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Jaroslav Hašek

Jaroslav Hašek (Czech: [ˈjaroslaf ˈɦaʃɛk]; 1883–1923) was a Czech writer, humorist, satirist, journalist, bohemian, first anarchist and then communist, and commissar of the Red Army against the Czechoslovak Legion. He is best known for his novel The Fate of the Good Soldier Švejk during the World War, an unfinished collection of farcical incidents about a soldier in World War I and a satire on the ineptitude of authority figures. The novel has been translated into about 60 languages, making it the most translated novel in Czech literature.

Jaroslav Hašek
Born(1883-04-30)30 April 1883
Prague, Austria-Hungary
Died3 January 1923(1923-01-03) (aged 39)
Lipnice nad Sázavou, Czechoslovakia
OccupationNovelist, humorist
Language
  • Czech
  • Russian
GenreHistorical satire
Literary movementSocial realism[1]
Notable worksThe Good Soldier Švejk
Signature

Life edit

Jaroslav Hašek's paternal ancestors were farmers rooted in Mydlovary in South Bohemia. Hašek's grandfather from his father's side, František Hašek, was a member of the Czech Landtag and later also the so-called Kromeriz convention. He was also involved in barricade fights in Prague in 1848. According to some rumors, he worked with Mikhail Bakunin during his stay in Bohemia in 1849.[2] 

 
Monument to Jaroslav Hašek in Lipnice nad Sázavou
 
Statue of Jaroslav Hašek in Žižkov, near the pubs where he wrote some of his works

The family of his mother, Katherine, née Jarešová, was also from South Bohemia. His grandfather Antonín Jareš and his great-grandfather Matěj Jareš were pond-keepers of the Schwarzenberg princes in Krč village No. 32.[3][4][5][6][7]

His father, Josef Hašek,[8] a mathematics teacher and religious fanatic,[9] died early of alcohol intoxication.[10] He put an end to himself due to pain caused by cancer. Poverty then forced his mother Kateřina with three children to move more than fifteen times.

At the age of four, the doctor diagnosed a heart defect and "stunted thyroid gland" in little Jaroslav. Because of this, he spent a lot of time in the country, with his grandfather from his mother's side, in the so-called Ražice dam-house, especially with his younger brother Bohuslav. In his childhood, Jaroslav was jealous of Bohuslav and even tried several times to hurt him as a baby.[11] Later they had an extremely strong relationship and traveled together a lot on foot. Bohuslav drank himself to death one year after Jaroslav's death.

Hašek's childhood was ordinary, boyish, imbued with adventures with peers and reading Karl May and Jules Verne. However, this changed when Hašek was eleven: the retired sailor Němeček moved to Lipová Street, where the Hašeks lived at that time. Němeček wrapped the teenage Hašek around his little finger, pilfered the money that Hašek had stolen at home, and began to lead him into bars, including the infamous Jedová chýše (Poison Hut) on Apolinářská Street, where he taught him to drink alcohol. In addition, he intentionally had sex with his girlfriend in front of the boy. It was a trauma for Hašek. He later remembered these experiences with disgust and remorse. It probably influenced Hašek's relationship with women. In his discussions with his comrades in the Russian legions, it is said that he said: “Can there be anything worse in the world than such a human pig? I didn't know anything about these things, and yet I felt such disgust and revulsion that it was enough to poison my whole life. I could never look at the woman again and I have also been afraid of women since then.” [11] Some theories about Hašek's homosexuality, spread mainly by the literary historian Jindřich Chalupecký (the essay "Podivný Hašek" in the book Expresionisté), have also originated here, as well as in the testimony of Hašek's friend Rudolf Šimanovský.[12]

Shortly after Hašek began his studies at the grammar school in Ječná Street, his father died. In 1897 he was present at anti-German riots in Prague as a student. He was arrested and the gymnasium teachers forced him to "voluntarily" leave the institution. He then trained as a druggist in Kokoška's drugstore on the corner of Perštýn and Martinská Street, but eventually graduated from the Czech-Slavonic Business Academy in Resslova Street. [13] At the academy he made friends with Ladislav Hájek, and together they wrote and released a parody of the lyrical love poetry of May Shouts, in which Hašek first laughed at pathos and entered the field of humorous literature.

After graduation, he became an employee of Slavia Bank but soon began to earn his living exclusively in journalism and literature. At that time he also met Czech anarchists. He began to lead a bohemian and vagrant life. Together with his brother Bohuslav, he walked through, among other places, Slovakia and western Galicia (now in Poland). Stories from these trips were published by Jaroslav Hašek in Národní listy.

In 1907, he became editor of the anarchist magazine Komuna and was briefly imprisoned for his work.

In the same year, he fell in love with Jarmila Mayerová, but because of his bohemian life, her parents did not consider him a suitable partner for their daughter. When he was arrested for desecrating the Austro-Hungarian flag in Prague, Mayer's parents took her to the countryside in the hope that it would help end their relationship. In response, Hašek tried to back out of his radical politics and get permanent work as a writer. In 1908 he edited the Women's Horizon. In 1909 he had sixty-four published short stories, and the same year he was appointed editor of Animal World magazine. Although this work did not last long (he was soon released for publishing articles on imaginary animals he had invented) yet he married Jarmila Mayerová on 23 May 1910.[14] However, after a year of marriage, Jarmila returned to her parents after Hašek was detained after trying to feign his own death. According to other sources, however, this was a serious attempt at suicide, motivated by the understanding that he was unable to live a marital life.[15] After this attempt, he was briefly hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital.

