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The Encyclopedia of the Dead

The Encyclopedia of the Dead (Serbo-Croatian: Enciklopedija mrtvih) is a collection of nine stories by Yugoslav author Danilo Kiš. Combining history and fiction in what critics have seen as a postmodern fashion, the stories (which have been compared to the work of Jorge Luis Borges) have helped cement Kiš's legacy as one of the most important 20th-century Yugoslav authors.

The Encyclopedia of the Dead
First edition (Serbian)
AuthorDanilo Kiš
Original titleEnciklopedija mrtvih
TranslatorMichael Henry Heim
Cover artistPatsy Welch
ISBN9780810115149
Preceded byHomo poeticus (1983) 

Background and contents edit

The Encyclopedia of the Dead, Kiš's final work,[1] was first published in Serbo-Croatian in 1983. A French translation by Pascale Delpech was published by Gallimard in 1985, and received a mixed review in World Literature Today, the reviewer finding them of uneven literary quality (but the translation "excellent").[2] It was translated in English by Michael Henry Heim (a translation praised for its faithfulness in preserving the original "clarity and precision"[1]) and published in 1989 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, then republished in 1997 by Northwestern UP in their European Classics series.

The stories combine fiction and history in a postmodern fashion.[3] In a postscript, Kiš provides historical backgrounds and other information. As in his other works, in The Encyclopedia Kiš attempts to "piece together the hybrid identity of the Balkans"; his effort "is mediated through contradictory strategies (documentary, myth, imaginary projection, metafictional allusions and references) that cannot provide narrative coherences or certitudes".[4] A Tomb for Boris Davidovich was "a cenotaph...for the hidden victims of Stalin's purges", and The Encyclopedia is an extension of that project of cataloging the victims of history "along more blatantly metaphysical lines", according to Chris Power.[5] As in A Tomb, a predilection with missing texts is an important theme in The Encyclopedia—in A Tomb, for instance, the missing entry in the Encyclopedia of Revolutionaries for the titular character, and in An Encyclopedia the lost correspondence of Mendel Osipovich in "Red Stamps with Lenin's Picture".[6]

Reception and influence edit

Kiš is frequently compared to Jorge Luis Borges (he had been accused of plagiarizing Borges and James Joyce in A Tomb for Boris Davidovich, which prompted a "scathing response" in The Anatomy Lesson (1978)[7]), and critics find this to be especially true of The Encyclopedia.[8] According to Angela Carter's review of The Encyclopedia, however, Kiš "is more haunted, less antic than the Argentine master".[9] The Slovenian poet Aleš Debeljak mentioned both Borges and Kiš in a 1994 essay called "The Disintegration of Yugoslavia: The Twilight of the Idols"; Debeljak, in a passage on who it was that young Yugoslav writers of the 1980s looked up to, explained that "the truly decisive role in our formation as writers wasn't Borges, as influential as he was, but Danilo Kiš", citing The Encyclopedia as one of three Kiš titles.[10] Less positive is German poet and translator Michael Hofmann, who in a 1989 review in The Times Literary Supplement called Kiš "a highly deliberate and self-conscious author of vaguely Pyrrhic books" and finds "terrible cliches" and predictable outlines in the stories.[11]

Major themes in the Text edit

Major themes in the text are: death, truth, being, archiving and the role of the archivist, religion, myth, storytelling, literature, language, reckoning of the human condition, the human experience, indifference to history, illusion, surveillance, deception, the creation and questioning of an objective reality, truth verses knowledge, the cartography of knowledge, appearance verses substance, culture as a filter of truth, man's ability to distort and manipulate history, positions of power, irony, the meaning of human experience and suffering, subjectivity of morality, the history of ideas, lineage and personal histories.

