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Milan Kundera

Milan Kundera (UK: /ˈkʊndərə, ˈkʌn-/ KU(U)N-dər-ə,[1][2] Czech: [ˈmɪlan ˈkundɛra] ; 1 April 1929 – 11 July 2023) was a Czech and French novelist. Kundera went into exile in France in 1975, acquiring citizenship in 1981. His Czechoslovak citizenship was revoked in 1979, but he was granted Czech citizenship in 2019.[3]

Milan Kundera
Kundera in 1980
Born(1929-04-01)1 April 1929
Brno, Czechoslovakia
Died11 July 2023(2023-07-11) (aged 94)
Paris, France
OccupationNovelist
Language
  • French
  • Czech
Citizenship
Education
Notable works
Notable awards
ParentLudvík Kundera (father)
RelativesLudvík Kundera (cousin)
Signature

Kundera's best-known work is The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Before the Velvet Revolution of 1989, the country's ruling Communist Party of Czechoslovakia banned his books. He led a low-profile life and rarely spoke to the media.[4] He was thought to be a contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature and was also a nominee for other awards.[5][6]

Kundera was awarded the Jerusalem Prize in 1985, the Austrian State Prize for European Literature in 1987, and the Herder Prize in 2000. In 2021, he received the Golden Order of Merit from the president of Slovenia, Borut Pahor.[7]

Early life and education edit

Kundera was born in 1929 at Purkyňova 6 (6 Purkyně Street) in Královo Pole, a district of Brno, Czechoslovakia (present-day Czech Republic), to a middle-class family. His father, Ludvík Kundera (1891–1971), was an important Czech musicologist and pianist who served as the head of the Janáček Music Academy in Brno from 1948 to 1961.[8][9][10] His mother Milada Kunderová (born Janošíková)[11] was an educator.[10] His father died in 1971, his mother in 1975.[10]

Milan learned to play the piano from his father and later studied musicology and musical composition. Musicological influences, references and notation can be found throughout his work. Kundera was a cousin of Czech writer and translator Ludvík Kundera.[12] In his youth, having been supported by his father in his musical education, he was testing his abilities as a composer.[13][14] One of his teachers at the time was Pavel Haas.[15] His approach to music was eventually dampened due to his father not being able to launch a piano career for insisting on playing the unpopular modernist and Jew Arnold Schoenberg.[14]

At the age of eighteen, he joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in 1947.[16] In 1984, he recalled that "Communism captivated me as much as Stravinsky, Picasso and Surrealism."[17]

He attended lectures on music and composition at the Charles University in Prague, but soon moved to the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU) to study film.[18] In 1950, he was expelled from the party.[13] After graduating, the Film Faculty appointed Kundera a lecturer in world literature in 1952.[19] Following the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, he lost his job at the Film Faculty.[20]

Political activism and professional career edit

His expulsion from the Communist party was described by Jan Trefulka in his novella Pršelo jim štěstí (Luck Rained on Them, 1962).[19] Kundera also used the expulsion as an inspiration for the main theme of his novel Žert (The Joke, 1967),[19] in which he ridiculed the ruling Communist party.[20] In 1956 Kundera was readmitted to the party but was expelled for a second time in 1970.[14][21] He took part in the Fourth Congress of the Czech Writers union in June 1967, where he delivered an impressive speech.[22] In the speech he focused on the Czech effort to maintain a certain cultural independence among its larger European neighbors.[22] Along with other reformist Communist writers such as Pavel Kohout, he was peripherally involved in the 1968 Prague Spring. This brief period of reformist activities was crushed by the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968. Kundera remained committed to reforming Czechoslovak Communism, and argued vehemently in print with fellow Czech writer Václav Havel, saying, essentially, that everyone should remain calm and that "nobody is being locked up for his opinions yet," and "the significance of the Prague Autumn may ultimately be greater than that of the Prague Spring." In 1968, the year his books were banned by the Czech Government, he made his first journey to Paris, where he befriended the publisher Claude Gallimard.[14] After he returned to Prague, he was frequently visited by Gallimard who encouraged Kundera to emigrate to France and also smuggled the manuscript for Life Is Elsewhere out of Czechoslovakia.[14] Finally, Kundera gave in and moved to France in 1975.[14] In 1979, his Czechoslovak citizenship was revoked.[17] He lectured for a few years at the University of Rennes.[14][21] After three years, he moved to Paris.[14]

Works edit

Although his early poetic works are staunchly pro-communist,[23][24] his novels escape ideological classification. Kundera repeatedly insisted that he was a novelist rather than a politically motivated writer. Political commentary all but disappeared from his novels after the publication of The Unbearable Lightness of Being except in relation to broader philosophical themes. Kundera's style of fiction, interlaced with philosophical digression, was greatly inspired by the novels of Robert Musil and the philosophy of Nietzsche.[25] In 1945 the journal Gong published his translation of some of the works from the Russian poet Vladimir Majakovsky.[19] The next year the journal Mladé archy printed a poem of his, to which he was inspired by his cousin Ludvik Kundera, also a writer.[19]

In the mid 1950s he was readmitted to the Communist party and he was able to publish Manː A Wide Garden in 1953, a long epic poem in 1955 called The Last May dedicated to Julius Fucik and the collection of lyrical poetry Monologue in 1957.[13] Those, together with other fore and afterwords are deemed to be in written in the fashion of uncontroversial propaganda which allowed him to benefit to a certain degree of the advantages that came with being a established writer in a Communist environment.[13] In 1962 he wrote the play The Owners of the Keys, which became an international success and was translated into several languages.[13] Kundera himself claimed inspiration from Renaissance authors such as Giovanni Boccaccio, Rabelais and, perhaps most importantly, Miguel de Cervantes, to whose legacy he considered himself most committed. Other influences include Laurence Sterne, Henry Fielding, Denis Diderot, Robert Musil, Witold Gombrowicz, Hermann Broch, Franz Kafka, Martin Heidegger and Georges Bataille.[26] Originally he wrote in the Czech language, but from 1985 onwards, he made a conscious transition from Czech towards the French which has since become the reference language for his translations.[13] Between 1985 and 1987, he undertook the revision of the French translations of his earlier works himself. With Slowness his first work in French was published in 1995.[27] His works were translated into more than eighty languages.[13]

The Joke edit

In his first novel, The Joke (1967), he satirized the totalitarianism of the Communist era.[28] Following the Soviets occupation of Czechoslovakia in August 1968, the book was banned.[20] His criticism of the Soviet invasion in 1968 led to his blacklisting[19] in Czechoslovakia and the banning[29] of his books.

Life Is Elsewhere edit

Kundera's second novel was first published in French as La vie est ailleurs in 1973 and in Czech as Život je jinde in 1979. Life Is Elsewhere is a satirical portrait of the fictional poet Jaromil, a young and very naïve idealist who becomes involved in political scandals.[30] For the novel Kundera was awarded the Prix Médicis the same year.[31]

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting edit

In 1975, Kundera moved to France where The Book of Laughter and Forgetting was published in 1979.[13] An unusual mixture of novel, short story collection, and authorial musings which came to characterize his works in exile, the book dealt with how Czechs opposed the Communist regime in various ways. Critics noted that the Czechoslovakia Kundera portrays "is, thanks to the latest political redefinitions, no longer precisely there," which is the "kind of disappearance and reappearance" Kundera ironically explores in the book.[32]

The Unbearable Lightness of Being edit

Kundera's most famous work, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, was published in 1984. The book chronicles the fragile nature of an individual's fate, theorizing that a single lifetime is insignificant in the scope of Nietzsche's concept of eternal return. In an infinite universe, everything is guaranteed to recur infinitely. In 1988, American director Philip Kaufman released a film adaptation, which Kundera disliked.[17] The book focuses on the life of a Czech dissident surgeon's journey from Prague to Zurich and his return back to Prague, where he was not permitted to take up work as a surgeon.[29] He worked instead as a window washer and used his job to arrange sex with hundreds of women.[29] At the end he and his wife move to the country.[29] The book was not published in the Czechoslovakia due to Kundera's fear it would be badly edited. He eventually delayed the publishing date for years and only in 2006 an official translation was available in the Czech language.[29] The book was available in the Czech language previously as a Czech expatriate in Canada translated the book in 1985.[29]

Ignorance edit

In 2000, Ignorance was published. The novel centers on the romance of two alienated Czech émigrés, two decades after the Prague Spring of 1968. It is thematically concerned with the suffering of emigration. In it, Kundera undermines the myths surrounding nostalgia and the émigré's longing for return. He concludes that in the "etymological light nostalgia seems something like the pain of ignorance, of not knowing." Kundera suggests a complex relationship between memory and nostalgia, writing that our memory can "create rifts both with our earlier selves and between people who ostensibly share a past." The main characters of Irena and Josef discover how emigration and forgetfulness have ultimately freed them from their pain. Kundera draws heavily from the myth of Odysseus, specifically the "mythology of home, the delusions of roots."[33][34] Linda Asher translated the original French version of the novel to English in 2002.[35]

The Festival of Insignificance edit

The 2014 novel focuses on the musings of four male friends living in Paris who discuss their relationships with women and the existential predicament confronting individuals in the world, among other things. The novel received generally negative reviews. Michiko Kakutani of the New York Times describes the book as being a "knowing, pre-emptive joke about its own superficiality".[36] A review in the Economist stated that the book was "sadly let down by a tone of breezy satire that can feel forced."[37]

Writing style and philosophy edit

François Ricard suggested that Kundera conceived his fiction with regard to the overall body of his work, rather than limiting his ideas to the scope of just one novel at a time, his themes and meta-themes traversing his entire œuvre. Each new book manifests the latest stage of his personal philosophy. Some of these meta-themes include exile, identity, life beyond the border (beyond love, beyond art, beyond seriousness), history as continual return, and the pleasure of a less "important" life.[38][verification needed]

Many of Kundera's characters seem to develop as expositions of one of these themes at the expense of their full humanity. Specifics in regard to the characters tend to be rather vague. Often, more than one main character is used in a novel; Kundera may have even completely discontinued a character, resuming the plot with somebody new. As he told Philip Roth in an interview in The Village Voice: "Intimate life [is] understood as one's personal secret, as something valuable, inviolable, the basis of one's originality".[39]

Kundera's early novels explore the dual tragic and comic aspects of totalitarianism. He did not view his works, however, as political commentary. "The condemnation of totalitarianism doesn't deserve a novel", he said. According to the Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes, "What he finds interesting is the similarity between totalitarianism and the immemorial and fascinating dream of a harmonious society where private life and public life form but one unity and all are united around one will and one faith". In exploring the dark humor of this topic, Kundera seems deeply influenced by Franz Kafka.[26]

Kundera considered himself a writer without a message. In Sixty-three Words, a chapter in The Art of the Novel, Kundera tells of a Scandinavian publisher who hesitated to publish The Farewell Party because of its apparent anti-abortion message. Not only was the publisher wrong about the existence of such a message, Kundera explained, but, "I was delighted with the misunderstanding. I had succeeded as a novelist. I succeeded in maintaining the moral ambiguity of the situation. I had kept faith with the essence of the novel as an art: irony. And irony doesn't give a damn about messages!".[40]

Kundera also ventured often into musical matters, analyzing Czech folk music for example; or quoting from Leoš Janáček and Bartók; or placing musical excerpts into the text, as in The Joke;[41] or discussing Schoenberg and atonality.[42]

Miroslav Dvořáček controversy edit

On 13 October 2008, the Czech weekly Respekt reported that an investigation was being carried out by the state-funded historical archive and research Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes,[43] into whether a young Kundera had denounced a returned defector, Miroslav Dvořáček, to the StB, or Czechoslovak secret police, in 1950.[44] The accusation was based on a police station report which named "Milan Kundera, student, born 1.4.1929" as the informant in regard to Dvořáček's presence at a student dormitory.[45] But the report did not include his ID card number, which was usually included, nor his signature.[45] According to the police report, the ultimate source of the information about Dvořáček's previous desertion from military service and defection to the West was Iva Militká.[44]

Dvořáček had allegedly fled Czechoslovakia after being ordered to join the infantry in the wake of a purge of the flight academy, and returned to Czechoslovakia as an agent of an anti-communist espionage agency organised by Czechoslovak exiles, an allegation which was not mentioned in the police report.[44] Dvořáček returned secretly to the student dormitory of a friend's ex-girlfriend, Iva Militká. Militká was dating and later married a fellow student, Ivan Dlask, who knew Kundera.[44] The police report alleges that Militká told Dlask of Dvořáček's presence, and that Dlask told Kundera, who told the secret police.[44] Although the prosecutor sought the death penalty, Dvořáček was sentenced to 22 years of hard labour, fined 10,000 crowns, stripped of personal property, and deprived of his civic rights for ten years.[44] Dvořáček served 14 years in a labor camp, some of it working in a uranium mine, before he was released.[46]