From 1911, he contributed to the Czech Word, then to the Torch, Humorist Letters, Nettle, Cartoons, and for some time led the Institute of Cynology,[10] which inspired his later book My Dog Shop.

In 1911, he founded The Party of Moderate Progress Within the Bounds of the Law. He founded it with his friends in the Vinohrady pub called U zlatého litru (The Golden Liter) to parody the political life of that time. He also wrote the satirical work Political and Social History of the Party of Mild Progress within the limits of the law, but it was not published in book form until 1963.

During this period, together with František Langer, Emil Artur Longen and Egon Erwin Kisch he co-authored a number of cabaret performances, where he was also the main performer.

In the summer of 1912, Hašek spent several weeks in a pub in Chotěboř, where he could not be gotten rid of and the proprietors waited in vain for payment. He described his stay in Chotěboř in the stories "Traitor of the Nation in Chotěboř", the "District Court in Malibor", and "How about the birthplace of Ignát Herrmann or the Consecration in Krivice".

At the outbreak of the First World War, Hašek lived with the cartoonist Josef Lada, who later illustrated the Good Soldier Švejk.[16]

In February 1915, Hašek was called up to the replacement battalion of 91st Regiment of the Austro-Hungarian army in České Budějovice. With the 12th march battalion of the regiment, he was in early July transported to the Eastern front in Galicia (now Ukraine). He served on the front until 24 September 1915 when he was captured by the Russians and sent to the Totskoye camp in Orenburg Governorate. Here he joined the Czechoslovak Legion in 1916. Then he was drafted into the 1st Regiment, where he worked as a scribe, emissary of the recruitment committee and gunner. Then he was transferred to the connecting section, machine-gun section (in which he participated in the Battle of Zborov against the Austrians) and the office of the 1st Regiment. From July 1916 to February 1918 he published in the journal Čechoslovan and Cs. soldier, and was the author of a number of anti-Bolshevik articles.

 
Jaroslav Hašek in 1920.

At the end of February 1918, he joined the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party (forerunner of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, 1921–1992). What led Hašek to abandon anarchism and to accept socialist ideals has nowhere been clarified. In March, the Czechoslovak legions embarked on their well-known retreat, with the aim of joining the Western Front via Vladivostok. Hašek disagreed with this and went to Moscow, where he began to cooperate with the Bolsheviks. In April he transferred from the legions to the Red Army. He was sent to Samara and the following year he was director of the army printer in Ufa, chief of the department for work with foreigners, etc.[17] At the end of 1918 he served as commander of the Chuvash troops in the Red Army and as deputy military commander of the Bugulma district. He then worked in Siberia, where he published several magazines. One of them was also the first magazine in the Buryat language, Jur (Dawn).[18]

 
Jaroslav Hašek in 1921

In 1920, he was wounded in an assassination attempt[19] in Irkutsk, where he served as a member of the city soviet.[20] In the same year he fell ill with typhoid fever, and in May he married a printing worker named Alexandra Grigorievna Lvov, called Shura, who took care of him after his illness. After his return to Czechoslovakia, he was not tried for polygamy because of the lack of order and recognition of various international treaties in Russia.

In December 1920, Hašek returned to independent Czechoslovakia. He was initially placed in quarantine in Pardubice, and on 19 December he arrived in Prague with Shura. The Soviets had sent him to Czechoslovakia to organize the communist movement. However, he was prevented from doing so by two circumstances: on the one hand, in support of the Kladno riots, he received from the Russian authorities an amount of 1,500 marks, which, however, was completely devalued by German inflation. In addition, even before Hašek's arrival in Prague, Jaroslav Handlíř, leader of a clutch of Russian agents whom Hašek was to contact, was arrested in Czechoslovakia. In this way Hašek's interest in communist politics ended and he returned to his bohemian way of life. He visited pubs in Prague and its surroundings, where he wrote his stories. Many stories describing this period were written by Hašek's friend Zdeněk Matěj Kuděj.

On 25 August 1921 Hašek left with his wife Shura and painter Jaroslav Panuška for Lipnice nad Sázavou. By this time he was seriously ill and dangerously obese. In Lipnice he began writing his masterpiece, The Fate of the Good Soldier Švejk during the World War. Eventually, he was, unable to write, yet he continued to dictate Švejk's chapters in his bedroom. On 3 January 1923, he died of heart paralysis. The last known photograph was taken in December 1922.

 
Hašek in October 1922

Contradictions and points of interest edit

In the Czech and Slovak public imagination Jaroslav Hašek is fixed as a bohemian, perhaps even the prototypical bohemian of the early twentieth century. In fact, this is largely a legend and represents Hašek's self-stylization. An internally disciplined author, Hašek was very productive. From his works it is also apparent that he had an extensive (perhaps a little unsystematic) humanistic education.

