Mystification as an Artistic Strategy in Milan Kundera's Work |
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Authors: | Jan ?ulík |
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Institution: | 1. School of Modern Languages and Cultures, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UKJan.Culik@glasgow.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTUsing close reading of Kundera's texts, Jan ?ulík argues that many arguments in Milan Kundera's literary works are deliberate provocations. Kundera's approach is undoubtedly related to post-modernism, although he used his mystification techniques long before the arrival of postmodernism, as early as in the Stalinist 1950s when he published fake quotes from Lenin in official Stalinist publications. In Jan ?ulík's view, it is the purpose of Milan Kundera's systematic use of false facts, distortions and disrupted logic to warn his readers against against the unreliability of words and human communication. Kundera seems to argue that the world in its complexity is basically unknowable and the only thing that is left for us is, in despair, in our ignorace of what is going on around us, to carry out pranks. |
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Keywords: | Milan Kundera Czech literature Czech-French author Milan Kundera 20th century Czech fiction postmodernism communism Czechoslovakia East-Central Europe |
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