In his response to Respekt's announcement, Kundera denied turning Dvořáček in to the StB,[46] stating he never knew him at all, and could not even remember an individual named "Militká".[47] On 14 October 2008, the Czech Security Forces Archive announced that they had ruled out the possibility that the document could be a forgery, but refused to arrive at any other definite conclusions.[48] Vojtech Ripka of the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes said, "There are two pieces of circumstantial evidence [the police report and its sub-file], but we, of course, cannot be one hundred percent sure. Unless we find all survivors, which is unfortunately impossible, it will not be complete." Ripka added that the signature on the police report matches the name of a man who worked in the corresponding National Security Corps section and that a police protocol is missing.[48]

Many in the Czech Republic condemned Kundera as a "police informer", while many others accused Respekt of committing journalistic misconduct by publishing such a poorly researched piece. On the other hand, presenting an ID card was procedure whenever dealing with the StB in 1950. Kundera was the student representative of the dorm Dvořáček had visited, and while it cannot be ruled out that another student could have denounced him to the StB using Kundera's name,[45] impersonating someone else in a Stalinist police state posed a significant risk. Contradictory statements by Kundera's fellow students appeared in the Czech news media in the wake of this scandal. Historian Adam Hradílek, the co-author of the Respekt article, was also accused of an undeclared conflict of interest since one of the individuals involved in the incident was his aunt.[45] Nonetheless, Respekt states on its website that its task is to "impartially study the crimes of the former communist regime".[49] With time, the Western journalists realized the whole controversy was flawed, with French newspapers defending Kundera.[45] The literary scholar Karen de Kunes investigated the reports and came to the conclusion that even if Kundera had issued the report, all he reported was the existence of a suitcase in the hallway.[45]

On 3 November 2008, eleven internationally recognized writers came to Kundera's defence, including four Nobel laureates, Orhan Pamuk, Gabriel García Márquez, Nadine Gordimer and J. M. Coetzee, as well as Carlos Fuentes, Juan Goytisolo, Philip Roth, Salman Rushdie, and Jorge Semprún.[50]

Awards and honors edit

In 1973, Life is elsewhere received the French Prix Médicis.[31] In 1979 Kundera was awarded the Mondello Prize for The Farewell Party.[51] In 1985, Kundera received the Jerusalem Prize.[15] His acceptance address appears among the essays collected in The Art of the Novel. He won The Austrian State Prize for European Literature in 1987. In 2000, he was awarded the international Herder Prize. In 2007, he was awarded the Czech State Literature Prize.[52] In 2009, he was awarded the Prix mondial Cino Del Duca. In 2010, he was made an honorary citizen of his hometown, Brno.[53] When he died the Greek Newspaper Efimerida ton Syntakton (Journal of the editors) published a special section where all the current affairs on each page were described with a book title of Kundera's.[54]

In 2011, he received the Ovid Prize.[55] The asteroid 7390 Kundera, discovered at the Kleť Observatory in 1983, is named in his honor.[56] In 2020, he was awarded the Franz Kafka Prize, a Czech literary award.[57]

Personal life edit

Stripped of Czechoslovak citizenship in 1979, Kundera became a French citizen in 1981.[58] He maintained contact with Czech and Slovak friends in his homeland,[59] but rarely returned and never with any fanfare.[4] He was granted Czech citizenship in 2019.[60] He saw himself as a French writer and insisted his work should be studied as French literature and classified as such in bookstores.[61]

Kundera was married twice. His first wife was the singer Olga Haasová-Smrčková, daughter of composer Pavel Haas.[15] His second marriage was to Věra Hrabánková, whom he married in 1967.[10] Vera reportedly was his secretary, translator of his works and the gatekeeper between Kundera and the outside world.[10]

Kundera died after a prolonged illness, in Paris on 11 July 2023, at the age of 94.[62][63] He was cremated in Paris on 19 July 2023.[64]

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

Short fiction edit

Collections edit

Stories edit

  • The Apologizer (2015)[67]

Poetry collections edit

  • Člověk zahrada širá (Man: A Wide Garden) (1953)[13]
  • Poslední máj (The Last May) (1955) – celebration of Julius Fučík[13]
  • Monology (Monologues) (1957)[13]

Essays edit

  • Český úděl (The Czech Deal) in Listy (December 1968)[68]
  • Radikalizmus a expozice (Radicalism and Exhibitionism) (1969)[69]
  • The Art of the Novel (L'art du Roman) (1986)[70]
  • Testaments Betrayed: An Essay in Nine Parts (Les testaments trahis: essai) (1993)[70]
  • D'en bas tu humeras les roses – rare book in French, illustrated by Ernest Breleur (1993)[70]
  • The Curtain (Le Rideau) (2005)[71]
  • An Encounter (Une rencontre) (2009)[72]

Drama edit

Articles edit

  • What is a novelist (2006)[74]
  • Die Weltliteratur (2007)[75]

Non-fiction edit

  • A Kidnapped West: The Tragedy of Central Europe (2023)[76]

References edit

  1. ^ "Kundera". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  2. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 13 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Milan Kundera má po 40 letech opět české občanství – Novinky.cz". novinky.cz. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Kundera rejects Czech 'informer' tag". BBC News. 13 October 2008. Retrieved 13 October 2008. The Czech Republic's best-known author, Milan Kundera, has spoken to the media for the first time in 25 years ... .
  5. ^ Crown, Sarah (13 October 2005). "Nobel prize goes to Pinter". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  6. ^ "'Milan Kundera' coming to China". People's Daily. 25 June 2004. Retrieved 25 June 2004.
  7. ^ W3bStudio (13 November 2021). . Slovenia Times. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 14 November 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Mareček, Luboš. "Legacy of Leoš Janáček". JAMU. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  9. ^ Webb, Kate (12 July 2023). "Milan Kundera obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
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  39. ^ Contemporary Authors Online, Thomson Gale, 2007[citation needed]
  40. ^ Kundera, Milan (6 March 1988). "Key Words, Problem Words, Words I love". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
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  42. ^ Benson, Stephen (2003). "For Want of a Better Term?: Polyphony and the Value of Music in Bakhtin and Kundera". Narrative. 11 (3): 304. doi:10.1353/nar.2003.0013. JSTOR 20107320. S2CID 144073112. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
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  65. ^ "The New York Times: Book Review Search Article". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 July 2023.
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  67. ^ Kundera, Milan (4 May 2015). "The Apologizer". The New Yorker. Vol. 91, no. 11. (trans) Linda Asher. pp. 56–64. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  68. ^ Sabatos, Charles (2008). p.1831
  69. ^ "The Debate That Won't Die: Havel And Kundera On Whether Protest Is Worthwhile". Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty. 11 January 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  70. ^ a b c Bibliothèque Nationale de France (June 2012). "Milan Kundera, lauréat 2012 du prix de la BNF" (PDF). bnf.fr. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  71. ^ Banks, Russell (4 March 2007). "Reading With Kundera". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  72. ^ Dyer, Geoff (22 August 2010). "Encounter: Essays by Milan Kundera". The Guardian / The Observer. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  73. ^ a b c Jungmannova, Lenka (2022). "Unsigned Play by Milan Kundera? An Authorship Attribution Study". arXiv:2212.09879 [cs.CL].
  74. ^ Kundera, Milan (9 October 2006). "What is a novelist". The New Yorker. pp. 40–45. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  75. ^ Kundera, Milan (8 January 2007). "Die Weltliteratur". The New Yorker. (trans) Linda Asher. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  76. ^ European Parliament. "Un Occident kidnappé, ou La tragédie de l'Europe centrale". European Parliament. Retrieved 15 July 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Leonidas Donskis. Yet Another Europe After 1984: Rethinking Milan Kundera and the Idea of Central Europe (Amsterdam Rodopi, 2012) 223 pp. ISBN 978-90-420-3543-0. online review
  • Charles Sabatos. "Shifting Contexts: The Boundaries of Milan Kundera's Central Europe," in Contexts, Subtexts, and Pretexts: Literary Translation in Eastern Europe and Russia, ed. Brian James Baer (Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2011), pp. 19–31.
  • Nicoletta Pireddu, "European Ulyssiads: Claudio Magris, Milan Kundera, Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt," in Comparative Literature, Special Issue "Odyssey, Exile, Return" Ed. by Michelle Zerba and Adelaide Russo, 67 (3), September 2015: pp. 67–86. JSTOR 24694591.

