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Doris LessingDoris Lessing
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BiographyDoris Lessing was born in Persia (present-day Iran) to British parents in 1919. Her family moved to Southern Africa where she spent her childhood on her father's farm in what was then Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). When her second marriage ended in 1949, she moved to London, where her first novel, The Grass is Singing, was published in 1950. The book explores the complacency and shallowness of white colonial society in Southern Africa and established Lessing as a talented young novelist.
In 2007, Doris Lessing was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. On Not Winning the Nobel Prize (2008) is the full text of the lecture she gave to the Swedish Academy when accepting the prize.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Autobiography, Essays, Fiction, Libretto, Non-fiction, Science-fiction, Short stories     BibliographyThe Grass is Singing Michael Joseph, 1950 This Was the Old Chief's Country (Collected African Stories Volume 1) Michael Joseph, 1951 Martha Quest (Book 1: The Children of Violence Series) Michael Joseph, 1952 Five Short Novels Michael Joseph, 1953 A Proper Marriage (Book 2: The Children of Violence Series) Michael Joseph, 1954 Retreat to Innocence Michael Joseph, 1956 Going Home MacGibbon & Kee, 1957 The Habit of Loving MacGibbon & Kee, 1957 A Ripple from the Storm (Book 3 The Children of Violence Series) Michael Joseph, 1958 In Pursuit of the English (a documentary) MacGibbon & Kee, 1960 The Golden Notebook Michael Joseph, 1962 A Man and Two Women MacGibbon & Kee, 1963 African Stories Michael Joseph, 1964 Landlocked (Book 4 The Children of Violence Series) MacGibbon & Kee, 1965 The Black Madonna Panther, 1966 Particularly Cats Michael Joseph, 1967 The Four-Gated City (Book 5 The Children of Violence Series) MacGibbon & Kee, 1969 Briefing for a Descent into Hell Cape, 1971 The Story of a Non-Marrying Man and Other Stories Cape, 1972 The Summer Before the Dark Cape, 1973 The Sun Between Their Feet (Collected African Stories Volume 2) Michael Joseph, 1973 Memoirs of a Survivor Octagon Press, 1975 To Room Nineteen (Collected Stories Volume 1) Cape, 1978 The Temptation of Jack Orkney (Collected Stories Volume 2) Cape, 1978 Re: Colonised Planet 5, Shikasta (Canopus in Argos series) Cape, 1979 The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four and Five (Canopus in Argos series) Cape, 1980 The Sirian Experiments (Canopus in Argos series) Cape, 1981 The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 (Canopus in Argos series) Cape, 1982 Diary of a Good Neighbour (as Jane Somers) Michael Joseph, 1983 Documents Relating to the Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire (Canopus in Argos Series) Cape, 1983 If the Old Could... (published as 'The Diaries of Jane Somers') Michael Joseph, 1984 The Good Terrorist Cape, 1985 Prisons We Choose to Live Inside Cape, 1987 The Wind Blows Away Our Words Pan, 1987 The Fifth Child Cape, 1988 A Doris Lessing Reader Cape, 1989 African Laughter HarperCollins, 1992 London Observed: Stories and Sketches HarperCollins, 1992 Under My Skin HarperCollins, 1994 Spies I Have Known and Other Stories CollinsEducational, 1995 Love, Again Flamingo, 1996 Walking in the Shade: Volume II of My Autobiography 1949-1962 HarperCollins, 1997 Mara and Dann: An Adventure HarperCollins, 1999 Ben, in the World Flamingo, 2000 The Sweetest Dream Flamingo, 2001 the grandmothers Flamingo, 2003 Time Bites: Selected Essays Fourth Estate, 2004 The Story of General Dann and Mara's Daughter, Griot and the Snow Dog Fourth Estate, 2005 The Cleft Fourth Estate, 2007 Alfred and Emily Fourth Estate, 2008 On Not Winning the Nobel Prize (illustrated by Abigail Rorer) Oak Tree Fine Press, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1954 Somerset Maugham Award Five 1971 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Briefing for a Descent into Hell 1976 Prix Médicis (France) The Golden Notebook 1981 Austrian State Prize for European Literature 1981 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Sirian Experiments 1982 Shakespeare Prize (Germany) 1985 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Good Terrorist 1985 WH Smith Literary Award The Good Terrorist 1989 Premio Grinzane Cavour (Italy) 1995 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for biography) Under My Skin 1995 Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Biography) Under My Skin 1999 Companion of Honour (British Government) 1999 Premio Internacional, Cataluna (Spain) 2001 David Cohen British Literature Prize 2001 Prince of Asturias Prize for Literature (Spain) 2005 Man Booker International Prize (shortlist) 2007 Man Booker International Prize (shortlist) 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature 2008 British Book Awards Author of the Year (shortlist)    
  Critical PerspectiveWhen Doris Lessing won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007, it seemed that, at last, the highest literary honour was being placed on a woman who has surveyed and judged mankind in the latter half of the 20th century like no other writer. She perceives the operations of sex, power and society by way of a mystical vision that makes her the heir to D.H. Lawrence. Her observations are not always comfortable ones, and this may be one reason why she has troubled the literary and political world so much – she is a fierce writer, unafraid to speak unpalatable truths. Although Lessing cannot be easily categorised, her work is united by her being a moralist, an investigator of states of consciousness and forms of fiction, and a portrayer of how individuals function within society. No one other than Lessing is capable of writing about African landscapes, outer space, Sufism, nuclear holocaust, Spanish rural poverty, a Hampstead political family, and cats, all within the same career.
Lessing will always be known as the writer of The Golden Notebook. It is hard now to comprehend just how original it was in 1962; it is a very early work of British postmodernism, characteristically British in that there is a strong realist centre. It reads partly, now, as an evocative social document of the early 1960s; for many, it became a feminist novel, although Lessing was keen to point out later that this was not what she intended. The business of this complex book is surely the inability of traditional forms of fiction to portray the divided modern self, irrespective of gender; it is a story of fragmented post-war life, told in a fragmented form. There is no centre and all is fiction; we cannot trust what we perceive. If this is familiar to us in the writings of John Fowles and A.S. Byatt, of Angela Carter and Graham Swift, this is because of the seeds sown by Lessing.
However Doris Lessing was a novelist long before The Golden Notebook, and there is an argument for her early works being her best. The Grass is Singing (1950), her debut, succeeds as well as it does because it is partly a thriller. Mary Turner, the central character, is dead at the start, and we learn, by way of flashback, the explanation for her death. The evocation of the atrophied African farm, the way that the environment sucks the life out of Mary, is superbly done. It is quasi-naturalism, with an omniscient narrator to direct us to a fact which seems obvious now but was not so then: the inbuilt racism of the colonials in southern Africa. Lessing continued this theme in a series of short stories published in the early 1950s; the short story form is particularly suited to her desire to use a particular incident to demonstrate a general truth, to explain us to ourselves via fable. ‘The Old Chief Mshlanga’, ‘A Sunrise on the Veld’ and ‘Little Tembi’ are standouts. Lessing is a masterful painter of the African landscape through deceptively simple language.
Martha Quest (1952), the first volume of the Children of Violence quintet, continues the African setting and the portrayal of conflicting female desires in The Grass is Singing. If it is a less gripping piece than its predecessors, it is because Lessing is already growing restless with form, and is anxious to show a story about false starts and dead ends. It is capacious, and supposed to frustrate: that is what life is like. The quintet as a whole is as famous and influential, perhaps, as The Golden Notebook; its last volume, The Four-Gated City (1969), heralds Lessing’s most adventurous years in fiction.
The boldest writers of English fiction have challenged realism and delighted in unsettling us, making us work. Lessing, in her novels of the late 1960s and 1970s, takes us into mysterious inner worlds and outer space, for political reasons. Dream can explain reality; alien worlds can explain the way we live now. Science fiction, as written by Lessing, is a return to the worlds of Milton, Dante and Blake, although today, in the words of Margaret Atwood, ‘aliens have taken the place of angels’. In Memoirs of a Survivor (1975), a disintegrating post-apocalyptic world is contrasted with the harmony of visions of the mind; in the ambitious Canopus in Argos series – ‘space fiction’, as Lessing calls it – the author has found a new way of examining the individual’s relationship with collective life. This is far removed from the popular view that science fiction is escapist entertainment, and it is highly appropriate that the third volume, The Sirian Experiments (1981), was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Lessing regards the series as her finest work.
It is a mistake to try to pigeon-hole Lessing, but from the 1980s on she has returned to realism, although always embracing fantasy and dystopian fiction along the way. A crafty experiment resulted in Diary of a Good Neighbour (1983) and its successor If the Old Could (1984), published under the name of Jane Somers. She wanted the fiction to be judged on its own terms; one reviewer said the style reminded them of the young Doris Lessing. Set in the then-present day, the novels are intelligent renderings of contemporary female experience, and particularly that of the elderly woman. Also of interest is The Good Terrorist (1985), a ‘condition of England’ novel in which London is decaying and in the grip of dangerous ideologies. Here, the personal is political, but our personal desires can become swamped by politics; as ever, Lessing shows that love, for women, works against their political and intellectual advancement. The novel reflects her various disenchantments with feminism, communism and Marxism. This suspicion of ideology, which so incensed many radicals, is to the fore in the great, late novel The Sweetest Dream (2001), which replaced Lessing’s third volume of autobiography, and which saw reviewers compare her to Balzac and George Eliot. The book convincingly encompasses the history of political and cultural ideas in Britain from the 1960s to the end of the century; the corruption and poverty within Zimbabwe (renamed Zimlia) is also ruthlessly exposed. She is unashamedly omniscient in her narration. Who else but Lessing would write 'The beginning of the new feminism in the Sixties resembled nothing so much as little girl at a party, mad with excitement … dancing about shrieking, “I haven’t got any knickers on, can you see my bum?”. Who else would portray the political movement they once supported drinking with “tender admiration” to Stalin, “possibly the cruellest murderer who has ever lived” '? Lessing’s work is maddening, depressing, brave, and shakes us by the neck. Her most recent two novels, The Cleft (2007), and Alfred and Emily (2008), show that she is still capable of surprises every time. The Cleft imagines a prehistoric Earth populated only by females; Alfred and Emily, by placing the true story of the effect of the First World War on Lessing’s parents alongside a novella that gives them a happier life, implicitly debates the ethics and authority of fiction-writing, rather like Ian McEwan does in Atonement. Clearly, Lessing is still a sibyl, and we hope she has not finished yet.
Dr Nick Turner, 2008.
 
  Author statement'The writers I know, or whose lives I have read about, have one thing in common: a stressed childhood. I don't mean, necessarily, an unhappy one, but children who have been forced into self-awareness early, have had to learn how to watch the grown-ups, assess them, know what they really mean, as distinct from what they say, children who are continually observing everyone - they have had the best of apprenticeships.'    
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