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OverviewMilan Kundera is one of the few Czech writers with worldwide readership. Often set within a political context, his novels have appealed to readers for their clarity and originality, intellectual flair, philosophical angles, and mythological metaphors. In Milan Kundera’s Fiction: A Critical Approach to Existential Betrayals, Karen von Kunes traces Kundera’s literary aspirations to a single episode in Czechoslovakia in the Stalinist era. This moment attracted international attention when a 1950 police report was released in 2008. Reporters rushed to judgment, accusing Kundera of denouncing a young man, Miroslav Dvořáček, to the police, resulting in Dvořáček’s immediate arrest and sentencing to hard labor. von Kunes debunks this shocking charge in a systematic and thorough fashion. She argues that Kundera reported a suitcase, not a man. Von Kunes further contends that two sentences in the report provide significant insight into Kundera’s novels and plays. She ties his dominant themes of sex, betrayal, and political denouncement to the suitcase, a fatal instrument that can lead to paradoxes and unforeseen and catastrophic coincidences for his characters. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Karen von KunesPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.517kg ISBN: 9781498510806ISBN 10: 1498510809 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 20 May 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsChapter One: The Author's Identity Unfolding Chapter Two: If You See Something, Say Something Chapter Three: The Suitcase, the Bearer of All Evil Chapter Four: Czech Destiny or Fate? Chapter Five: The Betrayal Chapter Six: Kundera's Sexual Politics? Chapter Seven: An Example of Interdisciplinary AnalysisReviewsKaren von Kunes has been following Kundera's work for years, and her judgment and analyses are always very precise in capturing the essence of the author's endeavor. Hers is the evolving attempt, very much in sync with Kundera's own changing themes and motifs. Kundera is responding to a new situation in the changing world and the sometimes uncomfortable changes in his fiction might be a challenge to some readers. Von Kunes makes sense of this challenging author in persuasive and clear interpretation of some of his most difficult works. -- Peter Petro, The University of British Columbia Karen von Kunes has been following Kundera's work for years, and her judgment and analyses are always very precise in capturing the essence of the author's endeavor. Hers is the evolving attempt, very much in sync with Kundera's own changing themes and motifs. Kundera is responding to a new situation in the changing world and the sometimes uncomfortable changes in his fiction might be a challenge to some readers. Von Kunes makes sense of this challenging author in persuasive and clear interpretation of some of his most difficult works. -- Peter Petro, The University of British Columbia Milan Kundera's Fiction is a topical, all-encompassing and very stimulating analysis of Milan Kundera's literary oeuvre. The author starts out by examining an incident from March 1950 when a CIA agent was arrested in Prague and Kundera may have been entangled in this event. A major role was played by coincidences and by a mysterious suitcase - hence von Kunes argues that the motif of suitcase is the fatal 'instrument' which always leads to catastrophic developments in Kundera's work. -- Jan Culik, University of Glasgow Karen von Kunes explores the ever-changing identity of Milan Kundera from his student days in Czechoslovakia to his authorial career in France, uncovering interwoven life struggles in the fiction of an inquisitive, analytical, and erudite mind. The case of a real-life valise that caught young Kundera's attention on March 14, 1950 and escalated into a political and human drama of betrayal and suffering reappears throughout his fiction. Digression, confusion, paradox, political plight, irrational behavior, secret police, and prison contribute to this comprehensive inquiry into Kundera's profoundly human stories of laughter and forgetting. -- Kenneth David Jackson, Yale University Author InformationKaren von Kunes is lecturer at Yale University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |