Berliner Boersenzeitung - Satire and poetry: Milan Kundera took on life's absurdity

EUR -
AED 4.211623
AFN 72.819805
ALL 93.636171
AMD 422.263103
ANG 2.053234
AOA 1052.192535
ARS 1647.65034
AUD 1.633165
AWG 2.06424
AZN 1.94858
BAM 1.932561
BBD 2.310912
BDT 140.847569
BGN 1.939102
BHD 0.432463
BIF 3430.0788
BMD 1.1468
BND 1.469925
BOB 7.957315
BRL 5.83813
BSD 1.147403
BTN 108.44201
BWP 15.37413
BYN 3.176602
BYR 22477.28
BZD 2.307651
CAD 1.621174
CDF 2660.576139
CHF 0.922721
CLF 0.025809
CLP 1015.78942
CNY 7.749444
CNH 7.771026
COP 3939.258
CRC 522.61567
CUC 1.1468
CUP 30.3902
CVE 109.347469
CZK 23.855791
DJF 203.809143
DKK 7.380966
DOP 67.202415
DZD 152.385607
EGP 57.234721
ERN 17.202
ETB 181.624475
FJD 2.561608
FKP 0.856046
GBP 0.867437
GEL 3.033285
GGP 0.856046
GHS 12.956202
GIP 0.856046
GMD 83.716038
GNF 10066.035871
GTQ 8.745909
GYD 240.013889
HKD 8.9884
HNL 30.616346
HRK 7.533559
HTG 149.848112
HUF 344.785009
IDR 20354.09448
ILS 3.376626
IMP 0.856046
INR 108.154132
IQD 1502.308
IRR 1576849.999934
ISK 142.58168
JEP 0.856046
JMD 181.467891
JOD 0.813103
JPY 183.789607
KES 148.53374
KGS 100.287387
KHR 4601.527047
KMF 487.389784
KPW 1032.120401
KRW 1733.806779
KWD 0.353327
KYD 0.956202
KZT 559.546703
LAK 25264.003775
LBP 102695.940062
LKR 384.391139
LRD 208.889425
LSL 18.572263
LTL 3.386203
LVL 0.693688
LYD 7.310873
MAD 10.602186
MDL 20.022237
MGA 4816.559941
MKD 60.879756
MMK 2408.217833
MNT 4104.835454
MOP 9.257481
MRU 45.963796
MUR 54.04896
MVR 17.729808
MWK 1990.845095
MXN 19.90667
MYR 4.661518
MZN 73.282934
NAD 18.580358
NGN 1558.638416
NIO 41.984462
NOK 11.159683
NPR 173.506117
NZD 1.991525
OMR 0.440942
PAB 1.147403
PEN 3.913467
PGK 5.031872
PHP 69.235767
PKR 319.152361
PLN 4.183148
PYG 7001.804944
QAR 4.174928
RON 5.168669
RSD 115.908285
RUB 83.683769
RWF 1706.4384
SAR 4.302672
SBD 9.244841
SCR 16.187223
SDG 688.652624
SEK 10.984337
SGD 1.470232
SHP 0.856202
SLE 28.383634
SLL 24047.826802
SOS 655.404832
SRD 42.812368
STD 23736.44462
STN 24.54152
SVC 10.039367
SYP 126.75821
SZL 18.574582
THB 37.310566
TJS 10.636301
TMT 4.025268
TND 3.339195
TOP 2.76122
TRY 53.261028
TTD 7.794276
TWD 36.19129
TZS 3010.353406
UAH 51.386834
UGX 4244.955411
USD 1.1468
UYU 46.323376
UZS 13767.333837
VES 683.53454
VND 30190.6568
VUV 136.456472
WST 3.141947
XAF 648.162993
XAG 0.017416
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.099285
XCG 2.067916
XDR 0.807
XOF 647.942205
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.655179
ZAR 18.84345
ZMK 10322.575319
ZMW 20.280136
ZWL 369.269132
  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18.43