External links edit

Biographical

  • Milan Kundera at IMDb
  • Milan Kundera and the Czech Republic. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • "Milan Kundera" topic in The New York Times

Book reviews; interviews

  • Review. The Unbearable Lightness of Being 2 April 1984 The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • 'Reading with Kundera' By Russell Banks 4 March 2007 The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • Review 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine of Slowness from The Review of European Studies. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • "Of Dogs and Death" A review of Une Recontre (An Encounter) 27 April 2009. The Oxonian Review. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 26 January 2001) The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Summer 1989, 9.2. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • Christian Salmon (Summer 1984). "Milan Kundera, The Art of Fiction No. 81". The Paris Review. Summer 1984 (92).

Open letters

  • . Article by Václav Havel in Salon October 2008. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • "The Flawed Defence" Article by Petr Třešňák in Salon November 2008. Retrieved 2010-09-25
  • "Informing und Terror" by Ivan Klíma, about the Kundera controversy Salon October 2008
  • Leprosy by Jiří Stránský, about the Kundera controversy, Salon October 2008. Retrieved 2010-09-25

Archives

  • Finding aid to Milan Kundera Manuscripts at Columbia University Rare Book & Manuscript Library

milan, kundera, dər, czech, ˈmɪlan, ˈkundɛra, april, 1929, july, 2023, czech, french, novelist, kundera, went, into, exile, france, 1975, acquiring, citizenship, 1981, czechoslovak, citizenship, revoked, 1979, granted, czech, citizenship, 2019, kundera, 1980bo. Milan Kundera UK ˈ k ʊ n d er e ˈ k ʌ n KU U N der e 1 2 Czech ˈmɪlan ˈkundɛra 1 April 1929 11 July 2023 was a Czech and French novelist Kundera went into exile in France in 1975 acquiring citizenship in 1981 His Czechoslovak citizenship was revoked in 1979 but he was granted Czech citizenship in 2019 3 Milan KunderaKundera in 1980Born 1929 04 01 1 April 1929Brno CzechoslovakiaDied11 July 2023 2023 07 11 aged 94 Paris FranceOccupationNovelistLanguageFrenchCzechCitizenshipCzechoslovakia until 1979 Stateless 1979 1981 France from 1981 Czech Republic from 2019 EducationCharles UniversityAcademy of Performing Arts in PragueNotable worksThe Joke in original Zert 1967 The Book of Laughter and Forgetting in original Kniha smichu a zapomneni 1979 The Unbearable Lightness of Being in original Nesnesitelna lehkost byti 1984 Notable awardsJerusalem Prize 1985Austrian State Prize for European Literature 1987Vilenica International Literary Festival 1992Herder Prize 2000Czech State Award for Literature 2007ParentLudvik Kundera father RelativesLudvik Kundera cousin SignatureKundera s best known work is The Unbearable Lightness of Being Before the Velvet Revolution of 1989 the country s ruling Communist Party of Czechoslovakia banned his books He led a low profile life and rarely spoke to the media 4 He was thought to be a contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature and was also a nominee for other awards 5 6 Kundera was awarded the Jerusalem Prize in 1985 the Austrian State Prize for European Literature in 1987 and the Herder Prize in 2000 In 2021 he received the Golden Order of Merit from the president of Slovenia Borut Pahor 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political activism and professional career 3 Works 3 1 The Joke 3 2 Life Is Elsewhere 3 3 The Book of Laughter and Forgetting 3 4 The Unbearable Lightness of Being 3 5 Ignorance 3 6 The Festival of Insignificance 4 Writing style and philosophy 5 Miroslav Dvoracek controversy 6 Awards and honors 7 Personal life 8 Bibliography 8 1 Novels 8 2 Short fiction 8 2 1 Collections 8 2 2 Stories 8 3 Poetry collections 8 4 Essays 8 5 Drama 8 6 Articles 8 7 Non fiction 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editKundera was born in 1929 at Purkynova 6 6 Purkyne Street in Kralovo Pole a district of Brno Czechoslovakia present day Czech Republic to a middle class family His father Ludvik Kundera 1891 1971 was an important Czech musicologist and pianist who served as the head of the Janacek Music Academy in Brno from 1948 to 1961 8 9 10 His mother Milada Kunderova born Janosikova 11 was an educator 10 His father died in 1971 his mother in 1975 10 Milan learned to play the piano from his father and later studied musicology and musical composition Musicological influences references and notation can be found throughout his work Kundera was a cousin of Czech writer and translator Ludvik Kundera 12 In his youth having been supported by his father in his musical education he was testing his abilities as a composer 13 14 One of his teachers at the time was Pavel Haas 15 His approach to music was eventually dampened due to his father not being able to launch a piano career for insisting on playing the unpopular modernist and Jew Arnold Schoenberg 14 At the age of eighteen he joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in 1947 16 In 1984 he recalled that Communism captivated me as much as Stravinsky Picasso and Surrealism 17 He attended lectures on music and composition at the Charles University in Prague but soon moved to the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague FAMU to study film 18 In 1950 he was expelled from the party 13 After graduating the Film Faculty appointed Kundera a lecturer in world literature in 1952 19 Following the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 he lost his job at the Film Faculty 20 Political activism and professional career editHis expulsion from the Communist party was described by Jan Trefulka in his novella Prselo jim stesti Luck Rained on Them 1962 19 Kundera also used the expulsion as an inspiration for the main theme of his novel Zert The Joke 1967 19 in which he ridiculed the ruling Communist party 20 In 1956 Kundera was readmitted to the party but was expelled for a second time in 1970 14 21 He took part in the Fourth Congress of the Czech Writers union in June 1967 where he delivered an impressive speech 22 In the speech he focused on the Czech effort to maintain a certain cultural independence among its larger European neighbors 22 Along with other reformist Communist writers such as Pavel Kohout he was peripherally involved in the 1968 Prague Spring This brief period of reformist activities was crushed by the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968 Kundera remained committed to reforming Czechoslovak Communism and argued vehemently in print with fellow Czech writer Vaclav Havel saying essentially that everyone should remain calm and that nobody is being locked up for his opinions yet and the significance of the Prague Autumn may ultimately be greater than that of the Prague Spring In 1968 the year his books were banned by the Czech Government he made his first journey to Paris