Radovan Brenkus

Last updated

Radovan Brenkus
Radovan Brenkus.jpg
Slovak writer, translator and critic
Born(1974-01-30)30 January 1974
Bardejov, Slovakia
Notable worksHell Returns

Radovan Brenkus (born 30 January 1974, Bardejov) is a Slovak writer, translator and critic.

Contents

Biography

The author finished the study at Science faculty of P. J. Šafárik University, in mathematics and physics. He worked as a teacher in Košice, later as a specialist worker at the Institute of Experimental Physics of Slovak Academy of Sciences. He publishes in journals at home and abroad. Slovak Radio broadcast a lot of his works, which have been published in international anthologies. He translates works from Polish and occasionally undertakes literary criticism, writing a critical studies and essays. The author works in publishing house Pectus in Košice, which was founded in 2006. [1]

Creation

Brenkus is a continuator of literary modernism. In the field of poetry, he observes, analyses and decrypts the chaotic tired world, denounces the prevailing moral circumstances, the differences in its perception from without and within. The inspiratory sources are destructive emptiness, nothingness, limiting pseudo-being. By a symbology of pessimism and decadence, he shows the loneliness of the individual, his more worsening condition and uncertain future. [2]

The motive of his prose is a search for the meaning of existence, awareness of transience, death. Among other things, Brenkus writes in neo-romantic style, as well as criticizes existentialism and the civilization progress which forces a human to find his own survival instinct. Surrealistic characters in author's stories are torn between the ideal and the real, and disturb an accepted order. Through expressive and mystical symbolism, dramatic and grotesque scenes, Brenkus displays rebellion against elitism and decline of contemporary society. He provides a space for catharsis in the condensed and equally distinctive characteristics of the situations and characters. [3]

Works

Poetry

Prose

Translations

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Košice</span> City in Slovakia

Košice is the largest city in eastern Slovakia. It is situated on the river Hornád at the eastern reaches of the Slovak Ore Mountains, near the border with Hungary. With a population of approximately 230,000, Košice is the second-largest city in Slovakia, after the capital Bratislava.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rudolf Schuster</span> Slovak politician (born 1934)

Rudolf Schuster is a Slovak politician, who served as the second president of Slovakia from 1999 to 2004. He was elected on 29 May 1999 and inaugurated on 15 June. In the presidential elections of April 2004, in which he sought re-election, Schuster was defeated. He received only 7.4% of the vote, with three other candidates receiving more than that. He was succeeded by Ivan Gašparovič.

Slovak literature is the literature of Slovakia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Košice Region</span> Region of Slovakia

The Košice Region is one of the eight Slovak administrative regions. The region was first established in 1923 and its present borders were established in 1996. It consists of 11 districts (okresy) and 440 municipalities, 17 of which have a town status. About one third of the region's population lives in the agglomeration of Košice, which is its main economic and cultural centre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nové Mesto nad Váhom</span> Town in Trenčín Region, Slovakia

Nové Mesto nad Váhom is a town in the Trenčín Region of Slovakia.

Ján Kozák is a Slovak football coach and former player. He is the manager of Slovak 1st tier team FC Košice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alois Jirásek</span> Czech writer, author, and playwright

Alois Jirásek was a Czech writer, author of historical novels and plays. Jirásek was a high school history teacher in Litomyšl and later in Prague until his retirement in 1909. He wrote a series of historical novels imbued with faith in his nation and in progress toward freedom and justice. He was close to many important Czech personalities like Mikoláš Aleš, Josef Václav Sládek, Karel Václav Rais or Zdeněk Nejedlý. He attended an art club in Union Cafe with them. He worked as an editor in Zvon magazine and was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1918, 1919, 1921 and 1930.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juraj Červenák</span> Slovak fantasy writer

Juraj Červenák is a Slovak author. He was originally best known for his short stories and novels which mix elements of sword and sorcery with historical fantasy and Slavic mythology, but later achieved mainstream success with a series of novels in the historical mystery genre, featuring a pair of fictional late 16th/ early 17th century detectives, Joachim Stein and Matej Barbarič.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dušan Fabian</span>

Dušan "Duke" Fabian is a Slovak horror and dark fantasy writer. He has published his first novel Invocatio Elementalium in 2006, followed by a loose sequel Pestis Draconum in 2008, as well as several short stories. The awards he has received include Istron for best short story in 2006 and the 2006 European Science Fiction Society Encouragement Award.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Culture of Slovakia</span>

The culture of Slovakia is influenced by its Catholic culture, its various folk traditions, and its location in Central Europe. Slovakian culture shares certain similarities with the cultural traditions of its neighbouring countries: Poland, Ukraine, Hungary, Austria and Czech Republic.

Blažej Baláž is a Slovak contemporary artist. His practise as an artist is usually associated with political art, environmental, activist, mail-art and neo-conceptualism. After 1988 he began working with text as art, neo-conceptual and post-conceptual texts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stefan Janos (physicist)</span>

Stefan Janos is a Slovak-Swiss university physicist and professor, founder of very low temperature physics in Slovakia.

Szentpétery Ádám is a Hungarian artist in Slovakia and the Department Head/Professor of the Studio of Contemporary Image at the Faculty of Arts at the Technical University of Košice, Slovakia. He is known primarily for his abstract painting with strong geometrically organized canvases in a highly original manner with a very intense but at the same time refined colorism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boris Sekulić</span> Footballer (born 1991)

Boris Sekulić is a professional footballer who plays as a defender for Polish club Górnik Zabrze. Born in Serbia, he plays for the Slovakia national team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Bukata</span> Slovak footballer

Martin Bukata is a Slovak footballer who plays for Spartak Trnava as a midfielder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jozef Heriban</span>

Jozef Heriban is a Slovak writer, scenarist and film director. He devotes his time to literature and film. He is the former President of the Slovak PEN Centre, a Vice-President of the Board of the Slovak Audiovisual Fund and a member of the Slovak Film and Television Academy. He was married to well-known television talk show host and former Director of the Slovak Institute in Vienna Alena Heribanová and has two daughters, writer and journalist Tamara Šimončíková Heribanová and marketing and PR manager Barbara Jagušák.

Ivan Čičmanec is a Slovak writer, poet, essayist and translator.

Klemen Pisk is a Slovenian poet, writer, translator and musician.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Radoslav Rochallyi</span> Slovak philosopher, artist, writer and poet (born 1980)

Radoslav Rochallyi, Bardejov, Czechoslovakia is a Slovak writer, artist, and poet living in Malta, and the Czech Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Štefan Butkovič</span> Slovak historian and museologist

Dr. Štefan Butkovič, CSc. was a Slovak historian and museologist. He was the founder and first director of the Slovak Technical Museum in Košice. He considered communication of scientific and technological progress to the general public one of the key missions of his professional life.

References

  1. Slovak Writers' Dictionary of the 20th Century (in Slovak) (2nd ed.). Bratislava: The Centre for Information on Literature. 2008. ISBN   978-80-89222-48-3.
  2. Mikulášek, Alexej. "Modernism redivivus?". Obrys-Kmen (in Czech). 2003 (18). Praha: Union of the Czech Writers. ISSN   1210-1494.
  3. Mikulášek, Alexej. "Brenkusiada ex inferno or "Somebody else is in the same situation"". Dotyky (in Slovak). 2006 (3–4). Bratislava: Slovak Writers' Society. ISSN   1210-2210.