Czech-French writer Milan Kundera dies at 94
His masterpiece is "The Unbearable Lightness of Being"
12 July, 14:17
(ANSA-AFP) - PRAGUE, 12 LUG - Czech-French writer Milan
Kundera, author of "The Unbearable Lightness of Being", has died
aged 94, the Milan Kundera Library said Wednesday.
"Unfortunately I can confirm that Mr Milan Kundera passed
away yesterday (Tuesday) after a prolonged illness," Anna
Mrazova, spokeswoman for the library in his native city of Brno,
told AFP.
"He died at home, in his Paris apartment," she said. The
novelist, poet and essayist lived in France since his emigration
from Communist-ruled Czechoslovakia in 1975. He was known for
dark, provocative novels dealing with the human condition and
sprinkled with satire reflecting his experience of being
stripped of his Czech nationality for dissent.
Born on April 1, 1929 in the second Czech city of Brno,
Kundera studied in Prague. He translated works by the French
poet Guillaume Apollinaire and wrote poetry as well as short
stories. Kundera also taught at a film school, where his
students included the future Oscar-winning director Milos
Forman. His breakthrough novel "The Joke" about a young man
expelled from university and the Communist Party over an
innocent joke was published in 1967.
A former Communist himself, Kundera fell out of favour with
the authorities after the Prague Spring reform movement was
crushed by Soviet-led armies in 1968. Following his departure
for France, Kundera taught at the University of Rennes. Rarely
speaking to the public, Kundera was stripped of Czech
nationality in 1979, following the publication of "The Book of
Laughter and Forgetting". He became a French national in 1981.
- 'Across all continents' - 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. Criticised for turning sour
with his homeland and for his decision to ban the translation of
his French books into Czech, Kundera only regained his Czech
nationality in 2019. It was 30 years after former Czechoslovakia
shed the Moscow-steered Communist rule in the Velvet Revolution
of 1989, and 26 years after the country's peaceful split into
the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993.
On his birthday this year, the Moravian Library in Brno
opened the Milan Kundera Library on one of its floors,
displaying part of his collection of author copies in dozens of
languages to which his books have been translated. Kundera was
frequently touted as a favourite to win the Nobel Prize for
literature, but he never did. "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. Also born in Brno, Czech Prime Minister Petr
Fiala said Kundera was able to "appeal to whole generations of
readers across all continents" with his work. "He leaves behind
remarkable novelistic but also outstanding essayistic work,"
Fiala added on Twitter. frj/mmp/rox
/ (ANSA-AFP).