where he befriended the publisher Claude Gallimard 14 After he returned to Prague he was frequently visited by Gallimard who encouraged Kundera to emigrate to France and also smuggled the manuscript for Life Is Elsewhere out of Czechoslovakia 14 Finally Kundera gave in and moved to France in 1975 14 In 1979 his Czechoslovak citizenship was revoked 17 He lectured for a few years at the University of Rennes 14 21 After three years he moved to Paris 14 Works editAlthough his early poetic works are staunchly pro communist 23 24 his novels escape ideological classification Kundera repeatedly insisted that he was a novelist rather than a politically motivated writer Political commentary all but disappeared from his novels after the publication of The Unbearable Lightness of Being except in relation to broader philosophical themes Kundera s style of fiction interlaced with philosophical digression was greatly inspired by the novels of Robert Musil and the philosophy of Nietzsche 25 In 1945 the journal Gong published his translation of some of the works from the Russian poet Vladimir Majakovsky 19 The next year the journal Mlade archy printed a poem of his to which he was inspired by his cousin Ludvik Kundera also a writer 19 In the mid 1950s he was readmitted to the Communist party and he was able to publish Manː A Wide Garden in 1953 a long epic poem in 1955 called The Last May dedicated to Julius Fucik and the collection of lyrical poetry Monologue in 1957 13 Those together with other fore and afterwords are deemed to be in written in the fashion of uncontroversial propaganda which allowed him to benefit to a certain degree of the advantages that came with being a established writer in a Communist environment 13 In 1962 he wrote the play The Owners of the Keys which became an international success and was translated into several languages 13 Kundera himself claimed inspiration from Renaissance authors such as Giovanni Boccaccio Rabelais and perhaps most importantly Miguel de Cervantes to whose legacy he considered himself most committed Other influences include Laurence Sterne Henry Fielding Denis Diderot Robert Musil Witold Gombrowicz Hermann Broch Franz Kafka Martin Heidegger and Georges Bataille 26 Originally he wrote in the Czech language but from 1985 onwards he made a conscious transition from Czech towards the French which has since become the reference language for his translations 13 Between 1985 and 1987 he undertook the revision of the French translations of his earlier works himself With Slowness his first work in French was published in 1995 27 His works were translated into more than eighty languages 13 The Joke edit Main article The Joke novel In his first novel The Joke 1967 he satirized the totalitarianism of the Communist era 28 Following the Soviets occupation of Czechoslovakia in August 1968 the book was banned 20 His criticism of the Soviet invasion in 1968 led to his blacklisting 19 in Czechoslovakia and the banning 29 of his books Life Is Elsewhere edit Main article Life Is Elsewhere Kundera s second novel was first published in French as La vie est ailleurs in 1973 and in Czech as Zivot je jinde in 1979 Life Is Elsewhere is a satirical portrait of the fictional poet Jaromil a young and very naive idealist who becomes involved in political scandals 30 For the novel Kundera was awarded the Prix Medicis the same year 31 The Book of Laughter and Forgetting edit Main article The Book of Laughter and Forgetting In 1975 Kundera moved to France where The Book of Laughter and Forgetting was published in 1979 13 An unusual mixture of novel short story collection and authorial musings which came to characterize his works in exile the book dealt with how Czechs opposed the Communist regime in various ways Critics noted that the Czechoslovakia Kundera portrays is thanks to the latest political redefinitions no longer precisely there which is the kind of disappearance and reappearance Kundera ironically explores in the book 32 The Unbearable Lightness of Being edit Main article The Unbearable Lightness of Being Kundera s most famous work The Unbearable Lightness of Being was published in 1984 The book chronicles the fragile nature of an individual s fate theorizing that a single lifetime is insignificant in the scope of Nietzsche s concept of eternal return In an infinite universe everything is guaranteed to recur infinitely In 1988 American director Philip Kaufman released a film adaptation which Kundera disliked 17 The book focuses on the life of a Czech dissident surgeon s journey from Prague to Zurich and his return back to Prague where he was not permitted to take up work as a surgeon 29 He worked instead as a window washer and used his job to arrange sex with hundreds of women 29 At the end he and his wife move to the country 29 The book was not published in the Czechoslovakia due to Kundera s fear it would be badly edited He eventually delayed the publishing date for years and only in 2006 an official translation was available in the Czech language 29 The book was available in the Czech language previously as a Czech expatriate in Canada translated the book in 1985 29 Ignorance edit Main article Ignorance novel In 2000 Ignorance was published The novel centers on the romance of two alienated Czech emigres two decades after the Prague Spring of 1968 It is thematically concerned with the suffering of emigration In it Kundera undermines the myths surrounding nostalgia and the emigre s longing for return He concludes that in the etymological light nostalgia seems something like the pain of ignorance of not knowing Kundera suggests a complex relationship between memory and nostalgia writing that our memory can create rifts both with our earlier selves and between people who ostensibly share a past The main characters of Irena and Josef discover how emigration and forgetfulness have ultimately freed them from their pain Kundera draws heavily from the myth of Odysseus specifically the mythology of home the delusions of roots 33 34 Linda Asher translated the original French version of the novel to English in 2002 35 The Festival of Insignificance edit Main article The Festival of Insignificance The 2014 novel focuses on the musings of four male friends living in Paris who discuss their relationships with women and the existential predicament confronting individuals in the world among other things The novel received generally negative reviews Michiko Kakutani of the New York Times describes the book as being a knowing pre emptive joke about its own superficiality 36 A review in the Economist stated that the book was sadly let down by a tone of breezy satire that can feel forced 37 Writing style and philosophy editFrancois Ricard suggested that Kundera conceived his fiction with regard to the overall body of his work rather than limiting his ideas to the scope of just one novel at a time his themes and meta themes traversing his entire œuvre Each new book manifests the latest stage of his personal philosophy