Description

Book Synopsis

An engaging and experimental biography of Danilo Kis (1935–89), the Yugoslav novelist, essayist, poet, and translator whose work generated storms of controversy in his homeland but today holds classic status.



Trade Review

Birth Certificate: The Story of Danilo Kis by British historian Mark Thompson is a brilliant guide to the biography of the Serbian writer Danilo Kis.... This work serves as a hermeneutic key for interpreting Kis's writings through the prism of circumstances in his life. Birth Certificate may be considered as a collection of historical, literary and philosophical comments.

* European History Quarterly *

How can one restore justice to Danilo Kiš? That is the task for Kiš'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 Kiš’s life and works.... [Thompson's] book is also remarkable for its attention to the detail of Kiš’s fiction. This is a great biography of the work as much as the life.

-- Adam Thirlwell * Times Literary Supplement *

Mark Thompson's biography of Danilo Kiš takes its cue from Hourglass... Thompson interrogates Kiš’s rather misleading autobiographical fragment, 'Birth Certificate,’ phrase by phrase, to generate an exemplary account of his life and works.... Thompson is more than equal to these tasks... I can hardly speak too highly of this biography. Its organization is impeccable: a great deal of information must be imparted to make Kiš’s circumstances clear, and this is done in relatively short chapters with impeccable lucidity and many helpful cross-references.... This is a fascinating and comprehensive introduction to the life and work of Danilo Kiš and an excellent book in its own right.

-- Chris Miller * PN Review *

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 *

"Yugoslav writer Danilo Kiš 1935-1989 may not be well-known to American-Jewish readers, but this ambitious biography at least offers a context for understanding Kiš'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


Even if I'm on the jury or the shortlist I deprecate literary prizes because they tend to endorse current tastes. This year, however, the Shannon Prize (which my university awards annually for the best work on an aspect of European culture) went to one of the most impressive, innovative, sensitive biographies I have ever read. Mark Thompson’sBirth Certificate(Cornell) conjures, daringly and deftly, the Montenegrin iconoclast, Danilo Kiš, and the political environment he inhabited – Communist, nationalist, cruel, distasteful, and yet navigable by a writer of genius. Thompson builds his picture from fragments of a demolished world with unfailing command of the evidence and unflagging fidelity to a moral stance as challenging as uncompromising as Kiš’s own.

-- Felipe Fernandez-Armesto * Times Literary Supplement "Books of the Year" *

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 *

Table of Contents

Introduction: Great and Invisible
Birth Certificate (A Short Autobiography) by Danilo Kiš1. 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 Virág...
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
Index

Birth Certificate

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A Hardback by Mark Thompson

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    View other formats and editions of Birth Certificate by Mark Thompson

    Publisher: Cornell University Press
    Publication Date: 19/03/2013
    ISBN13: 9780801448881, 978-0801448881
    ISBN10: 0801448883

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    An engaging and experimental biography of Danilo Kis (1935–89), the Yugoslav novelist, essayist, poet, and translator whose work generated storms of controversy in his homeland but today holds classic status.



    Trade Review

    Birth Certificate: The Story of Danilo Kis by British historian Mark Thompson is a brilliant guide to the biography of the Serbian writer Danilo Kis.... This work serves as a hermeneutic key for interpreting Kis's writings through the prism of circumstances in his life. Birth Certificate may be considered as a collection of historical, literary and philosophical comments.

    * European History Quarterly *

    How can one restore justice to Danilo Kiš? That is the task for Kiš'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 Kiš’s life and works.... [Thompson's] book is also remarkable for its attention to the detail of Kiš’s fiction. This is a great biography of the work as much as the life.

    -- Adam Thirlwell * Times Literary Supplement *

    Mark Thompson's biography of Danilo Kiš takes its cue from Hourglass... Thompson interrogates Kiš’s rather misleading autobiographical fragment, 'Birth Certificate,’ phrase by phrase, to generate an exemplary account of his life and works.... Thompson is more than equal to these tasks... I can hardly speak too highly of this biography. Its organization is impeccable: a great deal of information must be imparted to make Kiš’s circumstances clear, and this is done in relatively short chapters with impeccable lucidity and many helpful cross-references.... This is a fascinating and comprehensive introduction to the life and work of Danilo Kiš and an excellent book in its own right.

    -- Chris Miller * PN Review *

    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 *

    "Yugoslav writer Danilo Kiš 1935-1989 may not be well-known to American-Jewish readers, but this ambitious biography at least offers a context for understanding Kiš'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


    Even if I'm on the jury or the shortlist I deprecate literary prizes because they tend to endorse current tastes. This year, however, the Shannon Prize (which my university awards annually for the best work on an aspect of European culture) went to one of the most impressive, innovative, sensitive biographies I have ever read. Mark Thompson’sBirth Certificate(Cornell) conjures, daringly and deftly, the Montenegrin iconoclast, Danilo Kiš, and the political environment he inhabited – Communist, nationalist, cruel, distasteful, and yet navigable by a writer of genius. Thompson builds his picture from fragments of a demolished world with unfailing command of the evidence and unflagging fidelity to a moral stance as challenging as uncompromising as Kiš’s own.

    -- Felipe Fernandez-Armesto * Times Literary Supplement "Books of the Year" *

    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 *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction: Great and Invisible
    Birth Certificate (A Short Autobiography) by Danilo Kiš1. 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 Virág...
    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
    Index

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