MINSK, Belarus — Svetlana Alexievich, the Russian-speaking Belarusian winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize for literature, lashed out at Russia and the president of Belarus hours after the prize, saying they belonged to a “Russian world” she rejected.

“I consider myself a person of the Belarusian world, a person of Russian culture, and a cosmopolitan of the world,” Alexievich said at a press conference on Thursday. “I love the good, humanitarian Russian world” of “literature, ballet, grand music. But I don’t love the world of Stalin, Beria, Putin, and Shoigu,” she added, naming the notorious architect of the Soviet Union’s labor camps and Russia’s current defense minister.

Speaking to reporters in the packed offices of the independent Nasha Niva newspaper, littered with her books and the white-and-red flag adopted by the country’s opposition, Alexievich slammed Belarus’ authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko ahead of elections Sunday and urged Belarusians to reject the “collaborationist culture that authoritarian leaders count on so much.”

“If we boycott the election, we give Lukashenko a chance to increase his percentage,” Alexievich said. Alexievich, 67, the first Belarusian to win a Nobel, said Lukashenko had not called to congratulate her, though Ukraine’s president, Petro Poroshenko, and a Russian minister had. “Belarus’ government pretends I don’t exist. They don’t publish me and I can’t speak in public anywhere,” she said.

Lukashenko is expected to win Sunday’s vote by a wide margin, in large part due to his near-total control of Belarusian society and dissident groups’ failure to register a candidate. Alexievich’s works, which the Swedish academy called a “monument to suffering and courage in our time” have not been published in Belarus since 1994, the year Lukashenko took power.

Alexievich said she did not plan to vote, but offered a qualified endorsement of Tatiana Karatkevich, the nearest thing to an opposition candidate. Karatkevich has alienated most of Belarus’ dissidents with a campaign focused on everyday social problems rather than calls for democratic change.


Belarus’ opposition was thrilled with Alexievich’s victory. “I’m happy for all of us, for everyone who loves Belarus, regardless of the language he expresses that love in,” former presidential candidate and political prisoner Mikola Statkevich wrote on Facebook.

“I’m not a barricade person. I don’t like them. But time leads us to the barricades, because what’s happening is shameful,” Alexievich said, urging Belarusians to adopt non-violent protest. “I’m against revolutions. I don’t want one life to be lost. We need to find our Belarusian Gandhism,” she said.

Though Alexievich is the first Nobel laureate who writes in Russian since Joseph Brodsky won the prize in 1987, the award has drawn criticism in Russia, where supporters of Vladimir Putin consider her a Belarusian nationalist hostile to Russians. “They give Nobel Prizes for ideology in politics, and now literature too,” tweeted Alexei Pushkov, chair of the foreign affairs committee in Russia’s lower house of parliament. “Obama got it for words, not deeds. Alexievich got it for collecting ideological cliches.”

Alexeivich also voiced her opposition to the war in Ukraine, which she described as a “an occupation and an invasion by a foreign power,” and said she feared Putin would succeed in building a Russian airbase in Belarus, despite Lukashenko’s opposition. “Belarus could be saved if it turned towards the European Union, but nobody will ever let it go,” she said. Alexievich added that Russia’s airstrike campaign in Syria risked embroiling Moscow into a drawn-out, bloody conflict like the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which she documented in her book The Boys in Zinc. “We had Afghan veterans, we had Chechen veterans, and now we’ll have Syrian veterans,” she said.

Alexievich, whose debut book War’s Unwomanly Face chronicled the lives of Soviet women during World War II, said the nationalist wave in Russia reminded her of the early years of Nazi Germany. “At the start, when they told Germans: don’t go to that doctor, don’t go to that tailor, they went to see Jewish doctors anyway. But the machine was very powerful and pushed the most primitive buttons. That’s what we’re seeing today in Russia especially,” Alexievich said. “I think it’s always frightening and difficult to remain human. Even if they’re not jailing people en masse, like they did then. You can see they’re doing it already in Russia, and here. You need to have that courage,” Alexievicih said.

LINK: Nobel Prize In Literature Awarded To Belarusian Writer Svetlana Alexievich



Cartoonist Benjamin Marra Has Just Published The Most Badass Comic Of All Time

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Terror Assaulter: One Man War On Terror is a violent, sexual, and hilarious action-adventure.

In Benjamin Marra's Twitter bio he calls himself as a "Comic book writer, artist, publisher, sonuvabitch, the Future of Comics History." With the release of his first Fantagraphics book, One Man War On Terror, those descriptions are all proven accurate.

In Benjamin Marra's Twitter bio he calls himself as a "Comic book writer, artist, publisher, sonuvabitch, the Future of Comics History." With the release of his first Fantagraphics book, One Man War On Terror, those descriptions are all proven accurate.

The full-length graphic novel spins a tale of explosive violence and even more explosive sex . It stars an anonymous government agent who literally destroys everything in his path to save America.

It can be read as a trenchant spoof of the jingoistic Bush years or a Z-grade 80's action films... or it can be read as the worrisome notebook doodles of a demented teenager. Whatever it is, you probably haven't read anything like it before.

Benjamin Marra / Via Fantagraphics

I recently sat down with Marra at his Brooklyn studio and grilled him on his process, his passions, and plans for the future.

I recently sat down with Marra at his Brooklyn studio and grilled him on his process, his passions, and plans for the future.

Dan Meth / Via BuzzFeed

Let's talk about the hero. What was your inspiration for O.M.W.O.T.?

I saw this re-cut trailer for the movie "American Hunter" starring Robert Mitchum's son Christopher. When I saw it I thought, "I really want to make that trailer into a comic." But then it sort of became it's own thing.

Benjamin Marra

Sex and violence has always been a theme in your comics, but in O.M.W.O.T. you really cranked it up a few notches. What was your goal?

BM: I wanted the comic to have really graphic sex. I wanted it to really be an erotic action comic... but I don't think it's very sexy. Some people have told me that they think the sex is really hot, but I don't really see it that way. I just wanted to place the same amount of attention and purpose on the sex scenes as I did on the violence. One of the best things about Fantagraphics was that they said 'anything goes'.

O.M.W.O.T. is pansexual. He's a walking punching fist, a shooting gun, a fucking cock. He's just a machine who's always in control That's his superpower.

Benjamin Marra


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Here's Why Coriander Tastes Soapy To Some People

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It’s all about the chemistry.

There are quite a few people for whom coriander (or cilantro if you're American) has a rather unpleasant soapy, or even metallic, taste.

There are quite a few people for whom coriander (or cilantro if you're American) has a rather unpleasant soapy, or even metallic, taste.

The cause of this has its roots in the chemical composition of coriander leaves, but there can also be other factors at play that determine whether or not you're a fan of coriander.

The chemical composition of the essential oil of coriander leaves has shown it to be composed of around 40 different organic compounds, with 82 per cent of these being aldehydes, and 17 per cent alcohols. The aldehydes are mainly those with 9–10 carbon atoms, and it is these that are largely responsible for the aroma of coriander leaves – as well as its perceived soapy taste for some people.

Ludhi85 / Getty Images

The aldehydes present in coriander, as well as those similar to them, are also commonly found in both soaps and lotions.

The aldehydes present in coriander, as well as those similar to them, are also commonly found in both soaps and lotions.

Interestingly, some are also amongst the compounds excreted by shield bugs (also known as stink bugs) when they are disturbed. Given that, perhaps it's not completely surprising that, for some people, the smell and taste of coriander is a little on the repulsive side.

Andy Brunning / Orion Books

But it's not just the chemical composition of coriander leaves that makes some find it has a soapy taste.

But it's not just the chemical composition of coriander leaves that makes some find it has a soapy taste.

It's been suggested that there's also a genetic basis to this, which explains why not everyone has the same aversion. Scientists have highlighted a specific gene that codes for a receptor that is highly sensitive to the flavour of aldehydes. Several other genes have also been linked, however, so it seems likely that more than one could be responsible.

Andy Brunning / Orion Books

It's been suggested that repeated exposure to the taste leads to the brain forging new, positive associations. The strength of the aldehydes' effect on the taste of coriander can also be mitigated by crushing the leaves before consumption, with studies having shown that this speeds up the rate at which the aldehydes in the leaves are broken down by enzymes.


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Nobel Prize In Literature Awarded To Belarusian Writer Svetlana Alexievich

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Twitter

Investigative journalist Svetlana Alexievich of Belarus was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature by the Swedish Academy on Thursday "for her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time."

