Dževad Karahasan

Dževad Karahasan
Born (1953-01-25) 25 January 1953
Duvno, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
Occupation Novelist
Language Bosnian, German
Ethnicity Bosniak
Citizenship Germany
Alma mater

University of Sarajevo

University of Zagreb

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

Theatre

Radiodrama

Audio CDs

References

  1. Bach, Aya; Rose, Jasmina (28 August 2012). "Goetheova medalja za bosanskog graditelja mostova". Deutsche Welle (in Croatian). Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  2. Writing Europe: what is European about the literatures of Europe? : essays ... By Ursula Keller, Ilma Rakuša p. 184
  3. http://www.renner-institut.at/kreisky/kreisky.htm
  4. http://www.vilenica.si/press/Almanac_vilenica_2010-web.pdf
  5. http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6594211520061942081# Interview with Karahasan
  6. http://www.kleinezeitung.at/nachrichten/kultur/3607324/theater-zum-fuehlen-begreifen.story
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