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On January 5, László Krasznahorkai, Kossuth Prize-winning writer and one of the most significant representatives of contemporary Hungarian authors, celebrated his 70th birthday.

Krasznahorkai describes himself as an unabashed chronicler of an age “from which high culture has disappeared forever.” As he said, “it is no longer a question of this high culture being lost or endangered, but of us having entered a new era, when the area of human culture that is unpolluted by the market and unable to adapt to its laws, in other words unsaleable and thus useless, has been wiped off the map, and in its place there is nothing left but what used to be called mass culture, as is now called culture.”

Spaces, distances, and a sense of isolation are prominent in his writings.

He draws inspiration mainly from his travel experiences, having “been on the road continuously” since the 1990s. His journeys in Europe, including a number of countries, have been broken by excursions to the USA and the Far East (China, Japan).

His first short story was published in 1977, in the journal Mozgó Világ (Moving World).

In 1985, his first novel, Sátántangó, linked a vision of universal destruction to a reality drawn with ruthless precision, was published to critical praise.

The latter was adapted as a screenplay with film director Béla Tarr, with whom he began collaborating (Werckmeister Harmonies, The Turin Horse).

Fact

Béla Tarr’s film Sátántangó, released in 1994, is the longest Hungarian film with a screening time of 450 minutes. Set shortly before the 1989 regime change, the film depicts the collapse of an agricultural collective in the Hungarian lowlands. The film is divided into twelve parts, not necessarily chronologically. Within each section, a kind of three-act structure can be identified. The long takes in the film and in Tarr’s work have often led to parallels being drawn between the Hungarian director and Andrei Tarkovsky. A veritable cult has developed around the film. Partly due to its particular artistic forms and length. The popularity of Sátántangó is comparable to Fassbender’s Berlin Alexanderplatz.

His most recent work was strongly influenced by the paintings of Max Neumann. His satirical novel Zsömle odavan (Zsömle is away) was published on January 3, 2024. He has won several prestigious Hungarian and international awards.

Novelist László Krasznahorkai Speaks about His Work with Poet Allen Ginsberg
Novelist László Krasznahorkai Speaks about His Work with Poet Allen Ginsberg

Exploring the past of our nominee for the Nobel Prize in literature.Continue reading

Via Kultura.hu; Featured Image: Facebook / Krasznahorkai László


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