Outsiders join Swedish Academy to pick Nobel Literature winners - Action News
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Outsiders join Swedish Academy to pick Nobel Literature winners

Only half of those who choose the winners of next year's Nobel Prize in literature will be members of the scandal-rocked Swedish Academy that has always previously awarded the prize, the prestigious body said Monday.

'I do not know exactly how it will go. We'll see,' says temporary member

The body set to choose the winners of next year's Nobel Prize in literature will comprise members of the scandal-rocked Swedish Academy as well as five outsiders added temporarily, officials have announced. (Fernando Vergara/Associated Press)

Only half of those who choose the winners of next year's Nobel Prize in literature will be members of the scandal-rocked Swedish Academy that has always previously awarded the prize, the prestigious body said Monday.

Two authors, two critics and one translator all Swedish will join five members of the academy in picking the winners next year including the 2019 and the delayed 2018 literature prizes and in 2020.

The decision to build "a new Nobel committee" was taken "in consultation with the Nobel Foundation," Anders Olsson, the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, said in a statement.

The move was taken 'in consultation with the Nobel Foundation,' Anders Olsson, the group's acting permanent secretary, said in a statement. (Janerik Henriksson/AFP/Getty Images)

"What I understand is we run through [the names of]the prize nominees and discuss it. But I do not know exactly how it will go. We'll see," Rebecka Karde, a literary critic and one of those selected, told Swedish broadcaster SVT before the announcement.

The Nobel Foundation earlier had warned the academy that if it doesn't resolve its tarnished image, it could be decided that another group would be a better host.

A year ago, 18 women came forward in a Swedish newspaper with abuse accusations against Jean-Claude Arnault, the husband of a then-member of the academy.

Arnault has since been convicted of rape, and the academy in April found that "unacceptable behaviour in the form of unwanted intimacy" had taken place within the ranks of the prestigious institution.

Jean-Claude Arnault is seen at centre being escorted from a Stockholm court last week. He is appealing his October conviction of rape, for which he has been sentenced to two years in prison. (Jonas Ekstromer/TT News Agency/Associated Press)

A fierce internal debate over how to face up to the academy's flaws in responding to both sexual and financial crimes allegations divided its 18 members who are appointed for life into hostile camps, which has led to accusations of patriarchal leanings among some academy members.

So far, eight members have either left or disassociated themselves from the secretive academy.

Arnault also has been suspected of violating century-old Nobel rules by leaking the names of award winners allegedly seven times, starting in 1996. It remains unclear to whom the names were leaked and it's not known whether that has been investigated.