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Elfriede Jelinek

 
Who2 Biography: Elfriede Jelinek, Writer

  • Born: 20 October 1946
  • Birthplace: Mürzzuschlag, Austria
  • Best Known As: 2004 Nobel-winning Austrian novelist

Elfriede Jelinek is a controversial Austrian novelist and dramatist who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2004. In the early 1960s she studied music composition and theater science, and by the early '70s was also active in leftist politics. She began writing radio plays, and her 1974 play "When the Sun Sinks It's Time to Close Shop" made her famous in Austria and Germany. Jelinek's work has often caused controversy, especially in Austria, where she has been criticized for pointing to Austria's role in World War II fascism. Her work has also been described as "pornographic" for its frank depictions of sex and violence, but Jelinek's reputation as an overtly political writer has kept critics from denouncing her work as simply prurient. Her work is little known outside of Germany and Austria, but she is considered an influential writer and in 2004 she won the Nobel Prize for literature, only the tenth woman to do so. Her most famous books are Wonderful, Wonderful Times (1980) and The Piano Teacher (1983). The latter was made into a feature film starring Isabelle Huppert and was released in 2001. Famously reclusive (she describes herself as having a "social phobia"), Jelinek released her 2007 novel online, under the title Neid (Envy).

Jelinek also wrote a libretto for an opera by Olga Neuwirth, based on Lost Highway, the movie by David Lynch.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Elfriede Jelinek
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(born Oct. 20, 1946, Mürzzuschlag, Austria) Austrian novelist and playwright. At age 17 she suffered an emotional breakdown, and during her recovery she turned to writing as a form of self-expression and introspection. A polemical feminist, Jelinek often wrote about gender oppression and female sexuality. She also rejected the conventions of literary tradition in favour of linguistic and thematic experimentation. Among her notable novels are Wonderful, Wonderful Times (1980), The Piano Teacher (1983; filmed 2001), and Lust (1989). She also wrote a number of plays, including Clara S. (1984) and Bambiland (2003). In 2004 Jelinek won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

For more information on Elfriede Jelinek, visit Britannica.com.

German Literature Companion: Elfriede Jelinek
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Jelinek, Elfriede (Mürzzuschlag, Styria, 1946- ), has lived in Vienna since early childhood. She was tutored from a young age in a range of musical instruments, studied piano and organ at the Vienna conservatoire and completed six semesters of theatre studies and art history at the university. After a year convalescing from a nervous breakdown, Jelinek began writing. Her œuvre covers a wide range of genres including poetry, Lisas Schatten (1967) and ende. Gedichte 1966-1968 (1980); the Hörspiel and Hörroman; television and film scripts, notably Malina (1991, see Todesarten), based on a novel by Ingeborg Bachmann; libretti; essays and articles on literature and topical political issues. She is best known, however, as a novelist and playwright. Jelinek's preoccupation with popular culture is most evident in her early experimental novels, wir sind lockvögel baby! (1970) and Michael. Ein Jugendbuch für die Infantilgesellschaft (1973) which establish her use of the key techniques of montage and parody. She is widely received as a feminist writer, mainly as a result of novels such as Die Liebhaberinnen (1975), Die Klavierspielerin (1983), and Lust (1989). Her feminism is informed by her socialist beliefs (she was a member of the Austrian communist party until 1991), evident throughout her writing, both in its obvious endeavour to expose oppression and fascism and in the aesthetic devices and forms chosen. Type characters and caricatures are deployed throughout in order to suggest wider social relevance and promote political analysis. She strays most from this principle in the autobiographically inspired Die Klavierspielerin, which presents the abnormal sexual behaviour of a middle-aged daughter as a result of her oppressive upbringing and the over-zealous bourgeois aspirations of her possessive mother. The theme of sexuality is given extreme expression in the best-seller, Lust, where the mystique of the male libido is turned on its head in a hard-hitting critique of pornographic writing. Jelinek is a controversial figure, particularly in her native Austria, which forms the setting for most of her writings. The play Burgtheater (1984, in Theaterstücke, premièred 1985), for example, suggests the involvement of actors of the Burgtheater with the National Socialists, implying the complicity of the institution itself. In spite of much public disapproval, Jelinek's reputation as a brilliant political satirist has continued to grow. Raststätte oder sie machens alle was the first of her plays to be premièred in Vienna (in 1994). Other major works include bukolit (1979), Die Ausgesperrten (1980), Clara S. and Was geschah, nachdem Nora ihren Mann verlassen hatte oder Stützen der Gesellschaft, both in Theaterstücke (1984), Oh Wildnis, oh Schutz vor ihr (1985), Krankheit oder Moderne Frauen (1987), Wolken. Heim (1990), Totenauberg (1991), and Die Kinder der Toten (1995). Jelinek has been awarded a number of prizes, both Austrian and German, including the Heinrich Böll Prize (1986).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Elfriede Jelinek
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Jelinek, Elfriede (yĕl'ĭnĕk), 1946-, Austrian novelist and playwright, b. Mürzzuschlag. A trained musician who also studied art history and theater, she began her literary career with the poems of Lisas Schatten (1967) and turned to fiction in her first novel (1970). She became a well-known and extremely controversial figure in her homeland with the publication of three novels, Die Liebhaberinnen (1975, tr. Women as Lovers, 1994), Die Ausgesperrten (1980, tr. Wonderful, Wonderful Times, 1990), and the semiautobiographical Klavierspielerin (1983, tr. The Piano Teacher, 1988; film, 2001). A fiercely feminist writer and an outspoken partisan of left-wing political views, she has often focused on issues of power and privilege, mainly the social subordination and violent sexual subjugation of women, and on Austria's Nazi past and nationalist present. She has been particularly praised for her powerful yet sensitive use of multilayered language. Her later novels include Lust (1989, tr. 1992), Die Kinder der Toten [children of the dead] (1995), and Gier (2000, tr. Greed, 2007). She is also known for her unconventional radio and stage plays, e.g., Burgtheater (1984), The Farewell (2001), and Bambiland (2003), and has written screenplays, an opera libretto, and essays. The winner of Germany's Böll (1986), Büchner (1998), and Heine (2002) prizes, she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2004.

Bibliography

See studies by A. Fiddler (1994) and J. B. Johns and K. Arens, ed. (1994).

Wikipedia: Elfriede Jelinek
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Elfriede Jelinek

Born October 20, 1946 (1946-10-20) (age 63)
Mürzzuschlag, Styria, Austria
Occupation playwright, novelist
Nationality Austrian
Genres Feminism, social criticism, postdramatic theatre
Notable work(s) Die Klavierspielerin, Lust, Gier
Notable award(s) Nobel Prize in Literature
2004
Official website

Elfriede Jelinek (German pronunciation: [ˀɛlˈfʀiːdɛ ˈjɛlinɛk]) (born 20 October 1946) is an Austrian playwright and novelist. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2004 for her "musical flow of voices and counter-voices in novels and plays that, with extraordinary linguistic zeal, reveal the absurdity of society's clichés and their subjugating power."

Contents

Biography

Jelinek was born in Mürzzuschlag, Styria. Her father, a chemist of Jewish-Czech origin ("Jelinek" means "little deer" in Czech) managed to avoid persecution during the Second World War by working in strategically important industrial production. However, several dozen family members became victims of the Holocaust. Her mother, with whom she shared the household even as an adult, and with whom she had a difficult relationship, was from a formerly prosperous Vienna family. As a child, Elfriede suffered from what she considered an over-restrictive education in a Roman Catholic convent school in Vienna. Her mother planned a career as a musical Wunderkind for Elfriede. From an early age, she was instructed in piano, organ, guitar, violin, viola and recorder. Later, she went on to study at the Vienna Conservatory, where she graduated with an organist diploma. Jelinek also studied art history and drama at the University of Vienna. However, she had to discontinue her studies due to an anxiety disorder that prevented her from following courses.

Jelinek started writing poetry at a young age. She made her literary debut with the collection Lisas Schatten in 1967.

In the early 1970s, Jelinek married Gottfried Hüngsberg.

Work and politics

Prior to winning the Nobel Prize, her work was largely unknown outside the German-speaking world and was said to resemble that of acclaimed Austrian playwright Thomas Bernhard, with its pathology of destruction and its concomitant comedic abrogation. In fact, despite the author's own differentiation from Austria, Jelinek's writing is deeply rooted in the tradition of Austrian literature, showing the influence of Austrian writers such as Ingeborg Bachmann and Robert Musil.