It is most instructive to consider Hašek's work in Russia during 1916 to 1920. He has never been and still is not perceived as a mere bohemian or humorist writer in Russia, but, on the contrary, as a very responsible Bolshevik army official and a respected intellectual.[21] He was also a relatively skilled soldier. In 1918 he distinguished himself as a courageous commander of the Czechoslovak Red Army troops in the defense of Samara.[22] Samara was at that time threatened from the direction of Lipyagi station by the Czechoslovak legions, which were fighting alongside the White troops to restore the imperial regime, although the legionnaires tried to maintain essential neutrality and fight against the Bolsheviks only when inevitable. On 8 June 1918, Samara was conquered by the legions.[23] It is possible that at this time, Jaroslav Hašek met with Czech "brothers" and may have encouraged them to leave the White-Russian party. After the fall of Samara, he was in hiding in a territory controlled by White troops (and Czechoslovak legions) for several months.[20]

It is possible that in specific revolutionary Russian conditions, Hašek was given the opportunity to assert those aspects of his character that could not manifest themselves in stabilized and essentially small-town Czech conditions. It was also important that Hašek was banned by his Party organization from drinking alcohol.[24] He was basically sent to Czechoslovakia with the aim of organizing the communist movement, which also supports the thesis that he had to be perceived as a responsible person and a capable organizer in Soviet Russia.

A subject of debate and speculation is how Hašek behaved in the Red Army, especially at a time when he was a Commissioner – and deputy commander – of Bugulma.

Hašek's had close contact with a number of revolutionaries including Lev Trotsky.[25] Hašek's closest collaborators in Russia – Nikolai Ivanovich Kochkurov ("Artem Vesely") or Vladimir Yakovlevich Zazubrin – later became victims of Stalin's repression.[26]

There is also speculation about Hašek's mysterious mission to Mongolia, which he probably undertook in Soviet service. The writer Pavel Gan claims that he was there in conjunction with the Chinese revolutionary Chen Chang-Hai, alias Vanya Chang, and was going to go with him to China, for which reason he probably learned solid Chinese.[26]

A not-well-known aspect of Hašek's biography is that after returning to his homeland he found himself somewhat isolated. He was uncomfortable from left to right. After he left communist politics, for example, Stanislav Kostka Neumann described him as a "traitor to the proletarian revolution". For the poet Karel Toman he was branded a "traitor of the nation" by his red arm band and refused to shake his hand when he met him in a café after the war.[27] There were more such hostile reactions. Hašek's departure to Lipnice, where he wrote Švejk, was motivated by the hostile atmosphere he met in Prague.[28]

Works edit

Initially Hašek wrote mainly travel stories, features and humoresques, which he published in magazines. He wrote most of his works in Prague pubs.[29][30]

His prose was based on his own real experiences, confusing investigation of his actual life, because it is not always clear what is true and what is only poetic hyperbole.

Hašek hated pretense, sentimentality, settled life, to which he ironically reacted in satiric verse. Another characteristic feature of his work is resistance to moral and literary conventions.

In his life, he wrote about 1,200 short stories. Most of his short prose is scattered throughout various magazines and newspapers. Over the years nearly all the stories have been collected and printed in book's form. Some texts may however have been lost, for example, the story "The History of the Ox."[10] There is also a number of texts of which Hašek's authorship is likely, but not confirmed.

Words flowed easily from his pen, but this does not mean that he was not creative. František Langer stated that "he was attracted, controlled, absorbed by writing, driven by his almost passionate passion for his writing."[27]

His most famous text by far, the four-part humorous novel The Fate of the Good Soldier Švejk during the World War, has been translated into 58 languages and several times filmed and dramatized. Individual parts of the novel have the names: “In the Background (1921)”, “At the Front (1922)”, “Famous Spanking (1922)” and “Unfinished Continuation of the Famous Spanking” (1923). Hašek's most important work is associated by many people with congenial illustrations by Josef Lada. Hašek did not manage to complete the book. The completion of the work by Karel Vaněk is far from Hašek's original conception. Vanek's completion was based on the continuation of 1921, but was highly criticized (Viktor Dyk, Jaroslav Durych, F. X. Šalda etc.). At first, the work had few followers. Ivan Olbracht was probably the first to mark it as a major work in the cultural section of Rudé právo. "It is one of the best books ever written in the Czech Republic, and Svejk is quite a new type in world literature, equivalent to Don Quixote, Hamlet, Faust, Oblomov, Karamazov," Olbracht wrote.[27] Karel Čapek, Josef Čapek, Julius Fučík and Vítězslav Nezval, who connected Hašek's work with Dadaism, also adopted a positive attitude,[31] as did Devětsil theoretician Bedřich Václavek. Discussions on the value of the work continued in later years. For example, Václav Černý opposed Švejk, but a wide range of Czech literary theorists, artists, and intellectuals had other views – the philosopher Karel Kosík saw the novel as "an expression of the absurdity of the alienated world"; he described Švejk as the "tragic bard of European nihilism.The aesthetist Jan Grossman associated Švejk with existentialism; the literary theorist Jindřich Chalupecký described Švejk as the "tragic bard of European nihilism,"; and the writer Milan Kundera described the novel as "the pure irrationality of history.".[32]

Švejk has been dramatized several times, Hašek himself performed the first dramatization for the Emil Artur Longen "Revolutionary Scene"; in 1928 Švejk turned into a theater performance of Hašek's friend Max Brod, in 1963 by Pavel Kohout. The international adaptation was achieved by the adaptation of Schweik in the Second World War by the German playwright and director Bertold Brecht.