Some of these meta themes include exile identity life beyond the border beyond love beyond art beyond seriousness history as continual return and the pleasure of a less important life 38 verification needed Many of Kundera s characters seem to develop as expositions of one of these themes at the expense of their full humanity Specifics in regard to the characters tend to be rather vague Often more than one main character is used in a novel Kundera may have even completely discontinued a character resuming the plot with somebody new As he told Philip Roth in an interview in The Village Voice Intimate life is understood as one s personal secret as something valuable inviolable the basis of one s originality 39 Kundera s early novels explore the dual tragic and comic aspects of totalitarianism He did not view his works however as political commentary The condemnation of totalitarianism doesn t deserve a novel he said According to the Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes What he finds interesting is the similarity between totalitarianism and the immemorial and fascinating dream of a harmonious society where private life and public life form but one unity and all are united around one will and one faith In exploring the dark humor of this topic Kundera seems deeply influenced by Franz Kafka 26 Kundera considered himself a writer without a message In Sixty three Words a chapter in The Art of the Novel Kundera tells of a Scandinavian publisher who hesitated to publish The Farewell Party because of its apparent anti abortion message Not only was the publisher wrong about the existence of such a message Kundera explained but I was delighted with the misunderstanding I had succeeded as a novelist I succeeded in maintaining the moral ambiguity of the situation I had kept faith with the essence of the novel as an art irony And irony doesn t give a damn about messages 40 Kundera also ventured often into musical matters analyzing Czech folk music for example or quoting from Leos Janacek and Bartok or placing musical excerpts into the text as in The Joke 41 or discussing Schoenberg and atonality 42 Miroslav Dvoracek controversy editOn 13 October 2008 the Czech weekly Respekt reported that an investigation was being carried out by the state funded historical archive and research Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes 43 into whether a young Kundera had denounced a returned defector Miroslav Dvoracek to the StB or Czechoslovak secret police in 1950 44 The accusation was based on a police station report which named Milan Kundera student born 1 4 1929 as the informant in regard to Dvoracek s presence at a student dormitory 45 But the report did not include his ID card number which was usually included nor his signature 45 According to the police report the ultimate source of the information about Dvoracek s previous desertion from military service and defection to the West was Iva Militka 44 Dvoracek had allegedly fled Czechoslovakia after being ordered to join the infantry in the wake of a purge of the flight academy and returned to Czechoslovakia as an agent of an anti communist espionage agency organised by Czechoslovak exiles an allegation which was not mentioned in the police report 44 Dvoracek returned secretly to the student dormitory of a friend s ex girlfriend Iva Militka Militka was dating and later married a fellow student Ivan Dlask who knew Kundera 44 The police report alleges that Militka told Dlask of Dvoracek s presence and that Dlask told Kundera who told the secret police 44 Although the prosecutor sought the death penalty Dvoracek was sentenced to 22 years of hard labour fined 10 000 crowns stripped of personal property and deprived of his civic rights for ten years 44 Dvoracek served 14 years in a labor camp some of it working in a uranium mine before he was released 46 In his response to Respekt s announcement Kundera denied turning Dvoracek in to the StB 46 stating he never knew him at all and could not even remember an individual named Militka 47 On 14 October 2008 the Czech Security Forces Archive announced that they had ruled out the possibility that the document could be a forgery but refused to arrive at any other definite conclusions 48 Vojtech Ripka of the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes said There are two pieces of circumstantial evidence the police report and its sub file but we of course cannot be one hundred percent sure Unless we find all survivors which is unfortunately impossible it will not be complete Ripka added that the signature on the police report matches the name of a man who worked in the corresponding National Security Corps section and that a police protocol is missing 48 Many in the Czech Republic condemned Kundera as a police informer while many others accused Respekt of committing journalistic misconduct by publishing such a poorly researched piece On the other hand presenting an ID card was procedure whenever dealing with the StB in 1950 Kundera was the student representative of the dorm Dvoracek had visited and while it cannot be ruled out that another student could have denounced him to the StB using Kundera s name 45 impersonating someone else in a Stalinist police state posed a significant risk Contradictory statements by Kundera s fellow students appeared in the Czech news media in the wake of this scandal Historian Adam Hradilek the co author of the Respekt article was also accused of an undeclared conflict of interest since one of the individuals involved in the incident was his aunt 45 Nonetheless Respekt states on its website that its task is to impartially study the crimes of the former communist regime 49 With time the Western journalists realized the whole controversy was flawed with French newspapers defending Kundera 45 The literary scholar Karen de Kunes investigated the reports and came to the conclusion that even if Kundera had issued the report all he reported was the existence of a suitcase in the hallway 45 On 3 November 2008 eleven internationally recognized writers came to Kundera s defence including four Nobel laureates Orhan Pamuk Gabriel Garcia Marquez Nadine Gordimer and J M Coetzee as well as Carlos Fuentes Juan Goytisolo Philip Roth Salman Rushdie and Jorge Semprun 50 Awards and honors editIn 1973 Life is elsewhere received the French Prix Medicis 31 In 1979 Kundera was awarded the Mondello Prize for The Farewell Party 51 In 1985 Kundera received the Jerusalem Prize 15 His acceptance address appears among the essays collected in The Art of the Novel He won The Austrian State Prize for European Literature in 1987 In 2000 he was awarded the international Herder Prize In 2007 he was awarded the Czech State Literature Prize 52 In 2009 he was awarded the Prix mondial Cino Del Duca In 2010 he was made an honorary citizen of his hometown Brno 53 When he died the Greek Newspaper Efimerida ton Syntakton Journal of the editors published a special section where all the current affairs on each page were