Novelist Kundera mixed philosophy, irony to explore human nature
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[July 12, 2023]
By Michael Kahn
PRAGUE (Reuters) - Czech-born novelist Milan Kundera, who satirized
totalitarian regimes and mixed dark irony with philosophical musings to
explore the human condition, has died, a library he worked with said on
Wednesday. He was 94.
The author of "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" won accolades for his
style in depicting themes and characters that floated between the
mundane reality of everyday life and the lofty world of ideas. He rarely
gave interviews and believed writers should speak through their work.
His first novel "The Joke", published in 1967, offered a scathing
portrayal of the Czechoslovak Communist regime.
Coming at a time when Czech reformers were seeking to establish
"socialism with a human face", the novel was a first step in Kundera's
path from party member to exiled dissident, a moniker he disdained.
He told French daily Le Monde in 1976 that to call his works political
was to oversimplify, and therefore obscure their true significance.
A year earlier Kundera was blacklisted after criticizing the Soviet
invasion of 1968 and finally forced to emigrate with his wife Vera to
France, where he eventually became a citizen.
His first novel as an emigre was "The Book of Laughter and Forgetting"
(1979), a story written in seven parts that showed the power of
totalitarian regimes to erase parts of history and create an alternate
past.
While not as well known as "The Unbearable Lightness of Being",
published five years later, the book cemented Kundera's reputation as a
leading novelist with critics who called it a work of genius. It also
cost him his Czechoslovak citizenship. He regained a Czech passport in
2019.
"The Book of Laughter and Forgetting calls itself a novel, although it
is part fairy tale, part literary criticism, part political tract, part
musicology, and part autobiography," The New York Times wrote in a
review.
"It can call itself whatever it wants to, because the whole is a
genius."
MUSIC, FILM
Born in the Moravian capital of Brno on April 1, 1929, to a musicologist
who studied under the composer Leos Janacek, Kundera began writing poems
in high school and studied at Charles University in Prague after World
War Two.
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Like many young men of his age he
joined the Communist party but was later expelled. During the 1960s
he taught at a film academy where his students included Milos
Forman, who was among the creators of the Czech New Wave films.
During his exile the author had an icy relationship
with his former homeland, writing his new works in French and even
preventing some of his novels from being translated into Czech. He
once told an interviewer he considered himself French rather than an
emigre.
But Kundera never lost a connection with his homeland and many of
his books took place in the nation of his birth. He rarely made
public visits home after the Velvet Revolution of 1989 toppled the
Communist regime, preferring instead to quietly slip into the
country to visit friends and family.
Kundera lived mostly out of the public eye but made a public
statement in 2008 to deny a report that he had turned in a young
pilot as a spy in 1950, who landed in uranium mines and prisons for
14 years.
"It is not true, the only mystery that I cannot explain is how my
name got there," he said.
Translated into more than 20 languages, Kundera won several literary
prizes, including the Prix Europa-Litterature for the ensemble of
his work.
In 1973, his "Life Is Elsewhere" won France's coveted Prix Medicis
for best foreign novel, and "The Farewell Party", a modern-day
sexual farce set in an east European spa, won Italy's Premio
Mondello in 1978.
He was nominated several times for the Nobel prize in literature but
never won.
Accepting the Jerusalem Prize in 1985, Kundera said: "It pleases me
to think that the art of the novel came into the world as the echo
of God's laughter."
Kundera explained what drove him as a writer and his disdain for
self reflection in an interview with the New York Times the same
year.
"Only a literary work that reveals an unknown fragment of human
existence has a reason for being," he said in the interview. "To be
a writer does not mean to preach a truth, it means to discover a
truth."
(Reporting by Michael Kahn; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Peter
Graff)
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