Tributes edit

On 30 April 2013, Google celebrated Jaroslav Hasek's 130th Birthday with a doodle.[33][34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Patrick, Julian (2009). 501 great writers : A comprehensive guide to the giants of literature. Apple. p. 287. ISBN 9781845433109.
  2. ^ "Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška". Svejkmuseum.cz. 2 August 2017. from the original on 12 November 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  3. ^ "Matriční záznam o narození Kateřiny Garešowy 3. 11. 1849 na baště v Krči čp. 32: DigiArchiv of SOA Třebon – ver. 18.12.20". Digi.ceskearchivy.cz. from the original on 17 June 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  4. ^ . Jirilouzensky.TXT.cz. Archived from the original on 20 January 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  5. ^ "Chlapec". Radkopytlik.sweb.cz. from the original on 29 January 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  6. ^ (PDF). SDHKRC.cz. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  7. ^ Vojík, Václav (2012), Krč vesnice v srdci mém (monograph), pp. II to 74
  8. ^ Matriční záznam o sňatku prof. Josefa Haška s Kateřinou Jarešovou 17 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine farnosti Protivín
  9. ^ "Kdo je Jaroslav Hašek". Svejkmuseum.cz. from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  10. ^ a b c Galík, Josef, ed. (1994). Panorama české literatury (anthology). Olomouc: Rubico. ISBN 80-85839-04-0.
  11. ^ a b "Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška". Svejkmuseum.cz. from the original on 12 November 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  12. ^ Novák Večerníček, Jaroslav. "Hašek: Gay, nebo milovník jediné ženy? – Blog iDNES.cz". Mladá fronta DNES. from the original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  13. ^ . Cao.cz (in Czech). Archived from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  14. ^ Matriční záznam o sňatku Jaroslava Haška s Jarmilou Mayerovou 25 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine farnosti při kostele sv. Ludmily na pražských Královských Vinohradech
  15. ^ Muž, který zachránil Haška před sebevraždou. Nebýt jeho, nebyl by Švejk (monograph). Blesk.cz. 15 February 2011. from the original on 9 August 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  16. ^ "Hašek Jaroslav – živit a dílo ( Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za světové války ) – Materiály do školy". Materiály do školy (in Czech). 6 September 2016. from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  17. ^ "Jaroslav Hašek – Eduard Stehlík, Míla Sýkora". from the original on 2 August 2020. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  18. ^ "Jaroslav Hašek – biografia | TerazTeatr". Terazteatr.pl (in Polish). from the original on 1 August 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  19. ^ "Гашек Ярослав". from the original on 1 December 2019. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  20. ^ a b (in Russian). Archived from the original on 19 December 2009. Retrieved 27 July 2008.
  21. ^ "Заславский Д. Ярослав Гашек - Русофил - Русская филология | Образовательный ресурс". from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 27 July 2008.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  24. ^ "Kdo nám taky přednášel marxák aneb stručný výtah z pamětí Arnošta Kolmana" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 5 March 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  25. ^ Pytlík, Radko. "Rudá Evropa". Toulavé house (in Czech). from the original on 28 November 2019. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  26. ^ a b Malevič, Oleg (December 2015). V perspektivě desetiletí (monograph) (in Czech). Charles University in Prague, Karolinum Press. ISBN 9788024628448. from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  27. ^ a b c Suchomel, Milan. "Jaroslav Hašek a Josef Švejk, dvě pochybné existence". Časopis HOST (in Czech). from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  28. ^ "Jaroslav Hašek". Vltava (in Czech). from the original on 1 August 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2010.
  30. ^ "Klub přátel starého Smíchova, Jaroslav Hašek". from the original on 5 December 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  31. ^ "Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za světové války II. Na frontě. Čte Oldřich Kaiser". Vltava (in Czech). 13 July 2017. from the original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  32. ^ Oleg, Malevič (December 2015). V perspektivě desetiletí (in Czech). Charles University in Prague, Karolinum Press. 399 pages. ISBN 9788024628448. from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  33. ^ Desk, OV Digital (1 May 2023). "30 April: Remembering Jaroslav Hasek on Birthday". Observer Voice. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  34. ^ "Jaroslav Hasek's 130th Birthday (CZ)". www.google.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.

Further reading edit

  • The Good Soldier Švejk and His Fortunes in the World War, translated by Cecil Parrott, with original illustrations by Josef Lada
  • The Fateful Adventures of the Good Soldier Švejk During the World War 28 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine, translated by Zenny K. Sadlon
  • The Red Commissar: Including further adventures of the good soldier Švejk and other stories
  • Bachura Scandal and Other Stories and Sketches, translated by Alan Menhenett
  • Biography by Cecil Parrott, The Bad Bohemian (ISBN 0-349-12698-4).
  • Pytlík, Radko; Laiske, Miroslav (1960). Bibliografie Jaroslava Haška; soupis jeho díla a literatury o něm [Bibliography of Jaroslav Hašek: a list of his work and literature about him] (in Czech). Praha: Státní pedagogické nakl. OCLC 4573600.

