Nobel Lecture: Kazuo Ishiguro, Nobel Prize in Literature 2017

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  • Опубликовано: 6 дек 2017
  • My Twentieth Century Evening - and Other Small Breakthroughs
    The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2017 is awarded to Kazuo Ishiguro "who, in novels of great emotional force, has uncovered the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world".

Комментарии • 168

  • @NobelPrize
    @NobelPrize  4 года назад +37

    You can also see Kazuo Ishiguro's official Nobel Prize interview: ruclips.net/video/0BcJCybfdKg/видео.html

  • @holliswilliams8426
    @holliswilliams8426 2 года назад +103

    This is one of the few Nobel Prizes in Literature where it's unquestionable that the author definitely deserves the prize.

  • @gordonedgar8513
    @gordonedgar8513 6 лет назад +294

    Kazuo Ishiguro is my favourite novelist and having just watched this speech I feel a real sense of love for this man I don't know.

    • @ericALAGAN
      @ericALAGAN 6 лет назад +4

      My favourite author too.

    • @jesseabbot5192
      @jesseabbot5192 Год назад

      His talk has stimulated my own writing to be better. Thank you.

    • @ghosty9447
      @ghosty9447 Год назад

      Never Let Me Go ahhhhhh

  • @Jane009T
    @Jane009T 6 лет назад +69

    A gentle speaking man with a gentle heart is what makes a gentleman

  • @DominicNewbould
    @DominicNewbould 6 лет назад +156

    Such a gentle and delicate acceptance speech - yet incisive. Leaves us a huge question, and himself too, to ponder and reflect.

  • @junkarato6790
    @junkarato6790 6 лет назад +205

    "In a time of dangerously increasing division, we must listen. Good writing and good reading will break down barriers. We may even find a new idea, a great humane vision, around which to rally." I truly hope his voice reach more people facing walls and barriers in every corner of the world.

    • @anuradhainamdar8967
      @anuradhainamdar8967 4 года назад +7

      " Good writing & good reading will break down barriers " is very true.

    • @earthgrazer5511
      @earthgrazer5511 3 года назад +5

      I like how he emphasized good reading as well.

  • @celestialfix
    @celestialfix 6 лет назад +45

    "We are all butlers.........". Thank you Mr. Ishiguro, and congratulations.

  • @alinao625
    @alinao625 Год назад +38

    I cried unconsolably at the end of reading his "The Remains of the Day" - that's great literature at work, cathartic and instructive without being moralizing.

    • @moiskithorn
      @moiskithorn Год назад

      Me too. It's just a breathtaking work

    • @abesapien9930
      @abesapien9930 Год назад +1

      What is wrong with moralizing? I would hope a lot of literature wouldn't, but it shouldn't be some forbidden act either. He moralized at the end of this very speech, and I agreed with it.

    • @mylink1812
      @mylink1812 Год назад

      Me too! I cried to the point of dehydration. To this day I still can’t fathom how he could write such a masterpiece at that young age.

  • @toshivid
    @toshivid 6 лет назад +73

    As a Japanese, I am very proud of this literal giant, who was born in Nagasaki, Japan.
    Later, he left for the UK at the age of five due to his father's business; later he naturalized himself as a Japanese-British, as Kazuo Ishiguro, perfectly in Japanese name.
    He appeals justice, righteousness and peace to the world through his literal works, which he truly deserved to receive one of the greatest prizes in the world of literature.
    Congratulations, Mr. Ishiguro!

    • @reneesoryu3650
      @reneesoryu3650 6 лет назад +8

      Normally you guys just call someone who grew up in a different country and doesn't even speak Japanese a 'Gaijin', but I guess it's hard to do that to a Nobel prize laureate

    • @narunarunarunarunaru
      @narunarunarunarunaru 6 лет назад +3

      Renee Soryu
      Gaijin means ''outers of our community'',not nationality or appearance.
      I think he isn't Gaijin because he has something related to our community(it's very difficult to describe what the community is.There is divercity and there isn't divercity...).