Jelinek's political positions (in particular her feminist stance and her party affiliations) are of vital importance to any assessment of her work. They are also a part of the reason for the vitriolic controversy surrounding Jelinek and her work.

Brief history of Jelinek's political engagements

Jelinek was a member of Austria's Communist Party from 1974 to 1991. Jelinek became a household name during the 1990s due to her vociferous clash with Jörg Haider's far-right Freedom Party. Following the 1999 National Council elections and the subsequent formation of a coalition cabinet consisting of the Freedom Party and the Austrian People's Party, Jelinek became one of the new cabinet's most vocal critics. Citing the Freedom Party's alleged nationalism and authoritarianism, many European and overseas administrations swiftly decided openly to ostracize Austria's administration. The cabinet construed the sanctions against it as directed against Austria as such and attempted to prod the nation into a national rallying (Nationaler Schulterschluss) behind the coalition parties. This provoked a temporary heating of the political climate severe enough for dissidents such as Jelinek to be accused of treason by coalition supporters.

Jelinek's work

Jelinek's work is multi-faceted and highly controversial. It has been by turns praised and condemned by leading literary critics (in the wake of the Fritzl case, for example, she was accused of "executing 'hysterical' portraits of Austrian perversity"[1]). Likewise, her political activism evokes divergent and often heated reactions. Despite the public controversy surrounding her work, Jelinek has won many distinguished prizes, among them are the Georg Büchner Prize in 1998; the Mülheim Dramatists Prize in 2002 and 2004; the Franz Kafka Prize in 2004; and the Nobel Prize in Literature, also in 2004.

Prevalent topics in her prose and dramatic works are female sexuality, its abuse and the battle of the sexes in general. Texts such as Wir sind Lockvögel, Baby! (We are Decoys, Baby!), Die Liebhaberinnen (Women as Lovers) and Die Klavierspielerin (The Piano Teacher) showcase the brutality and power play inherent in human relations in a style that is at times ironically formal and tightly controlled. According to Jelinek, power and aggression are often the principal driving forces of relationships. Her provocative novel Lust contains graphically-delineated descriptions of sexuality, aggression and abuse. It received poor reviews by many critics, some of whom considered it little more than pornography, but was considered misunderstood and undervalued by others, who noted the power of the cold descriptions of moral failures.

In her later work, Jelinek has somewhat abandoned female issues to focus her energy on social criticism in general and Austria's difficulties to owning up to its Nazi past in particular; an example is Die Kinder der Toten (The Children of the Dead).

Her plays often involve an emphasis on choreography. In Sportstück, for example, the issue of violence and fascism in sports is explored. Some consider her plays taciturn, others lavish, and others still a new form of theater altogether.

Jelinek's novel Die Klavierspielerin (The Piano Player) was filmed with title The Piano Teacher by Austrian director Michael Haneke, with French actress Isabelle Huppert as the protagonist.

In late April 2006, Jelinek stood up to protect Peter Handke, whose play Die Kunst des Fragens (The Art of Asking) was removed from the repertoire of the Comédie-Française for his alleged support of Slobodan Milošević.

The Nobel Prize

Commenting on the Nobel Prize, she said she felt very happy to receive the Prize, but also felt despair: "despair for becoming a known, a person of the public". Paradigmatic for her modesty and subtle self-irony, she – a reputed feminist writer – wondered if she had not been awarded the prize mainly for "being a woman" and suggested that among authors writing in German, Peter Handke whom she praises as a "living classic", would have been a more worthy recipient.

Jelinek was criticized for not accepting the prize in person; instead, a video message was presented at the ceremony. Others appreciated that Jelinek openly disclosed that she suffers from agoraphobia and social phobia, anxiety disorders which can be highly disruptive to everyday functioning yet are often concealed by those affected out of shame or feeling of inadequacy. Jelinek has said that her anxiety disorders make it impossible for her even to go to the cinema or to board an airplane (in an interview she wished to be able to fly to New York to see the skyscrapers one day before dying), and she felt incapable of taking part in any ceremony. However, in her own words as stated in another tape message: "I would also very much like to be in Stockholm, but I cannot move as fast and far as my language."