Stories edit

"Simon Magus"
A "masterly tale",[12] with two different endings, of a counter-prophet from the 1st century AD. Magus, a reported sorcerer, is confronted by Peter (who is presented as a "tyrannical power"[13]) while preaching against Christianity and its god, and accepts a challenge to perform a miracle. In the first version, he flies into the clouds to be thrown down by God; in the second, he is buried alive and after three days his body has putrefied. Both endings confirm his prophetic qualities, in the eyes of his followers.
"Last Respects"
The death of a prostitute in Hamburg, 1923 or 1924, leads to "a miracle of revolutionary disobedience", an "elemental, irrational uprising" when her funeral is celebrated by the lower ranks of society, who pillage the flowers from all over the cemetery to place them on Marietta's grave.
"The Encyclopedia of the Dead (A Whole Life)"
A scholar spends a night in the Royal Library of Sweden where she gains access to The Encyclopedia of the Dead, a unique exemplar of a book "containing the biography of every ordinary life lived since 1789".[5]
The encyclopedia is the expression of a sociological and political philosophy; in the words of Gabriel Motola: "The scrupulous detail is necessary to the compilers of this encyclopedia because they believe that history is less the record of cataclysmic events caused by the high and mighty, who if mentioned in any other encyclopedia are automatically omitted from this one, than it is the sum total of everyday occurrences of ordinary folk".[7] The narrator reads the entry on her father and tries to record as much as she can.[14] The story was published in The New Yorker, June 12, 1982.
"The Legend of the Sleepers"
A retelling (from one of the sleepers' perspectives) of the legend of the Seven Sleepers.
"The Mirror of the Unknown"
A girl foresees in a mirror, bought for her from a gypsy, how her father and sisters will be murdered.
"The Story of the Master and the Disciple"
In Prague, Ben Haas (a writer who combines art and morality, a combination otherwise thought impossible) takes on a mediocre writer as a disciple, who in turn denounces his former master.
"To Die for One's Country Is Glorious"
Young Esterházy, of a noble family, is executed for having participated in a brief uprising against the Habsburgs. His mother possibly participates in what could be a cruel scheme to assist Esterházy in keeping up appearances until the final moment. In a themed 1998 issue of the journal Rowohlt Literaturmagazin devoted to Kiš, Hungarian poet Péter Esterházy latches on to this story in his remembrance.[15]
"The Book of Kings and Fools"
Written as an alternate biography of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the story is a fictional history of a book, The Conspiracy. Like The Protocols, The Conspiracy is said to be based on Maurice Joly's The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu. According to Svetlana Boym, the story treats conspiracy theory as an "actual historical threat" which the narrator attempts to disrupt, a tragic effort doomed to failure since the "violence persists" even after "the facts have been revealed".[16]
The influence of this story in particular on four contemporary authors serves as evidence for Andrew Wachtel that Kiš is the most influential Yugoslav author in post-Yugoslav literature.[17] In addition, Kiš's portrayal of Sergei Nilus formed the basis for Umberto Eco's version of the character in Foucault's Pendulum (1988).[18]
"Red Stamps with Lenin's Picture"
A woman explains in a letter to the biographer of Yiddish poet Mendel Osipovitch that she was the poet's long-time lover. In her account, she provides biographical detail and chastises his critics for their exaggerated and all-too literary interpretations ("lazy layers of psychoanalytic criticism", according to a reviewer in The American[19]).