External links edit

  • Petri Liukkonen. "Jaroslav Hašek". Books and Writers.
  • Virtuální muzeum Jaroslava Haška a Josefa Švejka (Czech)
  • A comprehensive site, mostly in Czech, but also partly in English
  • Radio Pytlik, biographer of Jaroslav Hašek, interview (Czech)
  • Tales from Jaroslav, a site publishing previously untranslated short stories by Jaroslav Hašek (English)
  • J. Hašek. Švejk Stands Against Italy (audio) (in English)

jaroslav, hašek, czech, ˈjaroslaf, ˈɦaʃɛk, 1883, 1923, czech, writer, humorist, satirist, journalist, bohemian, first, anarchist, then, communist, commissar, army, against, czechoslovak, legion, best, known, novel, fate, good, soldier, Švejk, during, world, un. Jaroslav Hasek Czech ˈjaroslaf ˈɦaʃɛk 1883 1923 was a Czech writer humorist satirist journalist bohemian first anarchist and then communist and commissar of the Red Army against the Czechoslovak Legion He is best known for his novel The Fate of the Good Soldier Svejk during the World War an unfinished collection of farcical incidents about a soldier in World War I and a satire on the ineptitude of authority figures The novel has been translated into about 60 languages making it the most translated novel in Czech literature Jaroslav HasekBorn 1883 04 30 30 April 1883Prague Austria HungaryDied3 January 1923 1923 01 03 aged 39 Lipnice nad Sazavou CzechoslovakiaOccupationNovelist humoristLanguageCzechRussianGenreHistorical satireLiterary movementSocial realism 1 Notable worksThe Good Soldier SvejkSignature Contents 1 Life 2 Contradictions and points of interest 3 Works 4 Tributes 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editJaroslav Hasek s paternal ancestors were farmers rooted in Mydlovary in South Bohemia Hasek s grandfather from his father s side Frantisek Hasek was a member of the Czech Landtag and later also the so called Kromeriz convention He was also involved in barricade fights in Prague in 1848 According to some rumors he worked with Mikhail Bakunin during his stay in Bohemia in 1849 2 nbsp Monument to Jaroslav Hasek in Lipnice nad Sazavou nbsp Statue of Jaroslav Hasek in Zizkov near the pubs where he wrote some of his works The family of his mother Katherine nee Jaresova was also from South Bohemia His grandfather Antonin Jares and his great grandfather Matej Jares were pond keepers of the Schwarzenberg princes in Krc village No 32 3 4 5 6 7 His father Josef Hasek 8 a mathematics teacher and religious fanatic 9 died early of alcohol intoxication 10 He put an end to himself due to pain caused by cancer Poverty then forced his mother Katerina with three children to move more than fifteen times At the age of four the doctor diagnosed a heart defect and stunted thyroid gland in little Jaroslav Because of this he spent a lot of time in the country with his grandfather from his mother s side in the so called Razice dam house especially with his younger brother Bohuslav In his childhood Jaroslav was jealous of Bohuslav and even tried several times to hurt him as a baby 11 Later they had an extremely strong relationship and traveled together a lot on foot Bohuslav drank himself to death one year after Jaroslav s death Hasek s childhood was ordinary boyish imbued with adventures with peers and reading Karl May and Jules Verne However this changed when Hasek was eleven the retired sailor Nemecek moved to Lipova Street where the Haseks lived at that time Nemecek wrapped the teenage Hasek around his little finger pilfered the money that Hasek had stolen at home and began to lead him into bars including the infamous Jedova chyse Poison Hut on Apolinarska Street where he taught him to drink alcohol In addition he intentionally had sex with his girlfriend in front of the boy It was a trauma for Hasek He later remembered these experiences with disgust and remorse It probably influenced Hasek s relationship with women In his discussions with his comrades in the Russian legions it is said that he said Can there be anything worse in the world than such a human pig I didn t know anything about these things and yet I felt such disgust and revulsion that it was enough to poison my whole life I could never look at the woman again and I have also been afraid of women since then 11 Some theories about Hasek s homosexuality spread mainly by the literary historian Jindrich Chalupecky the essay Podivny Hasek in the book Expresioniste have also originated here as well as in the testimony of Hasek s friend Rudolf Simanovsky 12 Shortly after Hasek began his studies at the grammar school in Jecna Street his father died In 1897 he was present at anti German riots in Prague as a student He was arrested and the gymnasium teachers forced him to voluntarily leave the institution He then trained as a druggist in Kokoska s drugstore on the corner of Perstyn and Martinska Street but eventually graduated from the Czech Slavonic Business Academy in Resslova Street 13 At the academy he made friends with Ladislav Hajek and together they wrote and released a parody of the lyrical love poetry of May Shouts in which Hasek first laughed at pathos and entered the field of humorous literature After graduation he became an employee of Slavia Bank but soon began to earn his living exclusively in journalism and literature At that time he also met Czech anarchists He began to lead a bohemian and vagrant life Together with his brother Bohuslav he walked through among other places Slovakia and western Galicia now in Poland Stories from these trips were published by Jaroslav Hasek in Narodni listy In 1907 he became editor of the anarchist magazine Komuna and was briefly imprisoned for his work In the same year he fell in love with Jarmila Mayerova but because of his bohemian life her parents did not consider him a suitable partner for their daughter When he was arrested for desecrating the Austro Hungarian flag in Prague Mayer s parents took her to the countryside in the hope that it would help end their relationship In response Hasek tried to back out of his radical politics and get permanent work as a writer In 1908 he edited the Women s Horizon In 1909 he had sixty four published short stories and the same year