In 2005, Knut Ahnlund left the Swedish Academy in protest, describing Jelinek's work as "whining, unenjoyable public pornography" as well as "a mass of text shoveled together without artistic structure". He said later her selection for the prize "has not only done irreparable damage to all progressive forces, it has also confused the general view of literature as an art".[2]

Bibliography

Novels

Plays

  • Was geschah, nachdem Nora ihren Mann verlassen hatte; oder Stützen der Gesellschaften (What Happened after Nora Left Her Husband; or Pillars of Society) premiered in Graz, Austria (October 1979) With Kurt Josef Schildknecht as director.
  • Clara S, musikalische Tragödie (Clara S, a Musical Tragedy) Premiered at Bonn (1982) OCLC 41445178
  • Burgtheater. Posse mit Gesang (Burgtheater. Farce with Songs) Premiered at Bonn (1985)
  • Begierde und Fahrererlaubnis (eine Pornographie) (Desire and Permission To Drive - Pornography) Premiered at the Styrian Autumn, Graz (1986)
  • Krankheit oder Moderne Frauen. Wie ein Stück (Illness or Modern Women. Like a Play) Premiered at Bonn, (1987) ISBN 9783922009887
  • Präsident Abendwind. Ein Dramolett, sehr frei nach Johann Nestroy (President Abendwind. A dramolet, very freely after Johann Nestroy) Premiered at the Tyrol Landestheater, Innsbruck (1992)
  • Wolken. Heim (Clouds. Home) Premiered at Bonn (1988) ISBN 9783882431476
  • Totenauberg. Premiered at the Vienna Burgtheater (Akademietheater) (1992) ISBN 9783498033262
  • Rastätte oder Sie machens alle. Eine Komödie (Service Area or They're All Doing It. A Comedy) Premiered at the Burgtheater, Vienna (1994)
  • Stecken, Stab und Stangl. Eine Handarbeit (Rod, Staff, and Crook - Handmade) Premiered at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg (1996)
  • Ein Sportstück (A Sport Play) Premiered at the Burgtheater, Vienna (1998)
  • er nicht als er (zu, mit Robert Walser) (him not himself - about/with Robert Walser) Premiered at the Salzburg Festival in conjunction with the Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg (1998)
  • Das Lebewohl (Les Adieux) Premiered at the Berliner Ensemble (2000)
  • Das Schweigen" ("Silence") Premiered at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg (2000)
  • Der Tod und das Mädchen II (Death and the Maiden II) Premiered at EXPOL 2000 in Hanover in conjunction with the Saarbrücken Staatstheater and ZKM Karlsruhe (2000) ISBN 9783442761623
  • MACHT NICHTS - Eine Kleine Trilogie des Todes ("NO PROBLEM - A Little Trilogy of Death") Premiered at the Zürich Schauspielhaus (2001) ISBN 9783499226830
  • In den Alpen ("In the Alps") Premiered at the Munich Kammerspiele in conjunction with the Zürich Schauspielhaus (2002) Berlin: Berlin Verlag. (2002) 259 pages. ISBN 9783827004574
  • Prinzessinnendramen: Der Tod und das Mädchen I-III und IV-V (Dramas of Princesses: Death and the Maiden I-III and IV-V) Parts I-III premiered at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg (2002) Parts IV-V premiered at the Deutsches Theater, Berlin (2002)
  • Das Werk. (The Works) Premiered at the Vienna Burgtheater (Akademietheater) (2003)
  • Bambiland Premiered at the Burgtheater, Vienna (2003) ISBN 9783498032258
  • Irm und Margit A part of "Attabambi Pornoland" Premiered at the Zürich Schauspielhaus (2004)
  • Ulrike Maria Stuart Premiered at Thalia Theater Hamburg (2006)
  • Über Tiere 2006
  • Rechnitz (Der Würgeengel) 2008
  • Die Kontrakte des Kaufmanns. Eine Wirtschaftskomödie (2009)

Translations

Opera libretto

  • Lost Highway (2003), adapted from the film by David Lynch, with music by Olga Neuwirth

Jelinek's novels in English

References

  1. ^ "Wife of incest dad under suspicion". The Australian, May 5, 2008.
  2. ^ "Member's abrupt resignation rocks Nobel Prize community". Boston Globe, October 12, 2005.

See also

External links



 
 

 

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Elfriede Jelinek biography from Who2.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Elfriede Jelinek" Read more