Berliner Boersenzeitung - Czech novelist Milan Kundera dies at 94

EUR -
AED 3.849023
AFN 71.377105
ALL 98.713018
AMD 408.027217
ANG 1.888169
AOA 956.757159
ARS 1045.773778
AUD 1.6014
AWG 1.888888
AZN 1.790592
BAM 1.967019
BBD 2.115265
BDT 125.194055
BGN 1.966739
BHD 0.394852
BIF 3094.650597
BMD 1.047927
BND 1.412054
BOB 7.23929
BRL 6.078989
BSD 1.047676
BTN 88.429063
BWP 14.312633
BYN 3.428555
BYR 20539.367995
BZD 2.111745
CAD 1.460103
CDF 3008.598175
CHF 0.933105
CLF 0.03714
CLP 1024.7943
CNY 7.590121
CNH 7.588128
COP 4600.137266
CRC 533.643681
CUC 1.047927
CUP 27.770064
CVE 110.897513
CZK 25.354598
DJF 186.564084
DKK 7.458169
DOP 63.140125
DZD 140.654233
EGP 51.730874
ERN 15.718904
ETB 128.254711
FJD 2.385029
FKP 0.827147
GBP 0.832195
GEL 2.871238
GGP 0.827147
GHS 16.552408
GIP 0.827147
GMD 74.40309
GNF 9030.506244
GTQ 8.087126
GYD 219.180112
HKD 8.156576
HNL 26.475002
HRK 7.475134
HTG 137.524382
HUF 411.442327
IDR 16707.675541
ILS 3.888244
IMP 0.827147
INR 88.48302
IQD 1372.427756
IRR 44091.525793
ISK 146.374379
JEP 0.827147
JMD 166.901939
JOD 0.743084
JPY 161.400652
KES 135.673827
KGS 90.645742
KHR 4218.058045
KMF 495.144769
KPW 943.133847
KRW 1471.823666
KWD 0.322605
KYD 0.87308
KZT 523.103565
LAK 23012.252297
LBP 93817.093604
LKR 304.919132
LRD 189.098539
LSL 18.905328
LTL 3.094256
LVL 0.633881
LYD 5.116181
MAD 10.539412
MDL 19.10899
MGA 4889.889894
MKD 61.882955
MMK 3403.625819
MNT 3560.855681
MOP 8.399809
MRU 41.685758
MUR 49.095582
MVR 16.200603
MWK 1816.66148
MXN 21.338895
MYR 4.68214
MZN 66.973076
NAD 18.905328
NGN 1778.018417
NIO 38.549872
NOK 11.531786
NPR 141.486983
NZD 1.787143
OMR 0.40329
PAB 1.047676
PEN 3.972658
PGK 4.218058
PHP 61.763748
PKR 290.932457
PLN 4.335792
PYG 8178.647597
QAR 3.820792
RON 5.009395
RSD 117.676176
RUB 108.684182
RWF 1430.15702
SAR 3.934367
SBD 8.785353
SCR 14.355505
SDG 630.325516
SEK 11.490398
SGD 1.407224
SHP 0.827147
SLE 23.819044
SLL 21974.508901
SOS 598.71482
SRD 37.195159
STD 21689.971872
SVC 9.167286
SYP 2632.947722
SZL 18.898791
THB 36.095812
TJS 11.157437
TMT 3.667744
TND 3.328384
TOP 2.454353
TRY 36.229795
TTD 7.115584
TWD 34.145125
TZS 2786.794716
UAH 43.342206
UGX 3871.079021
USD 1.047927
UYU 44.554118
UZS 13440.659923
VES 48.790577
VND 26637.254851
VUV 124.411992
WST 2.925383
XAF 659.719767
XAG 0.033387
XAU 0.000385
XCD 2.832075
XDR 0.796945
XOF 659.719767
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.90314
ZAR 18.881343
ZMK 9432.600526
ZMW 28.941068
ZWL 337.432047
  • CMSC

    0.0320

    24.672

    +0.13%

  • RIO

    -0.2200

    62.35

    -0.35%

  • RBGPF

    59.2400

    59.24

    +100%

  • NGG

    1.0296

    63.11

    +1.63%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.79

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    0.9900

    46.75

    +2.12%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    13.27

    +1.73%

  • AZN

    1.3700

    65.63

    +2.09%

  • VOD

    0.1323

    8.73

    +1.52%

  • BP

    0.2000

    29.72

    +0.67%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    24.46

    +0.06%

  • BTI

    0.4000

    37.38

    +1.07%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    33.96

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    26.77

    +0.34%

  • BCC

    3.4200

    143.78

    +2.38%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

Czech novelist Milan Kundera dies at 94
Czech novelist Milan Kundera dies at 94 / Photo: - - AFP/File

Czech novelist Milan Kundera dies at 94

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.

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.

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.

(P.Werner--BBZ)