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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mark ThompsonPublisher: Cornell University Press Imprint: Cornell University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.907kg ISBN: 9780801448881ISBN 10: 0801448883 Pages: 376 Publication Date: 15 February 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Language: English Table of ContentsIntroduction: Great and Invisible Birth Certificate (A Short Autobiography) by Danilo Kis 1. Birth Certificate (A Short Autobiography) 2. My father 3. came into the world 4. in western Hungary 5. and was educated at the commercial college ... 6. the birthplace of a certain Mr Virag ... 7. by the grace 8. of Mr Joyce ... First Interlude-The Garret (1962) 9. I believe it was the liberal policy ... 10. together with a desire for integration ... 11. Many details of the family chronicle ... 12. Among my ancestors on my mother's side ... 13. The ethnographic rarity I represent ... 14. In 1939, in my fourth year ... 15. my parents had me baptised ... 16. This saved my life. 17. I lived until my thirteenth year ... Second Interlude-Garden, Ashes (1965) 18. I worked as a servant for rich peasants ... 19. The 'troubling dissimilarity' that Freud calls ... Third Interlude-Early Sorrows (1969) 20. in my ninth year I wrote my first poems ... 21. From my mother I inherited a propensity ... Fourth Interlude-Hourglass (1972) 22. And it was not without significance ... 23. My mother read novels until her twentieth year ... 24. In 1947 we were repatriated by the Red Cross ... 25. Immediately after we arrived ... 26. I had to wait a year or two ... 27. For two years I learned violin ... 28. At the secondary school I continued to write ... 29. We were taught Russian by White Army officers ... Fifth Interlude-A Tomb for Boris Davidovich (1976) 30. From the Gymnasium I entered the University ... Sixth Interlude-The Anatomy Lesson (1978) 31. As a lector for Serbo-Croatian ... 32. For the last few years I have been living in Paris ... Seventh Interlude-The Encyclopaedia of the Dead (1983) 33 (1983) Acknowledgements Notes Bibliography IndexReviews<p> With Thompson's exhilarating feat of biography and literary criticism, English readers can finally gain an introduction to the cerebral and experimental works of Yugoslavian poet, novelist, and playwright Danilo Kis. . . . Thompson, a graceful writer and storyteller in his own right, restores Kis to his rightful place in the pantheon of 20th-century writers in a biography that should appeal to any reader interested in contemporary world literature. Publishers Weekly (17 December 2012) Mark Thompson has settled our collective debt to Danilo Kis, the great Central European writer, who belonged to many cultures and traditions and whose life was itself literature. Nuanced, wise, and poetic, Birth Certificate just might reawaken interest in Kis, whose story is paradigmatic and important as a signpost in contemporary chaos. Ivo Banac, Yale University <p> With Thompson's exhilarating feat of biography and literary criticism, English readers can finally gain an introduction to the cerebral and experimental works of Yugoslavian poet, novelist, and playwright Danilo Kis. . . . Thompson, a graceful writer and storyteller in his own right, restores Kis to his rightful place in the pantheon of 20th-century writers in a biography that should appeal to any reader interested in contemporary world literature. -Publishers Weekly (17 December 2012) <p> Mark Thompson has settled our collective debt to Danilo Kis, the great Central European writer, who belonged to many cultures and traditions and whose life was itself literature. Nuanced, wise, and poetic, Birth Certificate just might reawaken interest in Kis, whose story is paradigmatic and important as a signpost in contemporary chaos. -Ivo Banac, Yale University How can one restore justice to Danilo Kis? That is the task for Kis's future reader - and one way to begin, now that this reader has Mark Thompson's comprehensive, erudite and stylish new biography, is to rehearse the basic outline of Kis's life and works... [Thompson's] book is also remarkable for its attention to the detail of Kis's fiction. This is a great biography of the work as much as the life. -Adam Thirlwell, Times Literary Supplement (October 9, 2013) @font-face { font-family: Times New Roman ;}p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: Times New Roman ; }table.MsoNormalTable { font-size: 10pt; font-family: Times New Roman ; }div.Section1 { page: Section1; } British writer Thompson pays homage to one of the 20th century's most innovative and difficult writers in the very form of this immense autobiography that simultaneously moonlights as an attempt to rekindle interest in Kis's work and as a cultural history of Jews in south central Europe ... he ultimately succeeds brilliantly by using this patchwork approach to put Kis and his works into a wide range of contexts. Given that translations of Kis's work are vanishing from print, this study makes a compelling plea to reverse that trend. Summing Up: Recommended. -Choice (October 2013) [An] invigorating biography of Kis-a spirited interweaving of life, literary championing, and critical analysis... Thompson's book, lovingly researched, stimulatingly constructed, subtly and passionately written, panoptically reflecting Kis's contradictions, is a resurrection of (Kundera's words) a 'great and invisible' talent. -Julian Evans, The Independent (London) With Thompson's exhilarating feat of biography and literary criticism, English readers can finally gain an introduction to the cerebral and experimental works of Yugoslavian poet, novelist, and playwright Danilo Kis... Thompson, a graceful writer and storyteller in his own right, restores Kis to his rightful place in the pantheon of 20th-century writers in a biography that should appeal to any reader interested in contemporary world literature. -Publishers Weekly (17 December 2012) Yugoslav writer Danilo Kis (1935-1989) may not be well-known to American-Jewish readers, but this ambitious biography at least offers a context for understanding Kis's very real contributions to Jewish/Serbo-Croatian letters...Anyone interested in modern Eastern European literature, particularly the role of Jewish writers, will find this biography important reading. -Jewish Book Council This is the genre of biography transformed. Mark Thompson is equal to the great elusive task of creating the life of an unclassifiable genius, Danilo Kis. -Nadine Gordimer This is a fascinating biography: retracing the life of the great European writer Danilo Kis and rereading his prose has led to a volume that can be viewed as an indispensable-and very well written-book about the complex relationship between history and literature in Central and Eastern Europe. Mark Thompson's competence in this field is breathtaking. -Adam Zagajewski In Birth Certificate, Mark Thompson explores, with perseverance and an exquisite sense for detail, the rich and complex world of the great man and great writer, Danilo Kis, with passion, respect, and loyalty to its subject. -Dusan Makavejev, director of WR: Mysteries of the Organism and Montenegro Mark Thompson's erudite and engaging study is a biography and a literary exploration imbued with the formal playfulness that Danilo Kis loved. Clearly the product of an enduring personal obsession, this Birth Certificate is a fitting and long overdue English memorial to a great writer. -Vesna Goldsworthy, author of Chernobyl Strawberries and Inventing Ruritania Mark Thompson's creative procedure is unexpected: taking on his journey only one document, a sort of literary visa-Kis's short text, Birth Certificate -he treats it as hypertext, linking not only to Kis's own work but to cultural history, regional studies, politics, geography, mentalite, etc. Opening new semantic boxes one after another, Thompson's reading of this great European writer becomes excitingly rich. -Dubravka Ugresic, author of The Culture of Lies and Thank You for Not Reading Mark Thompson has settled our collective debt to Danilo Kis, the great Central European writer, who belonged to many cultures and traditions and whose life was itself literature. Nuanced, wise, and poetic, Birth Certificate just might reawaken interest in Kis, whose story is paradigmatic and important as a signpost in contemporary chaos. -Ivo Banac, Yale University Author InformationMark Thompson is the author of A Paper House: The Ending of Yugoslavia, Forging War: The Media in Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia-Hercegovina, and The White War: Life and Death on the Italian Front, 1915-1919. He lives in Oxford. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |