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  1. Kundera considered himself a writer without a message. In Sixty-three Words, a chapter in The Art of the Novel , Kundera tells of a Scandinavian publisher who hesitated to publish The Farewell Party because of its apparent anti-abortion message.

  2. Apr 3, 2019 · Kundera’s first novel, The Joke, seems to grow out of the short-story collection Laughable Loves. They have in common the central device of a “joke”—that is, an intended and performed hoax, a prank—that misfires and, like a boomerang, hurts the perpetrator rather than the intended victim. For example, in one of the stories in ...

  3. Jul 13, 2023 · He saw himself as a writer whose craft did not revolve around delivering a specific message, but rather sought to explore the depths of human experience and emotion.

  4. May 22, 2015 · From his own writings, it seems that Kundera would not consider himself to be part of that tradition of “truly great” writers towards which Banville was implicitly gesturing.

  5. Milan Kundera (born April 1, 1929, Brno, Czechoslovakia [now in Czech Republic]—died July 11, 2023, Paris, France) was a Czech novelist, short-story writer, playwright, essayist, and poet whose works combine erotic comedy with political criticism and philosophical speculation.

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  6. While the words revealing his thoughts about the characters and about human existence may indeed coincide with Kundera's own thoughts, once Kundera has chosen to write himself into the book, he...

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  8. Mar 17, 2007 · by Milan Kundera. 256pp, Faber, £12.99. In A Passage to India, EM Forster writes: "Most of life is so dull that there is nothing to be said about it, and the books and talk that would describe it ...

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