References edit

  1. ^ a b Gorjup, Branko (1991). "Rev. of The Encyclopedia of the Dead by Danilo Kiš". World Literature Today. 65 (1): 150. doi:10.2307/40146289. JSTOR 40146289.
  2. ^ Lakich, John J. (1986). "Rev. of Encyclopédie des morts by Danilo Kiš". World Literature Today. 60 (3): 491. doi:10.2307/40142350. JSTOR 40142350.
  3. ^ Folks, Jeffrey J. (1991). "Rev. of Hourglass by Danilo Kiš". World Literature Today. 65 (1): 150. doi:10.2307/40146288. JSTOR 40146288.
  4. ^ Cornis-Pope, Marcel (2004). "From Resistance to Reformulation". In Cornis-Pope, Marcel; Neubauer, John (eds.). History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries. John Benjamins. pp. 39–50. ISBN 9789027234520.
  5. ^ a b Power, Chris (2 August 2012). "A brief survey of the short story part 42: Danilo Kiš". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  6. ^ Crnković, Gordana (2000). Imagined Dialogues: Eastern European Literature in Conversation with American and English Literature. Northwestern UP. p. 22. ISBN 9780810117174.
  7. ^ a b Motola, Gabriel (1993). "Danilo Kiš: Death and the Mirror". The Antioch Review. 51 (4): 605–21. JSTOR 4612839.
  8. ^ Vuletić, Ivana (2003). The Prose Fiction of Danilo Kiš, Serbian Jewish Writer: Childhood and the Holocaust. Edwin Mellen. p. 19. ISBN 9780773467774.
  9. ^ Carter, Angela (1993). "Danilo Kis: The Encyclopedia of the Dead". Expletives deleted: selected writings. Vintage. pp. 24–25. ISBN 9780099222811.
  10. ^ Debeljak, Aleš (1994). "The Disintegration of Yugoslavia: Twilight of the Idols". International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. 8 (1): 147–68. doi:10.1007/bf02199310. JSTOR 20007177.
  11. ^ Hofmann, Michael (30 June 1989). "Rev. of The Encyclopedia of the Dead by Danilo Kiš". The Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  12. ^ Taylor, Benjamin (1995). Into the Open: Reflections on Genius and Modernity. NYU Press. pp. 107 n.1. ISBN 9780814782132.
  13. ^ Rajhona, Flora; Laczko, Eszter (2010). "The Forms of Narrative Material in the Exempla of Pelbartus de Themeswar's Pomerius". In Breuer, Dieter; Tüskés, Gábor (eds.). Fortunatus, Melusine, Genovefa. Peter Lang. pp. 35–52. ISBN 9783034303149.
  14. ^ Weber, Harold (1999). "The 'Garbage Heap' of Memory: At Play in Pope's Archives of Dulness". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 33 (1): 1–19. doi:10.1353/ecs.1999.0060. JSTOR 30053312.
  15. ^ Snel, Guido (2004). "Gardens of the Mind, Places of Doubt: Fictionalized Autobiography in Eastern Europe". In Cornis-Pope, Marcel; Neubauer, John (eds.). History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries. John Benjamins. pp. 386–400. ISBN 9789027234520.
  16. ^ Boym, Svetlana (1999). "Conspiracy Theories and Literary Ethics: Umberto Eco, Danilo Kiš and The Protocols of Zion". Comparative Literature. 51 (2): 97–122. doi:10.2307/1771244. JSTOR 1771244.
  17. ^ Wachtel, Andrew (2006). "The Legacy of Danilo Kiš in Post-Yugoslav Literature". The Slavic and East European Journal. 50 (1): 135–49. doi:10.2307/20459238. JSTOR 20459238.
  18. ^ Hagemeister, Michael (2008). "The Protocols of the Elders of Zioin: Between History and Fiction". New German Critique. 35 (1): 83–95. doi:10.1215/0094033x-2007-020.
  19. ^ "The A-List: The Encyclopedia of the Dead". The American. n.d. Retrieved 16 December 2013.

