advertisement
US President Barack Obama has presented the prestigious National Humanities Medal to Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri in recognition of her “beautifully wrought narratives of estrangement and belonging” which highlight the “Indian-American experience”.
Indian-American Lahiri was presented with the medal on Thursday in the East Room of the White House in the presence of luminaries from the field of arts and humanities. First Lady, Michelle Obama, was also present during the ceremony.
The 2014 National Humanities Medal to Jhumpa Lahiri, for enlarging the human story. In her works of fiction, Dr Lahiri has illuminated the Indian-American experience in beautifully wrought narratives of estrangement and belonging.
— White House citation
Lahiri’s parents and other family members were also present on the occasion.
Obama described the annual awards ceremony as his favourite White House event when “truly extraordinary artists and innovators and thinkers” are recognised for their brilliance while the rest of us look on and feel totally inadequate.
The men and women that we honour today, recipients of the National Medals for the Arts and the Humanities, are here not only because they’ve shared rare truths, often about their own experience, but because they’ve told rare truths about the common experiences that we have as Americans and as human beings.
— Obama
The first National Humanities Medal was awarded in 1996.
Since then, the medal has been bestowed upon 163 individuals and 12 organisations, including this year’s recipients.
(With PTI inputs)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)