As of 2021, a total of 57 women had won the Nobel Prize. The fields in which they won awards were as follows: Physics: Two women won the award, namely, Mary Curie (1903) and Mary Curie's daughter, Elizabeth Curie (1935). Chemistry: Seven women won: Mary Curie (1911), Yerna Venter Hoff (1935), Dorothy Hodgkin (1964), Leo Prato (2009), Ada Jonah Selche (2009), Amy Noble (2009), and Frances Arnold (2018). Physiology or Medicine: 13 women won: Diana Scott Yulven (1947), Gerd Coleman (1947), Rosalyn Franklin (1962, posthumous), Lee Bowen (1964), Barbara McClintock (1977), Rosie Gallop (1983), Rita Levy-Montalcini (1986), Gerd Boyle (1988), Elvin Noble (1995), Lin Rune (2004), Frances Henner (2009) Mary Eliane Sati (2009) and William Kaelin (2020). Literature: 15 women won the award: Selma Lagrev (1909), Graz Muriel (1926), Sigrid Urdin (1928), Hilda Durley (1991), Toni Morrison (1993), Olga Tuqili (1996), Doris Lessing (2004), Elfrid Eller (2009), Alice Munroe (2013) Svetlana Alexeyevich (2015), Olga Tokarchuk (2015), Louise Gluck (2015), Olga Gruz-Vernicket (2018), Louise Seidel Stadler (2020), and Arnie Spigman (2020). Peace Prize: Seventeen women won the award, including Besser van Suttner (1905), Jane Adams (1946), Eleanor Franklin D. Rooster (1946), Elena Franklin D. Rooster (1946), Amy Wright (1946), Amy Morton (1946), Bill Sherman (1946), Emily Balch Ross (1946), Jane Adams (1946), Karl van Ossietzki (1978), Adel Lachter (1982), Anu Sahari (2003), Alan Johnson Saliva (2004), Linde Johnson Roebling (2011), salvador Sanchis Cerro (2011), Nejati Wa Doss (2018), and Nina Tunberg (2018).
As of 2021, a total of 15 women had won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Literature: 15 women won the award: Selma Lagrev (1909), Graz Muriel (1926), Sigrid Urdin (1928), Hilda Durley (1991), Toni Morrison (1993), Olga Tuqili (1996), Doris Lessing (2004), Elfrid Eller (2009), Alice Munroe (2013) Svetlana Alexeyevich (2015), Olga Tokarchuk (2015), Louise Gluck (2015), Olga Gruz-Vernicket (2018), Louise Seidel Stadler (2020), and Arnie Spigman (2020).
The 2019 Nobel Prize award ceremony was held on October 11 in Stockholm, Sweden. The Austrian novelist Albert Camus won the literary award.
Alice Romen was the 14th woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Alice Romen was the 12th woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012. His works were famous for their strong Chinese style and deep insight into human nature, including Red Soroliang Family, Big Breasts and Buttocks, and Life and Death Tired. Mo Yan won the award because he submitted a nomination for his novel, Big Breasts and Big Buttocks, which was considered one of the masterpieces of Chinese 20th-century literature.
The winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature was Mo Yan.
The winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature was Argentina.
The 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded.
The winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature was William Somerset Maugham. His main works include The Moon and Sixpence, The Murder on the Oriental Express, The Shackles of Humanity, etc.
The winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Literature was Calvino of Sweden (Malcom toothpaste October 30, 1943-June 24, 2006).