Daniela Hodrová

Czech writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCzech writer
A.K.A.Daniela Hodrova
A.K.A.Daniela Hodrova
PlacesCzech Republic
wasWriter Critic Literary critic Literary theorist Translator Historian Literary historian Scholar Literary scholar
Work fieldAcademia Literature Social science
Gender
Female
Birth5 July 1946, Prague, Duchy of Bohemia, Czech Republic
Death30 August 2024 (aged 78 years)
Star signCancer
Education
Charles UniversityPrague, Duchy of Bohemia, Czech Republic
Awards
Franz Kafka Prize2012
Czech State Award for Literature2011
"Magnesia Litera" award for the best book of the year2016
The details

Biography

Daniela Hodrová (5 July 1946 - 30 August 2024) was a Czech writer and literary scholar.

Biography

Hodrová was born in Prague on 5 July 1946. She did postgraduate studies in French and comparative literature. In 1972–75, she worked as an editor of Slavonic literature in the Odeon publishing house. Since 1975, she worked at the Institute of Czech Literature of the Academy of Sciences (prior to 1993 known as the Institute of Czech and World Literature of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences), where she is now a Senior Researcher.

Her novels typically incorporate topics from her work as a literary scholar, "especially the classification of novels into roman-realité and the roman-invention, or the pioneering theory about the meaning and forms of the initiation storyline in a work of literature." She is perhaps best known for a trilogy called Trýznivé město (City of Torment), they are distinctive "Prague novels, which aim to convey emblematically the genius loci of this central European city, of whose history Hodrová highlights the tragic features."

Some of her works have been translated into English, such as Prague, I See a City... (translated by David Short, 2011) and the trilogy City of Torment (translated by Véronique Firkusny and Elena Sokol, 2021), both published by Jantar Publishing.

Bibliography

  • Podobojí (1991). A Kingdom of Souls, trans. Véronique Firkusny and Elena Sokol (Jantar Publishing, 2015) or later as In Both Kinds (in City of Torment)
  • Kukly (1991). Puppets
  • Théta (1991)
  • Město vidím... (1992). Prague, I See a City..., trans. David Short (Jantar Publishing, 2011)
  • Perunův den (1994)
  • Ztracené děti (1997)
  • Trýznivé město (1999). City of Torment, trans. Véronique Firkusny and Elena Sokol (Jantar Publishing, 2021). Compiles Podobojí, Kukly and Théta.
  • Komedie (2003)
  • Vyvolávání (2010)
  • Točité věty (2015)
  • Ta blízkost (2019)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 01 Sep 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.