    • @roccoanthony8930
      @roccoanthony8930 6 лет назад +5

      Renee Soryu this whole “gaijin” BS is out of control lol. No common Japanese uses the word “gaijin” as some sort of racist word.
      It literally means “foreigner”. Nothing more, Nothing less. Maybe it was used in a racist means back in pre-1940’s, or even to this day by ultra-right wings, but ordinary people just use the word “gaijin” as an abbreviation to “gaikokujin” which is a literal translation of “foreigner”. They have no hate or harm in those words. Hell, even kids (as in preschooler and elementary students) uses those words to refer a foreigner in general. So are you going to insist that those children “racists” lol?
      This whole “common Japanese are racist because they call foreigner “gaijin”” is misinterpreted in so many levels that only a tool that has absolutely no knowledge of Japan would refer to it. Stop talking like you know shit about Japan, just because you read some anti-Japanese propaganda article on the internet lol.
      And if you want them to stop calling you (or any foreigner) “gaijin”, just tell them, and they will immediately apologize. Japanese people aren’t ignorants.
      The problematic word is more along the lines of “zainichi”, which isn’t exactly a racist word (it just means “foreign-born people/foreigner who are living in Japan”), but people in internet will use the word to attack Chinese/Korean/Foreign related Japanese citizens. Kind of like how Americans are doing it to Mexicans/Canadians.

    • @martincelino
      @martincelino 3 года назад +1

      @松島立空 I would suggest to ask foreigners whether they see Japanese as racist.

  • @tigerchuu2148
    @tigerchuu2148 3 года назад +27

    I can't believe I actually sat through this whole thing. He just grabbed my attention and never lost it. Amazing.

  • @deborahkraal8134
    @deborahkraal8134 6 лет назад +76

    I also very much appreciate his books. His speech made me aware of the act of writing itself, how it is communication within the writer himself and then to others who also take those words and put them in his/her own heart and mind in a way that allows one to both connect and transcend. Ishiguro does this with such elegance, warmth and - it is so easy on the ear!

  • @bikeyoshiro
    @bikeyoshiro 6 лет назад +77

    For the moment, I could not be happier to hear his speech as a Japanese living overseas for long.

    • @kevinjoe1211
      @kevinjoe1211 3 года назад +2

      he is far more English than Japanese , I have to say, except his Asian look, he has nothing japanese within

    • @xulapostasy7132
      @xulapostasy7132 3 года назад +2

      He is 100% British

    • @asaynor225
      @asaynor225 3 года назад +4

      @@kevinjoe1211 'Nothing Japanese within' would be too far. Yes his memories were very hazy but his first novels were about expressing the Japanese identity he felt

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 2 года назад +3

      He is English but has definitely expressed some identity with Japan (see ''A Pale View of Hills'', for example).

    • @glenncambray626
      @glenncambray626 Год назад +2

      @@asaynor225 And, he would surely have had a deep Japanese influence from his parents.

  • @sattarabus
    @sattarabus 6 лет назад +44

    Sparse, spare, manicured, pedicured, introspective, clinically reflexive speech. His quotes from EM Forster are both illustrative and instructive. Small is beautiful. Now I understand what Laurence Binyon meant when he said, " slowness is beauty".

    • @cr820
      @cr820 2 года назад

      Very well said.

  • @tenzinsangpo321
    @tenzinsangpo321 6 лет назад +34

    "If you'd come across me in the autumn of 1979, you might have had some difficulty placing me, socially or even racially..." One of the most beautiful Nobel Lectures after Sir V.S. Naipaul in 2001.

    • @leonardohuang
      @leonardohuang 2 года назад

      Orhan Pamuk, 2006, , unprecedented and unparalleled in history

  • @JohnSampson
    @JohnSampson 6 лет назад +51

    No doubt an intellect and talent, a humanist that I can and do respect.

  • @julieandrews730
    @julieandrews730 Год назад +8

    One of my favorite authors in the world. I can't believe this just popped up in my YT lineup. Profound and moving.

  • @artraygalleryart1159
    @artraygalleryart1159 6 лет назад +18

    The Brilliant Kazuo Ishiguro. Love his writing. Bravo..Ang-Ray NYC

  • @daryabukhtoyarova5562
    @daryabukhtoyarova5562 6 лет назад +29

    Such a privilege - first witnessing the Nobel prize for literature going to Kazuo Ishiguro, now being able to watch him speak. The word "moving" came up a lot in the comments and for a good reason.
    Thank you, Mr. Ishiguro (and the Nobel Prize for uploading his lecture here).

  • @toshikokobataketalkingimag8329
    @toshikokobataketalkingimag8329 6 лет назад +29

    What an eloquent, sincere gentleman he is. Many congratulations to Kazuo Ishiguro.

  • @katharos9977
    @katharos9977 2 года назад +11

    Watching this after I just finished reading Never Let Me Go. I don't remember feeling as numb as I am now. One of the greatest books, one of the greatest authors. The fucking legend.

  • @matthewjamesappleby5834
    @matthewjamesappleby5834 6 лет назад +45

    A wonderful speech, incisive and deeply moving.

