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Milan Kundera's Identity translated from the French by Linda Asher.There are situations in which we fail for a moment to recognize the person we are with, in which the identity of the other is erased while we simultaneously doubt our own. That also happens with couples -- indeed, above all with couples, because lovers fear more than anything else "losing sight" of the loved one. With stunning artfulness in expanding and playing variations on the meaningful moment, Milan Kundera has made this situation -- and the vague sense of panic it inspires -- the very fabric of his new novel. Here brevity goes hand in hand with intensity, and a moment of bewilderment marks the start of a labyrinthine journey during which the reader repeatedly crosses the border between the real and the unreal, between what occurs in the world outside and what the mind creates in its solitude. Of all contemporary writers, only Kundera can transform such a hidden and disconcerting perception into the material for a novel, one of his finest, most painful, and most enlightening. Which, surprisingly, turns out to be a love story.
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Estimated Reading Time: 4 hrs. 59 min.Page Number: 176Publication Date: 21 April 1998First Publication Date: January 1998Publisher: HarperOriginal Title: L`identité
ISBN: 9780060175641Language: İngilizce
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Reader Profile of the Book

Kadın% 71.9
Erkek% 28.1
0-12 Yaş
13-17 Yaş
18-24 Yaş
25-34 Yaş
35-44 Yaş
45-54 Yaş
55-64 Yaş
65+ Yaş

About the Author

Milan Kundera
Milan KunderaYazar · 18 books
This text has been automatically translated from Turkish. Show Original
Milan Kundera is a writer of Czech-French origin. Kundera was born on April 1, 1929 in Brno, Czechoslovakia. He wrote 15 books, received numerous awards, and in addition to his writing career, he worked professionally in music and cinema for many years. He lives in Paris with his wife. life He was born in 1929 as the second child of the middle-class Kundera family. His father, Ludvik Kundera (1891-1971), was a student of the famous musicologist and pianist Leoš Janaček, who was the director of the Brno Music Academy between 1948 and 1961. He took his first piano lessons from his father and in the following years he also studied musicology. After completing his high school education in Brünn in 1948, he studied literature and aesthetics at the Faculty of Fine Arts of Charles University. After two semesters, he transferred to the Film Academy and wrote his first articles on directing, but later had to stop his studies due to political pressure. II. He became a member of the Communist Party at the end of World War II. However, he was expelled from the party in February 1948. In 1950, another Czech writer Jan Trefulka was suspended from the Communist Party for his activities against it. Trefulka wrote about the events of those days in Pršelo jim štěstí in 1962. He described it in his novel (The Happiness Rising from Them). Kundera must have seen what happened to him in those days as a joke, so he named his book Žert (Joke), in which he tells about what happened to him during the process of being expelled from the party. Milan Kundera, who re-entered the Communist Party in 1956, was expelled from the party for the second time in 1976, along with famous writers and artists such as Vaclav Havel. After the Russian invasion in 1968, Kundera, who was dismissed from his post at the Prague Academy of Music and Arts, could not stand the political pressures and immigrated to France and became a French citizen in 1981. "Your Laugh and Your Forget", which he wrote in 1979. After the publication of his book, the Czechoslovak government stripped Kundera of his citizenship. He shared the Commonwealth Award, which was received by Gabriel Garcia Marquez in 1980, with Tennessee Williams in 1981. His best-known novel, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, was adapted into a movie by Philip Kaufman in 1988. Kundera, who was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Michigan in 1983, was awarded the Jerusalem Prize in 1985. Described as the most successful intellectual novelist of our age and the last of the existentialists, Kundera's last book, A Meeting, was published in 2009 and translated into Turkish in 2010. He passed away at his home in Paris on July 11, 2023, after a long illness. Awards Medicis Award (Life Is Elsewhere) Mondello Award (Jacques and His Master) Commonwealth Prize Europa Literatura Award Jerusalem Prize