Nobel laureate in literature visits CERN
Gao Xingjian, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000, was invited to visit CERN as part of European Researchers’ Night. During his visit to the Laboratory, he took time out to give us a dose of his optimism.
“The idea of bringing scientists and artists together is wonderful!” An enthusiastic first-time visitor to the Laboratory, Gao Xingjian regaled his audience with his thoughts on human reality at the conference 'Made of Shadow and Light', in which he took part on 24 September, alongside Sergio Bertolucci, CERN’s Director for Research and Computing.
Interested in science since his childhood (his marks in physics and maths at school were excellent, he explains with a smile), he draws an interesting parallel between human consciousness and dark matter: “The concept of dark matter makes complete sense to me,” he explains. “The human consciousness and subconscious share the same characteristics: they are not visible, but they certainly exist.”
Asked about the rumours of the end of the world that have been circulating on the Internet for the last few weeks, he answers with a humorous reference to the medium-length film After the Flood, which he produced in 2008: “What happens after the flood? There’s still a future, even if it is uncertain.”
Seven texts by Gao Xingjian translated for CERN “Made of shadows and light” is an anthology of seven short texts, written by Gao Xingjian in Chinese between 1990 and 2012, and extracted from a work entitled “Youshen Yu Xuansi” (Earthbound Spirit and Meditative Thought). |
You can find Gao Xingjian’s biography and bibliography on the Nobel Prize website.