  • @gulsaraahmed6611
    @gulsaraahmed6611 2 года назад +12

    Absolutely amazing. I like how he analyses and critiques his own writings. He sums up his journey as a writer in correspondence with himself and knows for a fact, he's not done yet. He still has new avenues and terrains to explore and gives us a glimpse into the world of his upcoming books. I recently read Klara and the Sun, which he based on the challenges science and new technology will eventually face.

  • @jravindranath8345
    @jravindranath8345 3 года назад +11

    Most wonderful speech sliced with apt and much needed optimism in the tiring world.

  • @tomi1253
    @tomi1253 6 лет назад +22

    I was very much pleased to hear about the great news.
    Congratulations 🎉

  • @seamusgaelic6447
    @seamusgaelic6447 2 года назад +5

    When Ishiguro addresses the inequality in wealth between and within nations I can't help but think of how many wealthy people are in the room where he's delivering his speech.

    • @david50665
      @david50665 Год назад

      we should not mind that there are wealthy people...esp wealth that created by hard work and intellectual achievements which actually most of the new wealth comes from ....what we should mind is that there are still homeless people dying in the streets

  • @tenkun2439
    @tenkun2439 5 лет назад +9

    He writes in a very allegory manner which depicts all the characters in the front. Thank you. 🙏

  • @Andy_Idea
    @Andy_Idea 5 лет назад +6

    Such a gracious and dignified man. Well deserved honour.

  • @lennovp7742
    @lennovp7742 3 года назад +8

    What a beautiful speech!
    I'm also happy that i noticed 2 other laureates in the audience. Bet they like Kazuo's works.

  • @krithikrithi1938
    @krithikrithi1938 3 года назад +5

    Most Prestigious International Award ❤

  • @bhupeshdihenia6514
    @bhupeshdihenia6514 Год назад +2

    Thank you, Kazuo. Beautiful road travelled and even more eloquently shared. I look forward to reading “Never Let Me Go.”
    So glad RUclips put this speech in my thread.

  • @muhlenstedt
    @muhlenstedt Год назад +3

    Talent, intellect and humanity united, thank you for putting these in words.

  • @brianjanson3498
    @brianjanson3498 2 года назад +2

    His work is so rewarding. It has meant a great deal to me. I appreciate the effort he has taken to share it with us.

  • @takatez
    @takatez 6 лет назад +19

    Very impressive, indeed.

  • @Nicky.Slunsky
    @Nicky.Slunsky 4 года назад +8

    Well deserved. A great man and a great writer. The Unconsoled is one of my favorite novels ever.

  • @arberbuci
    @arberbuci 6 лет назад +21

    How completely different his experience from let's say Hanif Kureishi, who was born in England, son of a Pakistani immigrant and English mother. Both great writers of course, but due to background, with completely different kind of struggles and things to deal with, while living in the same country and in the same era.
    Great speech btw by mr. Kazuo Ishiguro.

  • @bijofrancis1114
    @bijofrancis1114 Год назад +1

    His speech and the way he talk is like a laminar flow, it's just perfection. 💗👏

  • @ulissina1
    @ulissina1 5 лет назад +5

    Moving, inteligent and brilliant speech.

  • @jyotinair2386
    @jyotinair2386 Год назад +1

    Wow! What an engaging speech outlining his vision, values and dreams for the future. The seamless movements back and forth from past to present and future were incredibly mesmerizing.!

  • @jyotinair2386
    @jyotinair2386 Год назад

    God bless you Kazaa Ishiguro for your vast in-depth understanding of human nature as it enveloped nations and it’s people !

  • @uui219
    @uui219 6 лет назад +25

    I am so happy for you. You have been my favorite author for as long as I can remember. I honestly never thought you would win this prize, but I could not be happier to be wrong. You fully deserve this and the many more honors that will be coming your way. *Congratulations.

  • @elizabethsanchezschulz4949
    @elizabethsanchezschulz4949 3 года назад

    So encouraging to see and hear a wise, intelligent writer appealling to kindness, peace and leaving behind Any sort of racism. If not, our civilization will definitely suffer horrible consequences or even disappear. He’s sensitive, amusing, lovable and , as my grandma would say: a good,noble man . CHAPEAU !!! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @Kelly_r_v
    @Kelly_r_v 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful! Yes we do and yes we can! Thank you for your work!

  • @hamditeyeb2986
    @hamditeyeb2986 4 месяца назад

    This speech has that kind of tone that you find in his books, and that makes you fall in love with him .. A peaceful steam of memory

  • @albertlacanilao4332
    @albertlacanilao4332 4 года назад +5

    Very moving speech....excellent....tears to my eyes...