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The Encyclopedia of the Dead Serbo Croatian Enciklopedija mrtvih is a collection of nine stories by Yugoslav author Danilo Kis Combining history and fiction in what critics have seen as a postmodern fashion the stories which have been compared to the work of Jorge Luis Borges have helped cement Kis s legacy as one of the most important 20th century Yugoslav authors The Encyclopedia of the DeadFirst edition Serbian AuthorDanilo KisOriginal titleEnciklopedija mrtvihTranslatorMichael Henry HeimCover artistPatsy WelchISBN9780810115149Preceded byHomo poeticus 1983 Contents 1 Background and contents 2 Reception and influence 3 Major themes in the Text 4 Stories 5 ReferencesBackground and contents editThe Encyclopedia of the Dead Kis s final work 1 was first published in Serbo Croatian in 1983 A French translation by Pascale Delpech was published by Gallimard in 1985 and received a mixed review in World Literature Today the reviewer finding them of uneven literary quality but the translation excellent 2 It was translated in English by Michael Henry Heim a translation praised for its faithfulness in preserving the original clarity and precision 1 and published in 1989 by Farrar Straus and Giroux then republished in 1997 by Northwestern UP in their European Classics series The stories combine fiction and history in a postmodern fashion 3 In a postscript Kis provides historical backgrounds and other information As in his other works in The Encyclopedia Kis attempts to piece together the hybrid identity of the Balkans his effort is mediated through contradictory strategies documentary myth imaginary projection metafictional allusions and references that cannot provide narrative coherences or certitudes 4 A Tomb for Boris Davidovich was a cenotaph for the hidden victims of Stalin s purges and The Encyclopedia is an extension of that project of cataloging the victims of history along more blatantly metaphysical lines according to Chris Power 5 As in A Tomb a predilection with missing texts is an important theme in The Encyclopedia in A Tomb for instance the missing entry in the Encyclopedia of Revolutionaries for the titular character and in An Encyclopedia the lost correspondence of Mendel Osipovich in Red Stamps with Lenin s Picture 6 Reception and influence editKis is frequently compared to Jorge Luis Borges he had been accused of plagiarizing Borges and James Joyce in A Tomb for Boris Davidovich which prompted a scathing response in The Anatomy Lesson 1978 7 and critics find this to be especially true of The Encyclopedia 8 According to Angela Carter s review of The Encyclopedia however Kis is more haunted less antic than the Argentine master 9 The Slovenian poet Ales Debeljak mentioned both Borges and Kis in a 1994 essay called The Disintegration of Yugoslavia The Twilight of the Idols Debeljak in a passage on who it was that young Yugoslav writers of the 1980s looked up to explained that the truly decisive role in our formation as writers wasn t Borges as influential as he was but Danilo Kis citing The Encyclopedia as one of three Kis titles 10 Less positive is German poet and translator Michael Hofmann who in a 1989 review in The Times Literary Supplement called Kis a highly deliberate and self conscious author of vaguely Pyrrhic books and finds terrible cliches and predictable outlines in the stories 11 Major themes in the Text editMajor themes in the text are death truth being archiving and the role of the archivist religion myth storytelling literature language reckoning of the human condition the human experience indifference to history illusion surveillance deception the creation and questioning of an objective reality truth verses knowledge the cartography of knowledge appearance verses substance culture as a filter of truth man s ability to distort and manipulate history positions of power irony the meaning of human experience and suffering subjectivity of morality the history of ideas lineage and personal histories Stories edit Simon Magus A masterly tale 12 with two different endings of a counter prophet from the 1st century AD Magus a reported sorcerer is confronted by Peter who is presented as a tyrannical power 13 while preaching against Christianity and its god and accepts a challenge to perform a miracle In the first version he flies into the clouds to be thrown down by God in the second he is buried alive and after three days his body has putrefied Both endings confirm his prophetic qualities in the eyes of his followers Last Respects The death of a prostitute in Hamburg 1923 or 1924 leads to a miracle of revolutionary disobedience an elemental irrational uprising when her funeral is celebrated by the lower ranks of society who pillage the flowers from all over the cemetery to place them on Marietta s grave The Encyclopedia of the Dead A Whole Life A scholar spends a night in the Royal Library of Sweden where she gains access to The Encyclopedia of the Dead a unique exemplar of a book containing the biography of every ordinary life lived since 1789 5 The encyclopedia is the expression of a sociological and political philosophy in the words of Gabriel Motola The scrupulous detail is necessary to the compilers of this encyclopedia because they believe that history is less the record of cataclysmic events caused by the high and mighty who if mentioned in any other encyclopedia are automatically omitted from this one than it is the sum total of