he was appointed editor of Animal World magazine Although this work did not last long he was soon released for publishing articles on imaginary animals he had invented yet he married Jarmila Mayerova on 23 May 1910 14 However after a year of marriage Jarmila returned to her parents after Hasek was detained after trying to feign his own death According to other sources however this was a serious attempt at suicide motivated by the understanding that he was unable to live a marital life 15 After this attempt he was briefly hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital From 1911 he contributed to the Czech Word then to the Torch Humorist Letters Nettle Cartoons and for some time led the Institute of Cynology 10 which inspired his later book My Dog Shop In 1911 he founded The Party of Moderate Progress Within the Bounds of the Law He founded it with his friends in the Vinohrady pub called U zlateho litru The Golden Liter to parody the political life of that time He also wrote the satirical work Political and Social History of the Party of Mild Progress within the limits of the law but it was not published in book form until 1963 During this period together with Frantisek Langer Emil Artur Longen and Egon Erwin Kisch he co authored a number of cabaret performances where he was also the main performer In the summer of 1912 Hasek spent several weeks in a pub in Chotebor where he could not be gotten rid of and the proprietors waited in vain for payment He described his stay in Chotebor in the stories Traitor of the Nation in Chotebor the District Court in Malibor and How about the birthplace of Ignat Herrmann or the Consecration in Krivice At the outbreak of the First World War Hasek lived with the cartoonist Josef Lada who later illustrated the Good Soldier Svejk 16 In February 1915 Hasek was called up to the replacement battalion of 91st Regiment of the Austro Hungarian army in Ceske Budejovice With the 12th march battalion of the regiment he was in early July transported to the Eastern front in Galicia now Ukraine He served on the front until 24 September 1915 when he was captured by the Russians and sent to the Totskoye camp in Orenburg Governorate Here he joined the Czechoslovak Legion in 1916 Then he was drafted into the 1st Regiment where he worked as a scribe emissary of the recruitment committee and gunner Then he was transferred to the connecting section machine gun section in which he participated in the Battle of Zborov against the Austrians and the office of the 1st Regiment From July 1916 to February 1918 he published in the journal Cechoslovan and Cs soldier and was the author of a number of anti Bolshevik articles nbsp Jaroslav Hasek in 1920 At the end of February 1918 he joined the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party forerunner of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia 1921 1992 What led Hasek to abandon anarchism and to accept socialist ideals has nowhere been clarified In March the Czechoslovak legions embarked on their well known retreat with the aim of joining the Western Front via Vladivostok Hasek disagreed with this and went to Moscow where he began to cooperate with the Bolsheviks In April he transferred from the legions to the Red Army He was sent to Samara and the following year he was director of the army printer in Ufa chief of the department for work with foreigners etc 17 At the end of 1918 he served as commander of the Chuvash troops in the Red Army and as deputy military commander of the Bugulma district He then worked in Siberia where he published several magazines One of them was also the first magazine in the Buryat language Jur Dawn 18 nbsp Jaroslav Hasek in 1921 In 1920 he was wounded in an assassination attempt 19 in Irkutsk where he served as a member of the city soviet 20 In the same year he fell ill with typhoid fever and in May he married a printing worker named Alexandra Grigorievna Lvov called Shura who took care of him after his illness After his return to Czechoslovakia he was not tried for polygamy because of the lack of order and recognition of various international treaties in Russia In December 1920 Hasek returned to independent Czechoslovakia He was initially placed in quarantine in Pardubice and on 19 December he arrived in Prague with Shura The Soviets had sent him to Czechoslovakia to organize the communist movement However he was prevented from doing so by two circumstances on the one hand in support of the Kladno riots he received from the Russian authorities an amount of 1 500 marks which however was completely devalued by German inflation In addition even before Hasek s arrival in Prague Jaroslav Handlir leader of a clutch of Russian agents whom Hasek was to contact was arrested in Czechoslovakia In this way Hasek s interest in communist politics ended and he returned to his bohemian way of life He visited pubs in Prague and its surroundings where he wrote his stories Many stories describing this period were written by Hasek s friend Zdenek Matej Kudej On 25 August 1921 Hasek left with his wife Shura and painter Jaroslav Panuska for Lipnice nad Sazavou By this time he was seriously ill and dangerously obese In Lipnice he began writing his masterpiece The Fate of the Good Soldier Svejk during the World War Eventually he was unable to write yet he continued to dictate Svejk s chapters in his bedroom On 3 January 1923 he died of heart paralysis The last known photograph was taken in December 1922 nbsp Hasek in October 1922Contradictions and points of interest editIn the Czech and Slovak public imagination Jaroslav Hasek is fixed as a bohemian perhaps even the prototypical bohemian of the early twentieth century In fact this is largely a legend and represents Hasek s self stylization An internally disciplined author Hasek was very productive From his works it is also apparent that he had an extensive perhaps a little unsystematic humanistic education It is most instructive to consider Hasek s work in Russia during 1916 to 1920 He has never been and still is not perceived as a mere bohemian or humorist writer in Russia but on the contrary as a very responsible Bolshevik army official