    -0.87%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7300

    61.14

    -2.83%

  • BCC

    3.8000

    74.61

    +5.09%

  • NGG

    -1.1300

    79.55

    -1.42%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.37

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    -0.8400

    31.17

    -2.69%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.63

    +0.08%

  • RIO

    -2.6100

    100.06

    -2.61%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    22.28

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    14.3

    -1.61%

  • GSK

    -1.4900

    50.66

    -2.94%

  • AZN

    -2.8000

    175.09

    -1.6%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    58.9

    -1%

  • BP

    -1.0650

    39.075

    -2.73%

Satire and poetry: Milan Kundera took on life's absurdity
Satire and poetry: Milan Kundera took on life's absurdity / Photo: - - AFP/File

Satire and poetry: Milan Kundera took on life's absurdity

Milan Kundera, the author of "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" whose dark, provocative novels delved into the enigma of the human condition, has died, a spokeswoman for the Milan Kundera Library in his native city of Brno said on Wednesday. He was 94.

Text size:

"Unfortunately I can confirm that Mr Milan Kundera passed away yesterday (Tuesday) after a prolonged illness," she told AFP.

Kundera died at his apartment in Paris, France, his adoptive country where he had lived since his emigration from Communist-ruled Czechoslovakia in 1975.

"Not only Czech literature, but world literature as well has lost one of the greatest contemporary writers, and one of the most translated writers too," Tomas Kubicek, director of the Kundera library, told the public Czech TV.

Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala said Kundera was able to "appeal to whole generations of readers across all continents" with his work.

Kundera was frequently touted as a favourite to win the Nobel Prize for literature, but he never claimed the coveted honour.

Through his characteristic satire and poetic prose, Kundera had sought to express all that is compelling and absurd about life, drawing on his own experiences of being stripped of his Czech nationality for dissent.

Life, he said in his work of criticism "Art of the Novel" (1986), "is a trap we've always known: we are born without having asked to be, locked in a body we never chose, and destined to die."

- Young rebel -

Kundera was born on April 1, 1929, in the town of Brno, in what was then Czechoslovakia. His father was a famous pianist.

He studied in Prague, where he joined the Communist Party, translated the French poet Apollinaire and wrote poetry of his own.

He also taught at a film school where his students included the future Oscar-winning director Milos Forman.

Although he professed faithfulness to Communism, the independent spirit of Kundera's writing soon got him into trouble.

He was expelled from the party in 1950, re-joined in 1956 and was expelled a second time in 1970 after the Prague Spring reform movement -- in which he was seen as playing a role -- was crushed.

- Locked out -

Kundera's first novel "The Joke", a work of dark humour about the one-party state published in 1967, led to a ban on his writing in Czechoslovakia while also making him famous in his homeland.

In 1975, he and his wife Vera went into exile in France, where he worked for four years as an assistant professor at the University of Rennes. They were stripped of their Czech nationality in 1979.

In his adopted home, where he became a citizen in 1981, his reputation and success grew as translations of his novels appeared, such as "Life is Elsewhere" (1973) set in Czechoslovakia about a poet entrapped by the Communist regime.

"The Book of Laughter and Forgetting" (1979) playfully explored through seven interlinked narratives the nature of forgetting in politics, history and daily life.

The novel was "brilliant and original," said the New York Times in 1980, "written with a purity and wit that invite us directly in; it is also strange, with a strangeness that locks us out."

Kundera was an author "fascinated by sex, and prone to sudden, if graceful, skips into autobiography, abstract rumination, and recent Czech history," said the Times reviewer, John Updike.

By far his most famous work, "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" was published in 1984 and turned into a film starring Juliette Binoche and Daniel Day-Lewis in 1987.

The novel is a morality tale about freedom and passion, on both an individual and collective level, set against the Prague Spring and its aftermath in exile.

- No going back? -

Kundera's critics say he turned his back on fellow Czechs and dissidents following his exile in France and for his decision to ban the translation of his French books into Czech.

In 2008, a Czech magazine accused him of being a police informer under Communist rule, which he denied as "pure lies".

In 2013, Kundera published his first novel after a 13-year hiatus.

"The Festival of Insignificance", about five friends in Paris, received mixed reviews, with The Atlantic noting its "near-impenetrable irony" and The Guardian deeming it a "stinker".

What Kundera "has to tell us seems to have less relevance", said the New York Times. "You can’t help wondering what his evolution would have been like if he had stayed, or stayed longer, in Czechoslovakia."

In 2019, the Czech Republic restored his nationality and in 2023 the Milan Kundera Library opened in his hometown of Brno.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)