Thursday, August 7, 2014

Elfriede Jelinek was born in 1946 in Mürzzuschlag. His mother Olga, born Buchner, comes from a fami


Elfriede Jelinek was born in 1946 in Mürzzuschlag. His mother Olga, born Buchner, comes from a family of the great Viennese bourgeoisie. Her father, Frederick Jelinek, a Czech-Hebrew origin, died in 1969, was a chemist. After graduating from secondary school, Elfriede enrolled at the Vienna Conservatory, where he studied piano and composition at the beginning, later theatrical art and art history. In 1967 it had to discontinue the study due to mental disorders with feeling anxious and becoming withdrawn. In the tradition of the Viennese group, Elfriede Jelinek initially did not use uppercase, lowercase writing only. Write his first novel in 1968 entitled Bukola, who published it only in 1979 but in 1974 joins the Austrian Communist Party and engage in propaganda work, because in 1991 to withdraw from the party. She is married to Gottfried Hüngsberg composer of music for films, artistic circle grouped around Rainer Werner Fassbinder German director. Elfriede Jelinek recorded the first successful literary novel liebhaberinnen die (Mistresses), appeared in 1975, a Marxist-feminist caricature canvassing novels. Follow a series of plays and novels, characterized by aggressive style and non-conformist, causing a hostile reaction from the public and critics. Jelinek far remains a controversial writer in central social polemics and debates always current. The award of the Nobel Prize for literature finding exclaimed: "I am, of course, but I feel rather frightened." He decided not to attend the ceremony in Stockholm for the award, since not feel able to support that person all official ceremonies duties. "I would feel threatened there." Romanian literary bukolit.hörroman 1979 wir sind lockvögel baby !, 1970 Die Liebhaberinnen (Mistresses) 1975 Die Ausgesperrten (Excluded), 1980 Die Klavierspielerin (pianist), 1983 Wildnis Oh, oh Schutz will ihr, 1985 Lust (Greed), Die Kinder der Toten 1989 (dead children), 1997 Gier, 2000 Drama Was geschah, nachdem Nora ihren verlassen Hattie Mann, 1977 Burgtheater, 1983 Krankheit oder Moderne Frauen, 1984 Totenauberg, Raststätte 1991 1994 Ein Sportstück 1998 Bambiland 2003 Romanian translations Pianist, Roman, translated by Nora Yuga, Iaşi, Polirom, 2004 Excluded, novel, translation and notes by Maria Herod, Iaşi, Polirom 2005 Mistresses novel, translated by Ana Mureşanu, Iaşi, Polirom, 2006 Greed, novel, translation and notes by Maria Herod, Iaşi, Polirom, 2008 ***** Elfriede Jelinek - The unexpected Nobel Gelu vlasin (10-10-2005) The 10th female winner of the Nobel Prize history, prize worth the amount of 1.1 million, is unknown to many people.
Austrian Elfriede Jelinek, aged 57 years, one of the most controversial and contentious contemporary German writer, against all odds would be one that shatter the dreams of glory of Margaret Atwood Canadian women, considered the favorite by many Western publishers and overseas. Unfortunately, for the latter, the Nobel Prize was to go into a surprising direction. Regarded as a staunch feminist, Elfriede Jelinek generally enters history with Nobel Prize: Swedish novelist Selma Lagerlof (1858 - 1940), winner of the Nobel Prize in 1909, the Italian novelist Garaz Deleeda (1871-1936), Nobel 1926 Norwegian novelist projections Sigrid Undeset (1882-1949), Nobel 1928 Pearl S. Buck American (1892-1973), Nobel 1938 poetess Gabriela Mistral Chilena (1889-1957), Nobel 1945 German playwright and poet Nelly Sachs (1891-1970), Nobel 1966 South African novelist Nadine Gordimer, born in 1923, Nobel 1991 American novelist Toni Morrison, born in 1931, Nobel Wislawa Szymborska in 1993 and the Polish poet, born in 1923, 1996 Austrian Nobel Elfrida Jelinek, even though it was not so unknown what seemed at first sight. She gained international fame with cinematographic transposition of the novel Die Klavierspielerin (pianist) (1983), conducted by Michael Haneke having interpretation: Isabelle Huppert. (Erika Kohut), Benoît Magimel (Walter Klemmer), Annie Girardot (mother), Anna Sigalevitch (Anna Schober), Susanne projections Lothar (Miss. Schober), Udo Samel (Dr. Blonskij) Köndgen Cornelia (Mrs.. Blonskij). This film won the Grand Jury Prize plus two awards section interpretation in Cannes - 2001, not before the public protests stir coyly, because hard scenes, projections like sado-masochistic. The film was presented at the International Festival in Romania

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