and a respected intellectual 21 He was also a relatively skilled soldier In 1918 he distinguished himself as a courageous commander of the Czechoslovak Red Army troops in the defense of Samara 22 Samara was at that time threatened from the direction of Lipyagi station by the Czechoslovak legions which were fighting alongside the White troops to restore the imperial regime although the legionnaires tried to maintain essential neutrality and fight against the Bolsheviks only when inevitable On 8 June 1918 Samara was conquered by the legions 23 It is possible that at this time Jaroslav Hasek met with Czech brothers and may have encouraged them to leave the White Russian party After the fall of Samara he was in hiding in a territory controlled by White troops and Czechoslovak legions for several months 20 It is possible that in specific revolutionary Russian conditions Hasek was given the opportunity to assert those aspects of his character that could not manifest themselves in stabilized and essentially small town Czech conditions It was also important that Hasek was banned by his Party organization from drinking alcohol 24 He was basically sent to Czechoslovakia with the aim of organizing the communist movement which also supports the thesis that he had to be perceived as a responsible person and a capable organizer in Soviet Russia A subject of debate and speculation is how Hasek behaved in the Red Army especially at a time when he was a Commissioner and deputy commander of Bugulma Hasek s had close contact with a number of revolutionaries including Lev Trotsky 25 Hasek s closest collaborators in Russia Nikolai Ivanovich Kochkurov Artem Vesely or Vladimir Yakovlevich Zazubrin later became victims of Stalin s repression 26 There is also speculation about Hasek s mysterious mission to Mongolia which he probably undertook in Soviet service The writer Pavel Gan claims that he was there in conjunction with the Chinese revolutionary Chen Chang Hai alias Vanya Chang and was going to go with him to China for which reason he probably learned solid Chinese 26 A not well known aspect of Hasek s biography is that after returning to his homeland he found himself somewhat isolated He was uncomfortable from left to right After he left communist politics for example Stanislav Kostka Neumann described him as a traitor to the proletarian revolution For the poet Karel Toman he was branded a traitor of the nation by his red arm band and refused to shake his hand when he met him in a cafe after the war 27 There were more such hostile reactions Hasek s departure to Lipnice where he wrote Svejk was motivated by the hostile atmosphere he met in Prague 28 Works editInitially Hasek wrote mainly travel stories features and humoresques which he published in magazines He wrote most of his works in Prague pubs 29 30 His prose was based on his own real experiences confusing investigation of his actual life because it is not always clear what is true and what is only poetic hyperbole Hasek hated pretense sentimentality settled life to which he ironically reacted in satiric verse Another characteristic feature of his work is resistance to moral and literary conventions In his life he wrote about 1 200 short stories Most of his short prose is scattered throughout various magazines and newspapers Over the years nearly all the stories have been collected and printed in book s form Some texts may however have been lost for example the story The History of the Ox 10 There is also a number of texts of which Hasek s authorship is likely but not confirmed Words flowed easily from his pen but this does not mean that he was not creative Frantisek Langer stated that he was attracted controlled absorbed by writing driven by his almost passionate passion for his writing 27 His most famous text by far the four part humorous novel The Fate of the Good Soldier Svejk during the World War has been translated into 58 languages and several times filmed and dramatized Individual parts of the novel have the names In the Background 1921 At the Front 1922 Famous Spanking 1922 and Unfinished Continuation of the Famous Spanking 1923 Hasek s most important work is associated by many people with congenial illustrations by Josef Lada Hasek did not manage to complete the book The completion of the work by Karel Vanek is far from Hasek s original conception Vanek s completion was based on the continuation of 1921 but was highly criticized Viktor Dyk Jaroslav Durych F X Salda etc At first the work had few followers Ivan Olbracht was probably the first to mark it as a major work in the cultural section of Rude pravo It is one of the best books ever written in the Czech Republic and Svejk is quite a new type in world literature equivalent to Don Quixote Hamlet Faust Oblomov Karamazov Olbracht wrote 27 Karel Capek Josef Capek Julius Fucik and Vitezslav Nezval who connected Hasek s work with Dadaism also adopted a positive attitude 31 as did Devetsil theoretician Bedrich Vaclavek Discussions on the value of the work continued in later years For example Vaclav Cerny opposed Svejk but a wide range of Czech literary theorists artists and intellectuals had other views the philosopher Karel Kosik saw the novel as an expression of the absurdity of the alienated world he described Svejk as the tragic bard of European nihilism The aesthetist Jan Grossman associated Svejk with existentialism the literary theorist Jindrich Chalupecky described Svejk as the tragic bard of European nihilism and the writer Milan Kundera described the novel as the pure irrationality of history 32 Svejk has been dramatized several times Hasek himself performed the first dramatization for the Emil Artur Longen Revolutionary Scene in 1928 Svejk turned into a theater performance of Hasek s friend Max Brod in 1963 by Pavel Kohout The international adaptation was achieved by the adaptation of Schweik in the Second World War by the German playwright and director Bertold Brecht Tributes editOn 30 April 2013 Google celebrated Jaroslav Hasek s 130th Birthday with a doodle 33 34 See also editVlastimil Kosvanec Josef Lada Cecil Parrott Statue of Jaroslav HasekReferences edit Patrick Julian 2009 501 great writers A comprehensive guide to the giants of literature Apple p 287 ISBN 9781845433109 Lidsky profil Jaroslava Haska Svejkmuseum cz 2 August 2017 Archived from the original on 12 November 2019 Retrieved 30 November 2019 Matricni zaznam o narozeni Kateriny Garesowy 3 11 1849 na baste v Krci cp 32 DigiArchiv of SOA Trebon ver 18 12 20 Digi ceskearchivy cz Archived from the original on 17 June 2020 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Stopami literatu Jirilouzensky TXT cz Archived from the original on 20 January 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Chlapec Radkopytlik sweb cz Archived from the original on 29 January 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Kniha Krc vesnice v srdci mem od Ing Vaclava Vojika z roku 2012 v pdf podobe strana 9 pdf PDF SDHKRC cz Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Vojik Vaclav 2012 Krc vesnice v srdci mem monograph pp II to 74 Matricni zaznam o snatku prof Josefa Haska s Katerinou Jaresovou Archived 17 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine farnosti Protivin Kdo je Jaroslav Hasek Svejkmuseum cz Archived from the original on 5 April 2016 Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c Galik Josef ed 1994 Panorama ceske literatury anthology Olomouc Rubico ISBN 80 85839 04 0 a b Lidsky profil Jaroslava Haska Svejkmuseum cz Archived from the original on 12 November 2019 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Novak Vecernicek Jaroslav Hasek Gay nebo milovnik jedine zeny Blog iDNES cz Mlada fronta DNES Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Jaroslav Hasek Ceskoslovanska akademie obchodni Cao cz in Czech Archived from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Matricni zaznam o snatku Jaroslava Haska s Jarmilou Mayerovou Archived 25 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine farnosti pri kostele sv Ludmily na prazskych Kralovskych Vinohradech Muz ktery zachranil Haska pred sebevrazdou Nebyt jeho nebyl by Svejk monograph Blesk cz 15 February 2011 Archived from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2019 Hasek Jaroslav zivit a dilo Osudy dobreho vojaka Svejka za svetove valky Materialy do skoly Materialy do skoly in Czech 6 September 2016 Archived from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Jaroslav Hasek Eduard Stehlik Mila Sykora Archived from the original on 2 August 2020 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Jaroslav Hasek biografia TerazTeatr Terazteatr pl in Polish Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Gashek Yaroslav Archived from the original on 1 December 2019 Retrieved 1 December 2019 a b Dualizm Yaroslava Gasheka perom i shtykom The dualism of Yaroslav Hasek pen and bayonet in Russian Archived from the original on 19 December 2009 Retrieved 27 July 2008 Zaslavskij D Yaroslav Gashek Rusofil Russkaya filologiya Obrazovatelnyj resurs Archived from the original on 24 December 2019 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Archivovana kopie Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 27 July 2008 Archivovana kopie Archived from the original on 11 November 2013 Retrieved 26 April 2013 Kdo nam taky prednasel marxak aneb strucny vytah z pameti Arnosta Kolmana PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2021 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Pytlik Radko Ruda Evropa Toulave house in Czech Archived from the original on 28 November 2019 Retrieved 1 December 2019 a b Malevic Oleg December 2015 V perspektive desetileti monograph in Czech Charles University in Prague Karolinum Press ISBN 9788024628448 Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Retrieved 2 October 2020 a b c Suchomel Milan Jaroslav Hasek a Josef Svejk dve pochybne existence Casopis HOST in Czech Archived from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Jaroslav Hasek Vltava in Czech Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 SPSE Olomouc Literatura Jaroslav Hasek Archived from the original on 30 August 2011 Retrieved 2 April 2010 Klub pratel stareho Smichova Jaroslav Hasek Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Osudy dobreho vojaka Svejka za svetove valky II Na fronte Cte Oldrich Kaiser Vltava in Czech 13 July 2017 Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Oleg Malevic December 2015 V perspektive desetileti in Czech Charles University in Prague Karolinum Press 399 pages ISBN 9788024628448 Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Desk OV Digital 1 May 2023 30 April Remembering Jaroslav Hasek on Birthday Observer Voice Retrieved 1 May 2023 Jaroslav Hasek s 130th Birthday CZ www google com Retrieved 1 May 2023 Further reading editThe Good Soldier Svejk and His Fortunes in the World War translated by Cecil Parrott with original illustrations by Josef Lada The Fateful Adventures of the Good Soldier Svejk During the World War Archived 28 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine translated by Zenny K Sadlon The Red Commissar Including further adventures of the good soldier Svejk and other stories Bachura Scandal and Other Stories and Sketches translated by Alan Menhenett Biography by Cecil Parrott The Bad Bohemian ISBN 0 349 12698 4 Pytlik Radko Laiske Miroslav 1960 Bibliografie Jaroslava Haska soupis jeho dila a literatury o nem Bibliography of Jaroslav Hasek a list of his work and literature about him in Czech Praha Statni pedagogicke nakl OCLC 4573600 External links editJaroslav Hasek at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Petri Liukkonen Jaroslav Hasek Books and Writers Virtualni muzeum Jaroslava Haska a Josefa Svejka Czech A comprehensive site mostly in Czech but also partly in English Jaroslav Hasek essays biographies memoirs gallery of images Russian Radio Pytlik biographer of Jaroslav Hasek interview Czech Tales from Jaroslav a site publishing previously untranslated short stories by Jaroslav Hasek English J Hasek Svejk Stands Against Italy audio in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jaroslav Hasek amp oldid 1216639203, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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