Sylvie Richterová
Appearance
Sylvie Richterová (born 20 August 1945) is a Czech educator and writer living in Italy.[1]
She was born in Brno and was educated as an interpreter at Charles University in Prague. In 1971, she moved to Italy, where she lectured in Czech and was a researcher at the Institute of Slavonic Philology. She went on to lecture on Czech language and literature in Padua and Viterbo.[1]
Her first book Návraty a jiné ztráty (Returns and other losses), a collection of short stories, was written in Italy and was published by 68 Publishers[2] in 1978. It was published in French as Retours et autres pertes in 1992.[1]
Richterová has also translated works by Czech writers into Italian.[3]
Awards
[edit]- Místopis (Topography), short stories (1981)
- Slova a ticho (Words and silence), essays (1986)
- Ticho a smích (Silence and laughter), essays (1997)
- Čas věčnost [Time Eternity], poems (2003)
- Místo domova [In Place of Home], essays (2004)
- "Každá věc ať dospěje na své místo" (– The Second Life of Jan Lazar),novel (2014)
- "Eseje o české literatuře" (Essays on Czech literature,) 2016
- "Tajné ohně" (Secret fires) poems (2020)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Sylvie Richterová". Czech literature portal.
- ^ "Sylvie Richterova : Je verrai toujours le monde comme l'espace où l'on peut se mouvoir". Radio Prague. March 3, 2007.(in French)
- ^ a b Segel, Harold B (2003). The Columbia Guide to the Literatures of Eastern Europe Since 1945. Columbia University Press. p. 466. ISBN 0231114044.
- ^ "Prague Daily Monitor: Richterova will receive Tom Stoppard Prize for her Essays on Czech Literature, a collection of her texts from the past 40 years". Archived from the original on 2018-07-29. Retrieved 2017-10-14.
Categories:
- 1945 births
- Living people
- Czech women writers
- Czech poets
- Czech educators
- Czech women educators
- Czech translators
- Czech women short story writers
- Czech short story writers
- Czech women poets
- Czech women essayists
- Czech essayists
- Writers from Brno
- Czechoslovak emigrants to Italy
- Charles University alumni
- Czech writer stubs