Dževad Karahasan
Dževad Karahasan | |
---|---|
Born |
Duvno, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia | 25 January 1953
Occupation | Novelist |
Language | Bosnian, German |
Ethnicity | Bosniak |
Citizenship | Germany |
Alma mater | |
Period | Postmodernism |
Genre | Novels |
Notable awards |
Prix européen de l'essai Charles Veillon (1994) Herder Prize (1994) Bruno Kreisky Prize for Political Books (1995) Leipzig Book Prize for European Relations (2004) Vilenica Prize (2010) Goethe Medal (2012) |
Dževad Karahasan (born 25 January 1953) is a Bosnian writer and philosopher. Karahasan was awarded with Herder Prize and Goethe Medal for his writings.
Early life
Karahasan was born in Duvno to a Bosniak family. He described his father as "religious communist" and mother as a devoted Muslim. He himself often spent time with Franciscan monks in the local monastery.[1]
Education
He studied literature and theatre at the university of Sarajevo. He received his Ph.D. from the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Zagreb.[2]
Life
In 1993 Karahasan fled the war in Sarajevo, a city that plays a central role in his work. From 1986 to 1993, Karahaan was a lecturer in drama and drama theory and the dean of the Academy for Performing Arts at the University of Sarajevo, since 1993 he has been a guest lecturer at various European universities, including Salzburg, Berlin and Göttingen.
Works
Theatre
Since 1993 Karahasan works as a dramatist for ARBOS – Company for Music and Theatre. His plays have been performed in Austria (Vienna, Krems, Hallein, Eisenstadt, Salzburg, Villach, Klagenfurt), Germany (Gera, Erfurt, Berlin, Leipzig), Bosnia-Herzegovina (Sarajevo), Ukraine (Odessa), Czech Republic (Prague, Hradec Králové, Brno), Kosovo (Pristina), Poland (Szczecin), Singapore (Singapore Arts Festival) and USA (Washington DC).
Literature and essays
In addition to his dramas and novel Karahasan published numerous essays in various European newspapers.
Awards
He has been honored for his work with the Prix européen de l'essai Charles Veillon (Charles Veillon European Essay Prize) and the Herder Prize in 1994. The "Bruno Kreisky Prize for Political Books" he got in 1995.[3] At the Leipzig Book Fair in 2004 he was awarded with the Leipzig Book Prize for European Relations. 2010 he got the Vilenica Prize of the Slovene Writers Association.[4]
Publications
Novels and Essays
- "The Eastern Divan", 1993 ISBN 3-85129-084-4
- "Exodus from a City," 1993 ISBN 1-56836-057-6
- "About the exile in the open society" 1994
- "King's legends," 1996 ISBN 3-910161-73-1
- "Citizen Handke, Serbs people" in "The anxiety of the poet from reality," 1996 ISBN 3-88243-412-0
- "Should 'Faust' be saved?" in "Freedom.Equality.Fraternity." Bregenzer Festspiele 1996
- "The Rink of Shahrijar" 1997 ISBN 3-87134-239-4
- "Forms of life" (about theatre together with Herbert Gantschacher) 1999 ISN: 3852660416
- "The questions to the calendar" 1999 ISBN 3-85266-118-8
- "Sara and Serafina" 2000 ISBN 3-87134-409-5
- "The book of Gardens" 2002
- "Poetics at the Border" (together with Markus Jaroschka) 2003 ISBN 3-85489-084-2
- "The Night Council" 2006 ISBN 3-458-17291-2
- "Reports from The Dark World" 2007 ISBN 978-3-458-17337-3
- "The Shadows of The Cities" 2010 ISBN 978-3-458-17451-6
Theatre
- "The Wheel of St. Catherine," National Theatre Sarajevo 1990
- "Al-Mukaffa|Abdullah Ibn al-Muqaffa" Theatre Akzent Vienna by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 1994[5]
- "The Song of Fools of Europe" Literary installation of a libretto, together with Herbert Gantschacher, Künstlerhaus Salzburg by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 1994
- "Povuceni Andjeo" Danube Festival in Krems by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 1995
- "The Concert of Birds" Künstlerhaus Salzburg by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 1997 ISBN 3-85266-037-8
- "The Atlas of Feelings" Frankfurt/Oder 1999
- "Woyzeck" adopted from the fragment of Georg Büchner, National Theatre Sarajevo 1999
- "Babylon or The Trip of The Beautiful Jutte" European Cultural Centre Erfurt by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 1999
- "The Strangers" ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre Vienna 2001
- "UROBOS: Project Time" together with Herbert Gantschacher, Singapore Arts Festival by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theater 2001
- "Snow and death" (adopted by Herbert Gantschacher) ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2002
- "On the edge of the desert" neuebuehnevillach by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2003
- "An old Oriental Fable" ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2004
- "The Death of Empedocles" adopted from the fragment of Friedrich Hölderlin together with Herbert Gantschacher, ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2005
- "The One and The Other" ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2005
- "Banquet" neuebuehnevillach by ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2005 ISSN 1012-4705
- "The Maps of The Shadows" ARBOS - Companpy for Music and Theatre 2009
- "Principle Gabriel" ARBOS - Company for Music and Theatre 2014[6]
Radiodrama
- "AL-Mukaffa" ORF Vienna 1994
- "The Delighted Angel" ORF Vienna 1995
Audio CDs
- "Al-Mukaffa" ARBOS 1996
- "The Singing of The Fools of Europe" ORF ARBOS 1998
- "UROBOS : Project Time" Singapore Arts Festival 2001
- "Banquet" Tonstudio Weikert ARBOS 2006
References
- ↑ Bach, Aya; Rose, Jasmina (28 August 2012). "Goetheova medalja za bosanskog graditelja mostova". Deutsche Welle (in Croatian). Retrieved 29 August 2012.
- ↑ Writing Europe: what is European about the literatures of Europe? : essays ... By Ursula Keller, Ilma Rakuša p. 184
- ↑ http://www.renner-institut.at/kreisky/kreisky.htm
- ↑ http://www.vilenica.si/press/Almanac_vilenica_2010-web.pdf
- ↑ http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6594211520061942081# Interview with Karahasan
- ↑ http://www.kleinezeitung.at/nachrichten/kultur/3607324/theater-zum-fuehlen-begreifen.story
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