described with a book title of Kundera s 54 In 2011 he received the Ovid Prize 55 The asteroid 7390 Kundera discovered at the Klet Observatory in 1983 is named in his honor 56 In 2020 he was awarded the Franz Kafka Prize a Czech literary award 57 Personal life editStripped of Czechoslovak citizenship in 1979 Kundera became a French citizen in 1981 58 He maintained contact with Czech and Slovak friends in his homeland 59 but rarely returned and never with any fanfare 4 He was granted Czech citizenship in 2019 60 He saw himself as a French writer and insisted his work should be studied as French literature and classified as such in bookstores 61 Kundera was married twice His first wife was the singer Olga Haasova Smrckova daughter of composer Pavel Haas 15 His second marriage was to Vera Hrabankova whom he married in 1967 10 Vera reportedly was his secretary translator of his works and the gatekeeper between Kundera and the outside world 10 Kundera died after a prolonged illness in Paris on 11 July 2023 at the age of 94 62 63 He was cremated in Paris on 19 July 2023 64 Bibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2015 Novels edit The Joke Zert 1967 20 Life Is Elsewhere Zivot je jinde 1969 30 The Farewell Waltz Valcik na rozloucenou Original translation title The Farewell Party French version La Valse aux Adieux 1972 51 The Book of Laughter and Forgetting Kniha smichu a zapomneni 1979 13 The Unbearable Lightness of Being Nesnesitelna lehkost byti 1984 29 Immortality Nesmrtelnost 1988 65 Slowness La Lenteur 1995 13 Identity L Identite 1998 51 Ignorance L Ignorance 2000 33 The Festival of Insignificance La fete de l insignifiance 2014 36 Short fiction edit Collections edit Laughable Loves Smesne lasky 1969 66 Stories edit The Apologizer 2015 67 Poetry collections edit Clovek zahrada sira Man A Wide Garden 1953 13 Posledni maj The Last May 1955 celebration of Julius Fucik 13 Monology Monologues 1957 13 Essays edit Cesky udel The Czech Deal in Listy December 1968 68 Radikalizmus a expozice Radicalism and Exhibitionism 1969 69 The Art of the Novel L art du Roman 1986 70 Testaments Betrayed An Essay in Nine Parts Les testaments trahis essai 1993 70 D en bas tu humeras les roses rare book in French illustrated by Ernest Breleur 1993 70 The Curtain Le Rideau 2005 71 An Encounter Une rencontre 2009 72 Drama edit Majitele klicu The Owners of the Keys 1962 13 73 Ptakovina The Blunder 1969 73 Jacques and His Master 73 Jakub a jeho pan Pocta Denisu Diderotovi 1981 Articles edit What is a novelist 2006 74 Die Weltliteratur 2007 75 Non fiction edit A Kidnapped West The Tragedy of Central Europe 2023 76 References edit Kundera Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 2 August 2019 Kundera Milan Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 13 November 2021 Milan Kundera ma po 40 letech opet ceske obcanstvi Novinky cz novinky cz Retrieved 3 December 2019 a b Kundera rejects Czech informer tag BBC News 13 October 2008 Retrieved 13 October 2008 The Czech Republic s best known author Milan Kundera has spoken to the media for the first time in 25 years Crown Sarah 13 October 2005 Nobel prize goes to Pinter The Guardian London Retrieved 12 May 2010 Milan Kundera coming to China People s Daily 25 June 2004 Retrieved 25 June 2004 W3bStudio 13 November 2021 Pahor presents Golden Order of Merit to author Milan Kundera Slovenia Times Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 14 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Marecek Lubos Legacy of Leos Janacek JAMU Retrieved 13 July 2023 Webb Kate 12 July 2023 Milan Kundera obituary The Guardian Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b c d e Darlingberg Dwomoh 12 July 2023 Milan Kundera s Married Wife and Children Meet The Author s Partner Vera Hrabankova and Kids Thedistin Retrieved 14 July 2023 Kunderova Milada Milada Kunderova Encyklopedie dejin mesta Brna Retrieved 13 July 2023 Ludvik Kundera JAMU Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Boyer Weinmann Martine 12 July 2023 Milan Kundera existential novelist has died Le Monde Retrieved 14 July 2023 a b c d e f g h in French Clavel Andre L intransigeant amoureux de la France L Express 3 April 2003 a b c Ivry Benjamin 13 July 2023 How Milan Kundera embodied the Jewish spirit The Forward Retrieved 15 July 2023 Sanders Ivan 1991 p103 a b c Duffield Charlie 12 July 2023 What did Milan Kundera write Author dies aged 94 Evening Standard Retrieved 13 July 2023 Rudenauer Ulrich 12 July 2023 Vom Lachen und Vergessen Die Zeit Retrieved 16 July 2023 a b c d e f Culik Jan Milan Kundera 1929 Gale Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b c d Kimball Roger 1986 Milan Kundera The Wilson Quarterly The New Criterion 10 3 34 ISSN 0363 3276 JSTOR 45266182 via JSTOR a b in English Kramer Jane When there is no word for home The New York Times 29 April 1984 a b Sabatos Charles 2008 Criticism and Destiny Kundera and Havel on the Legacy of 1968 Europe Asia Studies 60 10 1829 1830 doi 10 1080 09668130802434711 ISSN 0966 8136 JSTOR 20451662 S2CID 154092932 Man a wide garden Milan Kundera as a young Stalinist Enlighten University of Glasgow 12 April 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Jan Culik January 2007 Man a wide garden Milan Kundera as a young Stalinist PDF University of Glasgow Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Kundera Milan The Unbearable Lightness of Being Webster edu Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 a b Skop Martin 2011 Milan Kundera and Franz Kafka How not to Forget the Everydayness Masaryk University Jones Tim 2009 Milan Kundera s Slowness Making It Slow PDF Review of European Studies 1 2 64 doi 10 5539 RES V1N2P64 S2CID 53477512 via Semantic Scholar Howe Irving RED RULERS AND BLACK HUMOR The New York Times Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b c d e f g Czech writer and former dissident Milan Kundera dies in Paris aged 94 Hereford Times 12 July 2023 Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b Theroux Paul 28 July 1974 Life Is Elsewhere The New York Times Retrieved 13 July 2023 a b Sanders Ivan 1991 Mr Kundera the European The Wilson Quarterly 15 2 104 ISSN 0363 3276 JSTOR 40258623 The Book of Laughter and Forgetting by Milan Kundera Reviews Discussion Bookclubs Lists Goodreads com Retrieved 19 November 2013 a b Hron Madelaine 2007 The Czech Emigre Experience of Return after 1989 The great return the pain of ignorance The Slavonic and East European Review Modern Humanities Research Association 85 1 72 76 doi 10 1353 see 2007 0104 ISSN 0037 6795 JSTOR 4214394 Retrieved 14 July 2023 Jaggi Maya 15 November 2002 Czech mate The Guardian Retrieved 13 July 2023 Howard Maureen 6 October 2002 Shut Up Memory The New York Times Archived from the original on 18 January 2020 Retrieved 14 July 2023 a b Kakutani Michiko 14 June 2015 Review Milan Kundera s The Festival of Insignificance Is Full of Pranks Lies and Vanity The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 29 December 2015 Unbearable