The 57-year-old novelist, the first Chinese national to win the literature award, said "heated emotions and anger allow politics to suppress literature and transform a novel into reportage of a social event."
He gave his work "The Garlic Ballads" as an example. The novel, which depicts a peasant uprising and corruption, was banned in China after the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.
Mo, whose popular, sprawling, bawdy tales bring to life rural China, is the first Chinese winner of the literature prize who is not a critic of the authoritarian government and has been criticized for being a member of the Communist Party and vice president of the party-backed writers' association.
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