The China Mail - Satire and poetry: Milan Kundera took on life's absurdity

USD -
AED 3.672502
AFN 65.000382
ALL 80.8446
AMD 379.101998
ANG 1.79008
AOA 917.000143
ARS 1446.018197
AUD 1.42135
AWG 1.80125
AZN 1.698524
BAM 1.63681
BBD 2.013834
BDT 122.179122
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.376989
BIF 2962.042372
BMD 1
BND 1.264892
BOB 6.908615
BRL 5.212248
BSD 0.999845
BTN 91.992953
BWP 13.038912
BYN 2.824456
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010905
CAD 1.35196
CDF 2239.999904
CHF 0.766895
CLF 0.021762
CLP 859.649768
CNY 6.95465
CNH 6.94648
COP 3665.79
CRC 494.691958
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 92.280847
CZK 20.35965
DJF 178.050607
DKK 6.247035
DOP 62.817761
DZD 129.219039
EGP 46.836301
ERN 15
ETB 155.53865
EUR 0.836525
FJD 2.191603
FKP 0.725601
GBP 0.724525
GEL 2.695004
GGP 0.725601
GHS 10.923227
GIP 0.725601
GMD 72.999875
GNF 8774.066124
GTQ 7.671868
GYD 209.183311
HKD 7.805065
HNL 26.38664
HRK 6.297101
HTG 131.058637
HUF 319.154499
IDR 16794
ILS 3.08951
IMP 0.725601
INR 92.010175
IQD 1309.833164
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 121.290128
JEP 0.725601
JMD 156.885391
JOD 0.709021
JPY 153.202501
KES 129.000281
KGS 87.450237
KHR 4021.30749
KMF 412.000176
KPW 900.067146
KRW 1434.519686
KWD 0.30644
KYD 0.833218
KZT 502.274277
LAK 21507.509091
LBP 89537.068421
LKR 309.351946
LRD 184.971776
LSL 15.775744
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.280939
MAD 9.054512
MDL 16.817518
MGA 4469.049323
MKD 51.532557
MMK 2100.412852
MNT 3566.89232
MOP 8.038514
MRU 39.884173
MUR 45.149895
MVR 15.460286
MWK 1733.723329
MXN 17.227985
MYR 3.927499
MZN 63.760201
NAD 15.775744
NGN 1388.239968
NIO 36.79852
NOK 9.54433
NPR 147.18906
NZD 1.65026
OMR 0.384491
PAB 0.999845
PEN 3.343753
PGK 4.345188
PHP 59.005994
PKR 279.684656
PLN 3.522885
PYG 6709.432288
QAR 3.64487
RON 4.262498
RSD 98.197524
RUB 75.262927
RWF 1458.801475
SAR 3.75058
SBD 8.077676
SCR 13.861643
SDG 601.496316
SEK 8.834025
SGD 1.26532
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.29002
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 570.431464
SRD 38.0035
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.504065
SVC 8.748959
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 15.770555
THB 31.347499
TJS 9.338639
TMT 3.5
TND 2.863372
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.425394
TTD 6.786427
TWD 31.411503
TZS 2564.999917
UAH 42.791315
UGX 3556.827645
UYU 37.836277
UZS 12166.861246
VES 358.47615
VND 26000
VUV 119.569024
WST 2.716811
XAF 548.970821
XAG 0.00853
XAU 0.000184
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802014
XDR 0.682024
XOF 548.970821
XPF 99.808768
YER 238.411671
ZAR 15.768525
ZMK 9001.230785
ZMW 19.771777
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.71

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.4300

    79.42

    -1.8%

  • GSK

    0.7400

    50.84

    +1.46%

  • JRI

    0.0150

    13.005

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    0.1850

    25.455

    +0.73%

  • NGG

    -0.2100

    84.47

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0292

    24.08

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.8200

    94.19

    +0.87%

  • AZN

    -0.3000

    92.92

    -0.32%

  • BTI

    0.0050

    60.165

    +0.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.43

    -1.03%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • RELX

    -1.4930

    35.887

    -4.16%

  • VOD

    0.0150

    14.585

    +0.1%

  • BP

    0.2650

    37.965

    +0.7%

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

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

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

Text size:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

- Young rebel -

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

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

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

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

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

- Locked out -

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

- No going back? -

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

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

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

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

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

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

L.Johnson--ThChM