everyday occurrences of ordinary folk 7 The narrator reads the entry on her father and tries to record as much as she can 14 The story was published in The New Yorker June 12 1982 The Legend of the Sleepers A retelling from one of the sleepers perspectives of the legend of the Seven Sleepers The Mirror of the Unknown A girl foresees in a mirror bought for her from a gypsy how her father and sisters will be murdered The Story of the Master and the Disciple In Prague Ben Haas a writer who combines art and morality a combination otherwise thought impossible takes on a mediocre writer as a disciple who in turn denounces his former master To Die for One s Country Is Glorious Young Esterhazy of a noble family is executed for having participated in a brief uprising against the Habsburgs His mother possibly participates in what could be a cruel scheme to assist Esterhazy in keeping up appearances until the final moment In a themed 1998 issue of the journal Rowohlt Literaturmagazin devoted to Kis Hungarian poet Peter Esterhazy latches on to this story in his remembrance 15 The Book of Kings and Fools Written as an alternate biography of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion the story is a fictional history of a book The Conspiracy Like The Protocols The Conspiracy is said to be based on Maurice Joly s The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu According to Svetlana Boym the story treats conspiracy theory as an actual historical threat which the narrator attempts to disrupt a tragic effort doomed to failure since the violence persists even after the facts have been revealed 16 The influence of this story in particular on four contemporary authors serves as evidence for Andrew Wachtel that Kis is the most influential Yugoslav author in post Yugoslav literature 17 In addition Kis s portrayal of Sergei Nilus formed the basis for Umberto Eco s version of the character in Foucault s Pendulum 1988 18 Red Stamps with Lenin s Picture A woman explains in a letter to the biographer of Yiddish poet Mendel Osipovitch that she was the poet s long time lover In her account she provides biographical detail and chastises his critics for their exaggerated and all too literary interpretations lazy layers of psychoanalytic criticism according to a reviewer in The American 19 References edit a b Gorjup Branko 1991 Rev of The Encyclopedia of the Dead by Danilo Kis World Literature Today 65 1 150 doi 10 2307 40146289 JSTOR 40146289 Lakich John J 1986 Rev of Encyclopedie des morts by Danilo Kis World Literature Today 60 3 491 doi 10 2307 40142350 JSTOR 40142350 Folks Jeffrey J 1991 Rev of Hourglass by Danilo Kis World Literature Today 65 1 150 doi 10 2307 40146288 JSTOR 40146288 Cornis Pope Marcel 2004 From Resistance to Reformulation In Cornis Pope Marcel Neubauer John eds History of the Literary Cultures of East Central Europe Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries John Benjamins pp 39 50 ISBN 9789027234520 a b Power Chris 2 August 2012 A brief survey of the short story part 42 Danilo Kis The Guardian Retrieved 16 December 2013 Crnkovic Gordana 2000 Imagined Dialogues Eastern European Literature in Conversation with American and English Literature Northwestern UP p 22 ISBN 9780810117174 a b Motola Gabriel 1993 Danilo Kis Death and the Mirror The Antioch Review 51 4 605 21 JSTOR 4612839 Vuletic Ivana 2003 The Prose Fiction of Danilo Kis Serbian Jewish Writer Childhood and the Holocaust Edwin Mellen p 19 ISBN 9780773467774 Carter Angela 1993 Danilo Kis The Encyclopedia of the Dead Expletives deleted selected writings Vintage pp 24 25 ISBN 9780099222811 Debeljak Ales 1994 The Disintegration of Yugoslavia Twilight of the Idols International Journal of Politics Culture and Society 8 1 147 68 doi 10 1007 bf02199310 JSTOR 20007177 Hofmann Michael 30 June 1989 Rev of The Encyclopedia of the Dead by Danilo Kis The Times Literary Supplement Retrieved 16 December 2013 Taylor Benjamin 1995 Into the Open Reflections on Genius and Modernity NYU Press pp 107 n 1 ISBN 9780814782132 Rajhona Flora Laczko Eszter 2010 The Forms of Narrative Material in the Exempla of Pelbartus de Themeswar s Pomerius In Breuer Dieter Tuskes Gabor eds Fortunatus Melusine Genovefa Peter Lang pp 35 52 ISBN 9783034303149 Weber Harold 1999 The Garbage Heap of Memory At Play in Pope s Archives of Dulness Eighteenth Century Studies 33 1 1 19 doi 10 1353 ecs 1999 0060 JSTOR 30053312 Snel Guido 2004 Gardens of the Mind Places of Doubt Fictionalized Autobiography in Eastern Europe In Cornis Pope Marcel Neubauer John eds History of the Literary Cultures of East Central Europe Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries John Benjamins pp 386 400 ISBN 9789027234520 Boym Svetlana 1999 Conspiracy Theories and Literary Ethics Umberto Eco Danilo Kis and The Protocols of Zion Comparative Literature 51 2 97 122 doi 10 2307 1771244 JSTOR 1771244 Wachtel Andrew 2006 The Legacy of Danilo Kis in Post Yugoslav Literature The Slavic and East European Journal 50 1 135 49 doi 10 2307 20459238 JSTOR 20459238 Hagemeister Michael 2008 The Protocols of the Elders of Zioin Between History and Fiction New German Critique 35 1 83 95 doi 10 1215 0094033x 2007 020 The A List The Encyclopedia of the Dead The American n d Retrieved 16 December 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Encyclopedia of the Dead amp oldid 1073217701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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