lightness The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 29 December 2015 Ricard Francois Kundera Milan 2003 Le dernier apres midi d Agnes essai sur l œuvre de Milan Kundera Arcades Paris Gallimard ISBN 978 2 07 073024 7 Contemporary Authors Online Thomson Gale 2007 citation needed Kundera Milan 6 March 1988 Key Words Problem Words Words I love The New York Times Retrieved 13 November 2010 Beckerman Michael 1996 Kundera s Musical Joke and Folk Music in Czechoslovakia 1948 Retuning Culture Duke University Press pp 39 40 doi 10 1515 9780822397885 003 ISBN 9780822397885 S2CID 242196564 Retrieved 14 July 2023 Benson Stephen 2003 For Want of a Better Term Polyphony and the Value of Music in Bakhtin and Kundera Narrative 11 3 304 doi 10 1353 nar 2003 0013 JSTOR 20107320 S2CID 144073112 Retrieved 14 July 2023 The Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes in Czech Ustrcr cz 15 May 2013 Archived from the original on 26 November 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 a b c d e f Milan Kundera s denunciation Respekt 13 October 2008 Archived from the original on 14 October 2008 a b c d e f Culik Jan 2020 Was Milan Kundera a Bastard PDF University of Glasgow a b Pancevski Bojan 14 October 2008 Milan Kundera denies spy tip off claims The Times UK 1 Archived 17 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b ceskenoviny cz Archived from the original on 3 January 2015 Ustav pro studium totalitnich rezimu in Czech Ustrcr cz 15 November 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Coetzee J M 4 November 2008 Support Milan Kundera The Guardian London Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b c Kuhlman Martha 2001 Images of the Crowd in Milan Kundera s Novels From Communist Prague to Postmodern France The Comparatist 25 92 ISSN 0195 7678 JSTOR 44367083 Czechs to honour Kundera the writer they love to hate eux tv Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 Kundera becomes honorary citizen of native city Brno Ceske Noviny News 8 December 2009 Retrieved 8 December 2009 Milan Koyntera H Efhmerida twn Syntaktwn Milan Kundera and Ognjen Spahic awarded at Days and Nights of Literature Festival nineoclock ro 14 June 2011 Retrieved 14 June 2011 Schmadel Lutz D International Astronomical Union 2003 Dictionary of minor planet names Berlin New York Springer Verlag p 594 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 Retrieved 29 July 2012 Alison Flood 22 September 2020 Milan Kundera joyfully accepts Czech Republic s Franz Kafka prize The Guardian Biography Milan Kunder Kundera de 1 April 1929 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Milan Kundera skips hometown conference on his work CBC News 30 May 2009 Archived from the original on 1 June 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2009 Milan Kundera ma po 40 letech opet ceske obcanstvi Novinky cz novinky cz Retrieved 3 December 2019 Milan Kundera skips hometown conference on his work CBC News 30 May 2009 Archived from the original on 1 June 2009 Retrieved 3 December 2019 Lewis Daniel 13 July 2023 Unbearable Lightness Author Gave Comical Flair to Despair The New York Times Vol 172 no 59848 pp A1 A20 Presse AFP Agence France Czech Writer Milan Kundera Dies At 94 barrons com Retrieved 12 July 2023 Spisovatel Kundera mel kremaci v Parizi Uvazuje se o jeho pohrbeni v Brne Mlada fronta DNES in Czech 19 July 2023 Retrieved 19 July 2023 The New York Times Book Review Search Article The New York Times Retrieved 16 July 2023 Iggers Wilma 1976 Review of Laughable Loves The Guinea Pigs The Slavic and East European Journal 20 2 200 202 doi 10 2307 305836 ISSN 0037 6752 JSTOR 305836 Kundera Milan 4 May 2015 The Apologizer The New Yorker Vol 91 no 11 trans Linda Asher pp 56 64 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Sabatos Charles 2008 p 1831 The Debate That Won t Die Havel And Kundera On Whether Protest Is Worthwhile Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 11 January 2012 Retrieved 15 July 2023 a b c Bibliotheque Nationale de France June 2012 Milan Kundera laureat 2012 du prix de la BNF PDF bnf fr Retrieved 15 July 2023 Banks Russell 4 March 2007 Reading With Kundera The New York Times Retrieved 15 July 2023 Dyer Geoff 22 August 2010 Encounter Essays by Milan Kundera The Guardian The Observer Retrieved 15 July 2023 a b c Jungmannova Lenka 2022 Unsigned Play by Milan Kundera An Authorship Attribution Study arXiv 2212 09879 cs CL Kundera Milan 9 October 2006 What is a novelist The New Yorker pp 40 45 Retrieved 19 September 2019 Kundera Milan 8 January 2007 Die Weltliteratur The New Yorker trans Linda Asher Retrieved 19 September 2019 European Parliament Un Occident kidnappe ou La tragedie de l Europe centrale European Parliament Retrieved 15 July 2023 Further reading editLeonidas Donskis Yet Another Europe After 1984 Rethinking Milan Kundera and the Idea of Central Europe Amsterdam Rodopi 2012 223 pp ISBN 978 90 420 3543 0 online review Charles Sabatos Shifting Contexts The Boundaries of Milan Kundera s Central Europe in Contexts Subtexts and Pretexts Literary Translation in Eastern Europe and Russia ed Brian James Baer Amsterdam John Benjamins 2011 pp 19 31 Nicoletta Pireddu European Ulyssiads Claudio Magris Milan Kundera Eric Emmanuel Schmitt in Comparative Literature Special Issue Odyssey Exile Return Ed by Michelle Zerba and Adelaide Russo 67 3 September 2015 pp 67 86 JSTOR 24694591 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milan Kundera nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Milan Kundera Biographical Milan Kundera at IMDb Milan Kundera and the Czech Republic Retrieved 2010 09 25 Milan Kundera topic in The New York TimesBook reviews interviews Review The Unbearable Lightness of Being 2 April 1984 The New York Times Retrieved 2010 09 25 Reading with Kundera By Russell Banks 4 March 2007 The New York Times Retrieved 2010 09 25 Review Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine of Slowness from The Review of European Studies Retrieved 2010 09 25 Of Dogs and Death A review of Une Recontre An Encounter 27 April 2009 The Oxonian Review Retrieved 2010 09 25 Interview with Kundera at the Wayback Machine archived 26 January 2001 The Review of Contemporary Fiction Summer 1989 9 2 Retrieved 2010 09 25 Christian Salmon Summer 1984 Milan Kundera The Art of Fiction No 81 The Paris Review Summer 1984 92 Open letters Two Messages Article by Vaclav Havel in Salon October 2008 Retrieved 2010 09 25 The Flawed Defence Article by Petr Tresnak in Salon November 2008 Retrieved 2010 09 25 Informing und Terror by Ivan Klima about the Kundera controversy Salon October 2008 Leprosy by Jiri Stransky about the Kundera controversy Salon October 2008 Retrieved 2010 09 25Archives Finding aid to Milan Kundera Manuscripts at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Portal nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Milan Kundera amp oldid 1181883302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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