"Well, what were 'political considerations' behind Seifert? Canetti? Gide? Lagerkvist? And I could continue."
Let me ask again - Have you read books by
all laureates? Do you base your theory on your own experience with their work?
No, I don't think I've read all the prize winners, but I've read a lot of them, to see that some weren't prize worthy.
For example, what Morrison's books have you read? What was so unsatisfying about them that it convinced you that she didn't deserve the award and only won due to political reasons?
And as for the quote - no, I didn't know it's from Shakespeare. First, I only read some 4 or 5 of his plays and second, I read them in my language, not in English. But that's not what I asked.
I know you meant members of the forum. But why should we be "happy few"? Because we discuss literature? And so we are more intelligent, more aware of how things really are, than those that aren't members of "happy few"? And if we're "happy few", aware of what things really are, does it mean they're just "dumb masses"?
That's what I thought about when I saw the quotation. Maybe you didn't mean that. Maybe I'm just paranoid.

But it sounded like that to me. That's why I said I hope I'm wrong.