  • @saemakhan6594
    @saemakhan6594 Год назад +1

    Beautiful speech ! Congratulations !

  • @benrezenarosa
    @benrezenarosa 6 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this.

  • @yutat9843
    @yutat9843 2 месяца назад +1

    As a Japanese, I feel extreme feeling of proud

  • @werke_und_tage
    @werke_und_tage Год назад +1

    I cried in the end. Thank you Mr. Ishiguro!

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 Год назад +2

    A most splendid writer .

  • @paulharvey2396
    @paulharvey2396 Год назад

    Thank you sir Kaz, God bless you amen.

  • @willisknapick4405
    @willisknapick4405 Год назад

    I read two of his books. He's incredibly imaginative and insightful.

  • @sergiopena8121
    @sergiopena8121 5 лет назад +8

    I loved 'Never let you go', can't wait to read more from him.

  • @petestevens3970
    @petestevens3970 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @Redbullshit777
    @Redbullshit777 4 года назад +1

    Honoured and Learned keep to writing, sir.

  • @ramanathannv9971
    @ramanathannv9971 2 года назад +2

    I am really impressed by his concluding remarks to the Swedish Academy to go far and deep into the unknown quarters of our human habitations to find cut and uncut diamonds of literature and writing of word class and even beyond lying unnoticed by the Academy. I sure, had the academy been fortunate it would definitely found greatness in the works Malayalam writers like G.SANKARSKURUP M T Vasudevan Nair .

  • @nicholaschen1806
    @nicholaschen1806 2 года назад +1

    Hope I can follow him as a winner of Nobel Prize for language and literature from Asia country someday.

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer173 2 года назад +2

    As I listen to this sincere and humble sharing,I realise how our life itself is the crucible for our creativity.
    It is important therefore Not to forget,not to be amnesiac.
    Also,how writing is self creative,perhaps the birthplace of creative writings.
    Word creates us.
    Word expands us.
    Covid 19 has laid bare our Human imperfections flaws selfishness but also its generosity creativity.

  • @mariabarr1286
    @mariabarr1286 Год назад

    Food for thought.Connect well with those who want a lasting wold peace.

  • @priyaa1201
    @priyaa1201 5 месяцев назад

    One of the greatest storytellers

  • @maximonacer5039
    @maximonacer5039 Год назад

    Kazuo Ishiguro: Congratulations for keeping the tenderness given the circumstances. It is magic. Just imagine a new capacity to visit virtually any person in any place where you could find caring humans improving land and property, doing what they love by networking with each other, generating and sharing their own energy and food, using paper containers of hydrogen currency recharging as vehicles for commerce everywhere while rendering obsolete the use of military lasers or hydrogen weapons to keep those rights alive.

  • @looseygoosey23
    @looseygoosey23 2 года назад

    Listening to his words is captivating

  • @shivabreathes
    @shivabreathes Год назад +2

    This was amazing and so inspiring.

  • @troygaspard6732
    @troygaspard6732 Год назад

    When he talks about a nation's memory and what should be remembered or forgotten, he would address in his novel The Buried Giant.

  • @ramdularsingh1435
    @ramdularsingh1435 2 года назад +1

    Kazuo is really a ' cashewo nut ' for his readers making them fit & healthy like the dried fruit does to all of us. He is a creative genius and most importantly a gentleman.

  • @abrlim5597
    @abrlim5597 2 года назад +2

    At the end of the speech, Kazuo Ishiguro sounded like Mr. Stevens he wrote, trying to contribute something to the world, without knowing whether he has actually done so.

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Год назад +1

    I love his writing. That “something in the singer’s voice” I would call pathos.

  • @melaniamonicacraciun9900
    @melaniamonicacraciun9900 Год назад

    In this cyberspace time is on our side, we can share opinions, fix things and help each other like true family & siblings as we should, Nobel genius minds are trully surprising friends, you are doing a great job indeed, never stop digging out remarcable talents that can become our guiding lights in order to raise humankind a better place, in order to help each other evolve, improve ourselves each other and ...trying to save the planet together, that's the biggest challenge above all indeed

  • @yaslynnyaya5860
    @yaslynnyaya5860 5 лет назад +5

    I will try my best to make my research perfect

  • @tracygwendolyn1
    @tracygwendolyn1 6 лет назад

    Brilliant

  • @englishguardian3792
    @englishguardian3792 2 года назад +1

    Pleased to listen to you

  • @mehdibaghbadran3182
    @mehdibaghbadran3182 Год назад

    Thanks regards

  • @glamacherrie
    @glamacherrie Год назад

    I liked how he linked his own process to that of Latin American and Caribbean writers - such as V. S Naipaul and the great Gabriel Garcia Marquez - and their own quest for inclusion. I respect how he reveals the complex insider/ outsider life he has led, seeking to find a happy medium between the best of these worlds.

