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Contemporary Author Display

September


Ivan Klíma
Czech

1931-

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Ivan Klíma is a Czech writer who was banned in his own country by the communist government after the 1968 Prague Spring reforms. One of about two hundred banned Czech writers, Klíma chose not to emigrate, unlike his fellow dissidents Milan Kundera and Josef Skvorecky, preferring to stay at home and write as best he could under the existing constraints. "Ivan Klíma," according to Eva Hoffman in the New York Times Book Review, "is among those urbane, plain-spoken literary spirits whose work travels successfully across political systems, as well as across continents."

 

During the communist government's ban on writers' work, an underground movement was formed in Czechoslovakia to circulate typewritten manuscripts among interested readers. The Russian term for writing circulated in this fashion is samizdat, generally translated as "writing for the desk-drawer." Circulating and reading samizdat writings were considered criminal offenses, so the reader as well as the writer took a risk in participating in the movement. After the collapse of the Czech communist government, restrictions loosened and efforts were made to reintegrate banned writers into Czech society and liberalize controls on the arts. Klíma was an active member and spokesperson for the revived Czech branch of PEN; in 1990 he became its president. (Contemporary Authors)

 

For more information check out the display in Burling or visit his page in Literary Resource Center online...

 

Related Authors:

Milan Kundera (1929-)
Josef Skvorecky (1924-)
Bohumil Hrabal (1914-1997)
Ludvik Vaculik (1926-)
Vaclav Havel (1936-)

 

Prepared by John Wepking '06

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