Birth Certificate

The Story of Danilo Kis

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Pub Date Mar 19 2013 | Archive Date Apr 25 2013

Description

Danilo Kis (1935–89) was a Yugoslav novelist, essayist, poet, and translator whose work generated storms of controversy in his homeland but today holds classic status. Kis was championed by prominent literary figures around the world, including Joseph Brodsky, Susan Sontag, Milan Kundera, Philip Roth, Nadine Gordimer, and Salman Rushdie. As more of his works become available in translation, they are prized by an international readership drawn to Kis's innovative brilliance as a storyteller and to his profound meditation on history, culture, and the human condition at the end of the twentieth century.A subtle analysis of a rich and varied body of writing, Birth Certificate is also a careful and sensitive telling of a life that experienced some of the last century's greatest cruelties. Kis's father was a Hungarian Jew, his mother a Montenegrin of Orthodox faith. The father disappeared into the Holocaust and the son—cosmopolitan, anticommunist, and passionately opposed to the myth-drenched nationalisms of his native lands—grew up chafing against the hypocrisies of Titoism. His writing broke with the epic mode, pioneered modernist techniques in his language, fulminated against literary kitsch, and sketched out a literary heritage "with no Sun as its Center and Tyrant." Joyce and Borges were influences on his writing, which nevertheless is stunningly original. The best known of his works are Garden, Ashes; The Encyclopedia of the Dead; Hourglass; The Anatomy Lesson; and A Tomb for Boris Davidovich. Over the course of nearly two decades, Mark Thompson studied Kis's papers and interviewed his family members, friends, and admirers. His intimate understanding of the writer's life and his sure grasp of the region's history inform his revelatory readings of Kis's individual works.More than an appreciation of an important literary and cultural figure, this book is also a compelling guide to the destructive policies which would, shortly after Kis’s death, generate the worst violence in Europe since World War II. Thompson’s book pays tribute to Kis’s experimentalism by being itself experimental in form. It is patterned as a series of commentaries on a short autobiographical text that Kis called "Birth Certificate." This unusual structure adds to the interest and intrigue of the book, and is appropriate for treating so autobiographical a writer who believed that literary meaning is always deeply shaped by other texts.

Danilo Kis (1935–89) was a Yugoslav novelist, essayist, poet, and translator whose work generated storms of controversy in his homeland but today holds classic status. Kis was championed by prominent...


Advance Praise

“This is the genre of biography transformed. Mark Thompson is equal to the great elusive task of creating the life of an unclassifiable genius, Danilo Kiš.”—Nadine Gordimer

“This is a fascinating biography: retracing the life of the great European writer Danilo Kiš and rereading his prose has led to a volume that can be viewed as an indispensable—and very well written—book about the complex relationship between history and literature in Central and Eastern Europe. Mark Thompson‘s competence in this field is breathtaking.”—Adam Zagajewski

“In Birth Certificate, Mark Thompson explores, with perseverance and an exquisite sense for detail, the rich and complex world of the great man and great writer, Danilo Kiš, with passion, respect, and loyalty to its subject.”—Dušan Makavejev, director of WR: Mysteries of the Organism and Montenegro

“Mark Thompson’s erudite and engaging study is a biography and a literary exploration imbued with the formal playfulness that Danilo Kiš loved. Clearly the product of an enduring personal obsession, this Birth Certificate is a fitting and long overdue English memorial to a great writer.”—Vesna Goldsworthy, author of Chernobyl Strawberries and Inventing Ruritania

“Mark Thompson’s creative procedure is unexpected: taking on his journey only one document, a sort of literary visa—Kiš’s short text, “Birth Certificate”—he treats it as hypertext, linking not only to Kiš’s own work but to cultural history, regional studies, politics, geography, mentalite, etc. Opening new semantic boxes one after another, Thompson’s reading of this great European writer becomes excitingly rich.”—Dubravka Ugrešić, author of The Culture of Lies and Thank You for Not Reading

“Mark Thompson has settled our collective debt to Danilo Kiš, the great Central European writer, who belonged to many cultures and traditions and whose life was itself literature. Nuanced, wise, and poetic, Birth Certificate just might reawaken interest in Kiš, whose story is paradigmatic and important as a signpost in contemporary chaos.”—Ivo Banac, Yale University

“This is the genre of biography transformed. Mark Thompson is equal to the great elusive task of creating the life of an unclassifiable genius, Danilo Kiš.”—Nadine Gordimer

“This is a fascinating...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780801448881
PRICE $40.00 (USD)