The 67-year-old author has written several books that lend a human voice to major historical events in the former Soviet Union and Russia such as World War II, the Soviet-Afghan War, and the Chernobyl disaster.

When Permanent Secretary Sara Darius broke the good new to the "overjoyed" writer she had just one word to say in response, "fantastic."

Alexievich's 40-year career has been spent "mapping the Soviet and post-Soviet individual," Darius said. But her writing is about more than just chronically historical events, she adds a layer of humanity and emotion to her writing and through her unique style, has managed to develop a wholly new genre.

"She's actually devised a new genre, a new kind of literary genre," Darius said. "It's true achievement."

One of her notable works is her first book The War's Unwomanly Face in which she lends a voice to hundreds of the more than 1 million Soviet women who fought on the front lines during World War II. Darius recommended readers start with this book when exploring Alexievich's work.

"She's offering us a history of emotions, a history of the soul if you wish," Darius said.

Alexievich says that when searching for the right genre to use when portraying her "vision of the world," she settled on one where "human voices speak for themselves."

"Real people speak in my books about the main events of the age such as the war, the Chernobyl disaster, and the downfall of a great empire," Alexievich wrote on her website.

"But I don't just record a dry history of events and facts, I'm writing a history of human feelings."

In 2005 she won the National Book Critics Circle Award for her book Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster and in 2013 she was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association.

The association said that she has created "her own literary genre — one that resonates all over the world as a powerful choir of witnesses and testimonies."

The writer faced censorship and persecution in her native Belarus after current president Alexander Lukashenko took control of the country in 1994. Her books were no longer published in the country and were removed from the school curriculum. Attacks against her increased over the years, she was banned from making public appearances, and her phones were bugged. In 2000 Alexievich fled Belarus and moved to Paris after the International Cities of Refuge Network (ICORN) offered her sanctuary. She returned to Minsk in 2011.

She was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 2014 by Ural Federal University.

According to Russian news site Yekaterinburg News, "Aleksievich's writing displays large-scale disasters of the 20th century using private human history to create a portrait of time."

Here's a list of her works in published in English:

* War's Unwomanly Face (1988)

* Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from a Forgotten War (1992)

* Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan War (1992)

* Voices from Chernobyl: Chronicle of the Future (1999)

* Voices from Chernobyl: the Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster (2005)

A Twitter account claiming to belong to the author broke the news nearly two hours before the official announcement.

The account later claimed it was a hoax set up by Italian journalist Tommasso Debenedetti.




12 British Poets Share Their Favourite Poems For #NationalPoetryDay

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The theme for 2015 is “light”.

Amaal Said

Amaal Said

Age: 19

Themes in your work: I start with the personal. I write about my family, the stories that are passed down to me, and the ones I watch unfold. I write about shame and silence, beauty and trauma.

Favourite poem: "Elegy for Joseph Brodsky" by Ilya Kaminsky.

What comes to mind when you think of the word "light"? Writing after a long period of sadness and feeling the curtains open is what comes to mind. I think of the word "light" when I remember the first time I sat down with my mother to ask the hard questions. I brought my notepad and recorded the interview on my phone. It's the only word I think to describe it, because we were closer and it felt like a weight had been lifted. I didn't have to make up my mother's past life in my head any more.

Amaal Said

Inua Ellams

Inua Ellams

Age: 30

Themes in your work: Identity. Displacement. Destiny.

Favourite poem: This is an impossible answer. I have various favourite poems that I go to for various reasons and at various times of year, depending on how I feel and what I’d like inspired in me. At best, I can give my favourite poem at the moment, which is called "The Same City" by Terrance Hayes. I recorded myself reading it.

What comes to mind when you think of the word "light"? This year, I have been working with this theme in various parts of the world, in various incarnations. When I think of light I think of shadows – where we crawl out of and crawl into – of the privilege of electricity, the privilege of education, of light pollution in urban areas and how we take it for granted in suburban areas, of the cost of light, how it changes economies, and whether or not darkness has riches we should be spend time relishing.

The Art Valley

Rachel Long

Rachel Long

Age: 26

Themes in your work: Sexuality, growing up, hurt, mixed parentage, love, eating disorders, death, dreams.

