Annie Thérèse Blanche Ernaux is a French writer who received the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature for her courageous and clinically acute exploration of the roots, estrangements, and collective restraints of personal memory. Her literary work is predominantly autobiographical and has strong connections to sociology.
Annie Ernaux was born in Lillebonne, Normandy, France in September 1940.
In 1960, Ernaux traveled to London, England, and worked as an au pair, an experience she would later chronicle in her 2016 book "A Girl's Story."
Ernaux's son, Éric, was born in 1964.
Ernaux's son, David, was born in 1968.
Ernaux earned a higher degree in modern literature in 1971.
Annie Ernaux commenced her literary journey in 1974 with the publication of her debut autobiographical novel, "Cleaned Out (Les Armoires vides)".
Ernaux and Philippe Ernaux divorced in 1981.
Ernaux signed a letter advocating for the release of Georges Abdallah, who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1982 for assassinating an American military attaché and an Israeli diplomat.
In 1984, Ernaux won the prestigious Renaudot Prize for her autobiographical novel "La Place (A Man's Place)", exploring her relationship with her father and her upbringing.
Ernaux's novel "Shame" was recognized as a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1998.
"I Remain in Darkness" was named a Top Memoir of 1999 by The Washington Post.
Ernaux's novel "The Possession" was featured in the Top Ten Books of 2008 by More magazine.
Ernaux published her acclaimed historical memoir "The Years (Les Années)" in 2008, which garnered significant praise from French critics and is widely regarded as her magnum opus.
"The Years" won the Télégramme Readers Prize in 2009.
Ernaux showed her support for Jean-Luc Mélenchon in the 2012 French presidential election.
"The Years" was awarded the Strega European Prize in 2016.
In 2016, Ernaux published "A Girl's Story (Mémoire de fille)", reflecting on her experiences as an au pair in London during the 1960s.
Ernaux expressed her support for the Yellow Vests protests in 2018.
Ernaux joined approximately 80 artists in signing a letter opposing the Israel-France cross-cultural season organized by the Israeli and French governments in 2018.
Ernaux signed a letter urging a French state-owned broadcasting network not to broadcast the Eurovision Song Contest held in Israel in 2019.
In 2019, "The Years" was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize and won the Warwick Prize for Women in Translation, marking a significant increase in Ernaux's popularity in the anglophone world.
Following Operation Guardian of the Walls in 2021, Ernaux signed a letter labeling Israel an apartheid state and criticizing the characterization of the conflict as a war between equals.
In October 2022, Annie Ernaux was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the 16th French writer and the first French woman to receive this honor. French President Emmanuel Macron praised her as the "voice of the freedom of women and of the forgotten."
In 2022, Annie Ernaux was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature for her courageous and insightful exploration of personal memory.