  • @yarubkhayat
    @yarubkhayat 3 года назад

    Inspiring .. thanks

  • @reasonablyserious
    @reasonablyserious 11 месяцев назад

    I love that he's interested in the small and personal. Unfortunate he didn't stick with that. Sometimes it's better to stop early.

  • @raewambia33
    @raewambia33 5 лет назад

    Exquisite

  • @noras.9774
    @noras.9774 Год назад

    The Remains of the Day is one of the century’s book!

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer173 2 года назад +1

    I enjoyed that.

  • @eclipser5945
    @eclipser5945 5 лет назад +2

    *wow!*

  • @Steven-tl2vu
    @Steven-tl2vu Год назад

    His novel Nocturnes is wonderf❤

  • @holyspacemonkey
    @holyspacemonkey 2 года назад +2

    “Can stable free nations really be built on foundations of willful amnesia and frustrated justice?” 33:17

  • @milroynishantha6458
    @milroynishantha6458 2 месяца назад +1

    I Love you All Nobel prize 🙏🇱🇰🌸🌸🎀
    My Hero All Nobel prize 🌟🥇🌟
    My House All Nobel prize 💙💙🏠💜💜

  • @dekapwt5618
    @dekapwt5618 8 месяцев назад

    🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @adolphsanchez1429
    @adolphsanchez1429 Год назад

    I have yet to read The Remains of the Day, but Never Let Me Go was a great book and one of the very few science fiction books I have liked, possibly because it wasn't filled with tons of way off the mark contraptions that have never come to pass (not that we are farming organs from a lower class of people, but we'll get there eventually).

  • @dr.janardanpaudelphd4749
    @dr.janardanpaudelphd4749 2 года назад

    Very nice saying.

  • @judihopewell2499
    @judihopewell2499 Год назад

    Wow. A deserving laureate.

  • @mohammaderfani5742
    @mohammaderfani5742 3 года назад +3

    Is it better to remember or to forget?

  • @socialcelerity8983
    @socialcelerity8983 3 года назад +1

    Very personal and insightful. See 38:50 for ‘Turning points’ …

  • @MrSinghSAmit
    @MrSinghSAmit 2 года назад

    I’m in awe of his simplicity. He has a new fan and a follower!

  • @nabu2431
    @nabu2431 Год назад

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @Krishna-we1kv
    @Krishna-we1kv 5 лет назад

    From where I can get more details about kazuo ishuguro except wiki....?

  • @edgaremiliolar
    @edgaremiliolar 3 года назад +3

    Did she introduce him as Kazugo Ishiguro?

  • @trackeroftheworld4012
    @trackeroftheworld4012 Год назад

    Where is this place and name of the place

  • @crybabyaina
    @crybabyaina Год назад

    DAAYUUMMMMMMMMMMM

  • @anaesparza1877
    @anaesparza1877 2 года назад +1

    👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 loved it.

  • @paulfranco3239
    @paulfranco3239 Год назад

    💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖

  • @user-gc5kv3cd7j
    @user-gc5kv3cd7j 6 лет назад +10

    I think the cleaning people must enter that door pretty often :)

  • @terribates7240
    @terribates7240 Год назад

    how rude to sit in the front row, reading all the way through. I can only hope they were reading a translation into their own language of the talk they had been so privileged to attend. I enjoyed the whole thing very much and particularly thoughts towards the end, which resonated very much for me.

    • @NobelPrize
      @NobelPrize  Год назад +3

      Bound booklets with translations of the speeches are often provided to attendees at the prize ceremony and at the literature prize lecture. - Thanks for watching!

  • @juldor93
    @juldor93 4 года назад +6

    they stood up and sat down like in church xD

    • @david50665
      @david50665 Год назад

      there is a good preacher in the pulpit

  • @ci7446
    @ci7446 6 лет назад +1

    was that Kazuo Ishiguro's concession speech? 44:30

  • @umakanthrao426
    @umakanthrao426 Год назад

    Nobel speech of self

    • @fabianhauser708
      @fabianhauser708 4 месяца назад

      That's kind of to be expected/whished from the laureates. That they also share the circumstances why and how they got the ideas for which they get awared here 😊