- György Konrád
György (George) Konrád (born
April 2 ,1933 ) is a Hungarian novelist and essayist, known as an advocate of individual freedom. He was adissident under thecommunist regime.Life
Konrad was born in
Berettyóújfalu , nearDebrecen into an affluent Jewish family. He graduated in 1951 from the Madách Secondary School in Budapest, entered the Lenin Institute and eventually studied literature, sociology and psychology at theEötvös Loránd University . In 1956 he participated in the Hungarian Uprising against the Soviet occupation, but did not kill anybody, although he had a gun.First working at the Budapest Institute of Urban Planning and later the Academy's Institute for Literary Scholarship, he had a collision with the political system and lost his position, was jailed for some time, as well as being under a publication ban during most of the 1970s and early 1980s.
From 1982 to 1984 he lived in Berlin on a stipend. In 1990 he was elected president of
International PEN serving until 1993, and in 1997 he was the first non-German to become president of theAkademie der Künste in Berlin. [ [http://www.daad.de/alumni/en/4.2.6_08.html DAAD - wandel durch austausch - change by exchange ] ]He has published a number of essays on politics, literature and sociology, as well as fiction. One of Konrád's most significant novels is "The Case Worker", a bleak portrait of human suffering in modern urban industrial society, written from the perspective of a social services functionary. "A Feast in the Garden" and "The Stone Dial" are the first two parts of a semi autobiographical fictional trilogy.
In 2001 he received the
Charlemagne Award of the city ofAachen . [ [http://www.aachen.de/EN/sb/pr_az/karls_pr/laureates/declaration_01/index.html Charlemagne Prize 2001 ] ]In 2007 Konrád won the
National Jewish Book Award in the Biography, Autobiography & Memoir category, for "A Guest in my Own Country: A Hungarian Life". [http://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/external_links/NJBA2007_PR.pdf]Partial list of works
Fiction
* "The Case Worker"
* "The City Builder"
* "The Loser"
* "A Feast in the Garden"
* "The Stone Dial"
Non fiction
* "The Intellectual on the Road to Class Power" (1978), with
Iván Szelényi * "Antipolitics"
* "The Melancholy of Rebirth" (1995)
* "The Invisible Voice: Meditations on Jewish Themes"
* "A Guest in My Own Country: A Hungarian Life" (2003)
References
www.konradgyorgy.hu
External links
* [http://konradgyorgy.hu
* [http://dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=1092 "Chance Wanderings," an essay by Konrad on the 'revolutions' of 1989]
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/konrad.htm A biographical essay, written in English]]
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