WELCOME TO FRENDZ4M
Sat, Feb 22, 2025, 02:15:00 PM

Current System Time:

Get updatesShare this pageSearch
Telegram | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Share on Facebook | Tweet Us | WhatsApp | Telegram
 

Forum Main>>General Talk>>News>>

"I was a terrible student": Haruki Murakami while receiving his honorary degree

Page: 1   
Mr.Love ™User is offline now
PM [1]
Rank : Helper
Status : Super Owner

#1

Publicity-shy Japanese author Haruki Murakami told his alma mater Tuesday that he was far from being a model scholar, as he collected an honorary degree in a rare public appearance.


"It feels kind of strange being given the award, considering what a terrible student I was," said Murakami to laughter from the audience at Waseda University.


"I would skip classes and forget about studying. I was just doing whatever I wanted and causing loads of trouble to the university," the 75-year-old said.


The degree is therefore a "pretty generous gesture on Waseda's part," the novelist, dressed in academic regalia, told the rapturous audience of hundreds of admiring fans and Waseda students.


Awarding the honorary doctorate, Tokyo's prestigious Waseda University hailed the "cosmopolitan atmosphere" of Murakami's work and his ability "freewheelingly to zigzag between the real and the surreal".


The author of "Norwegian Wood" and "Kafka on the Shore" is known for his intricate tales of the absurdity and loneliness of modern life, which have been translated into about 50 languages.


Perennially tipped for a Nobel prize, Murakami is a reclusive figure and famously media-shy.


Readers of his works are drawn into the "Murakami world" where giant frogs challenge office workers in battle and mackerel rain down from the sky.


"The City and Its Uncertain Walls", his first full-length novel in six years, hit shelves in Japan last year, and copies of its English translation were released in November.


In his short, self-deprecating speech, Murakami said he had "gained absolutely nothing" from his previous six honorary doctorates -- all awarded by universities abroad -- calling them "useless".


"It's not like they come with pension money... And just because you have honorary doctorates doesn't mean your books sell," he quipped to another bout of laughter.


This is not to say, he added, that he is not grateful to his alma mater.


"Had I not enrolled in Waseda, I might have not pursued the career as a novelist at all," Murakami said, calling the award a milestone in his "life cycle".


Typical of his taciturn style, Murakami offered no clue as to what his next project will be, but he ended his speech on a bright note.


"I want to keep writing good novels," he said.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by News Agency staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Reply
You are not logged in, please

Login

Page: 1   

Jump To Page:

Keywords:terrible, student, haruki, murakami, receiving, honorary, degree, publicity, japanese, author, tuesday, scholar, collected, public, appearance, strange,
Related threads:

The Indian student wins the memory contest by removing 80 digits in 13.5 seconds


Hadi kill, accused of trying to kill Salman Rushdie, declared guilty


Professional of the Secretary Company, Results of the Executive Exam to leave on this date


Class 12 Physics document was a higher level of difficulty, says the teacher


In Bihaha, 1 student murdered, 2 injured in dispute to cheat on the exam


"There is no matter of imposing language but ...": Minister of Education in Hindi Row


"Imaginary concerns ...": Minister of Education of Tamil Nadu in 'Hindi Imposition'


Trump's assistant congratulates the new FBI Kash Patel director in Bollywood style


Who is Kash Patel, the new director of the FBI and his connection of India


Kash Patel, first director of the FBI of Indian origin


TERMS & CONDITIONS | DMCA POLICY | PRIVACY POLICY
Home | Top | Official Blog | Tools | Contact | Sitemap | Feed
Page generated in 0.25 microseconds
FRENDZ4M © 2025