Favourite poem: Impossible to choose. I've sat here for a half hour with fingers over keys or in my hair. I can't call it between: "In The Book of The Disappearing Book" by John Gallaher, "The Ugly Daughter" by Warsan Shire, "Snow" by David Berman, "Sex Without Love" by Sharon Olds, and "Of August" by Karen McCarthy Woolf.

What comes to mind when you think of the word "light"? Marlboro, that sunrise, a macro photograph of oestrogen taken by science photographer Lennart Nilsson that looks like a firework. It was stunning to see, and to know that we have this exploding, all the time, on the inside of our bodies

Amaal Said

Dean Atta

Dean Atta

Age: 30

Themes in your work: Race, sexuality, equality, love.

Favourite poem: "Howl" by Allen Ginsberg.

What comes to mind when you think of the word "light"?

There Shines a Light

from your phone screen
as you lay in bed

tweet-dreams, tinder-night
scrolling your timeline

swiping left or right
when looking for love

a picture = 1,000 words
or 140 characters

there is a hashtag or app
for everything, you believe

people are getting closer
to reaching enlightenment

to reaching enlightenment
people are getting closer

for everything, you believe
there is a hashtag or app

or 140 characters
a picture = 1,000 words

when looking for love
swiping left or right

scrolling your timeline
tweet-dreams, tinder-night

as you lay in bed
from your phone screen

there shines a light.

Hussina Raja


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Author Rainbow Rowell Chooses Between Good And Evil In This Epic Game Of Would You Rather

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We asked the best-selling author of Fangirl and Carry On the tough questions about magic, villainy, and love.

Rainbow Rowell's critically acclaimed books have established her as a YA powerhouse. Her newest, Carry On, deals with issues of identity, heroes and villains, choice, and magic. We had the chance to catch up with her on the day of Carry On's launch. Naturally, we put her to the test with a game of Would You Rather: Heroes and Villains edition.

St. Martin's Press

Would you rather be an antagonist or an anti-hero?

Would you rather be an antagonist or an anti-hero?

"Antagonist (anti-anti-hero)."

Taylor Miller / BuzzFeed

...have magical powers but lose your sense of sight, or have super strength but lose your sense of taste?

...have magical powers but lose your sense of sight, or have super strength but lose your sense of taste?

"Super strength (no taste?)"

Taylor Miller / BuzzFeed


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Mike Huckabee's 1998 Book Is Full Of Fake Quotes From America's Founders

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When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary to make sure the sources in your book are not an Internet quotations page.

Republican presidential candidate and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee's 1998 book Kids Who Kill is full of spurious quotations from leading American political figures, mostly the country's founding fathers.

A number of the quotations, such as those from Washington and Jefferson, have been routinely debunked by libraries of the past presidents but still regularly find their way into books from conservative figures. Other quotes, debunked by prominent historians, seem to be used for the first time in the book.

The book was co-written with evangelical author George Grant in response to a mass shooting in Arkansas. The book links that shooting to the decline in America's moral culture. The quotes, from figures such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Patrick Henry, are often used to reinforce Huckabee's moral viewpoint.

Huckabee isn't the first Republican presidential to attribute fake quotes to America's founders. Ben Carson, Rand Paul, and former candidate Scott Walker have all done so.

"That book was co-authored, and I'm not sure which one wrote those, but we appreciate you reading the book," a Huckabee spokesman said.

"Thomas Jefferson asserted that the 'chief purpose of government is to protect life. Abandon that and you have abandoned all,'" writes Huckabee in one part of the book on abortion.

"Thomas Jefferson asserted that the 'chief purpose of government is to protect life. Abandon that and you have abandoned all,'" writes Huckabee in one part of the book on abortion.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

However, according to the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, "this quotation has not been found in the writings of Thomas Jefferson."

Another quote attributed to Jefferson read, "Any woodsman can tell you that in a broken and sundered nest, one can hardly expect to find more than a precious few whole eggs. So it is with the family." Neither the Thomas Jefferson Foundation nor The Papers of Thomas Jefferson at Princeton University could verify the quote.

"I have searched our presidential files using woodsman, nest, and family as keywords and have not found this quote," The Papers of Thomas Jefferson wrote to BuzzFeed News in a statement.

Huckabee's cites "King's Signet Book's" in his book as the source for the quote, but a search for the source only turns up links to Huckabee's book and another book, Revolution: Jesus' Call to Change the World.


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