Czech writer and former dissident Milan Kundera dies in Paris aged 94

12 July 2023, 11:04

Milan Kundera
France Obit Kundera. Picture: PA

His novel The Unbearable Lightness Of Being won him critical acclaim and earned him a wide readership among Westerners.

Milan Kundera, whose dissident writings in communist Czechoslovakia transformed him into an exiled satirist of totalitarianism, has died in Paris at the age of 94, Czech media said on Wednesday.

Kundera’s renowned novel, The Unbearable Lightness Of Being, opens with Soviet tanks rolling through Prague, the Czech capital that was the author’s home until he moved to France in 1975.

Weaving together themes of love and exile, politics and the deeply personal, Kundera’s novel won critical acclaim, earning him a wide readership among Westerners who embraced both his anti-Soviet subversion and the eroticism threaded through many of his works.

“If someone had told me as a boy, one day you will see your nation vanish from the world, I would have considered it nonsense, something I couldn’t possibly imagine.

“A man knows he is mortal, but he takes it for granted that his nation possesses a kind of eternal life,” he told author Philip Roth in a New York Times interview in 1980, the year before he became a naturalised French citizen.

France Obit Kundera
Czech-born writer Milan Kundera, pictured in 1963, became a naturalised French citizen in 1981 (Nesvadba Frantisek/CTK/AP)

In 1989, the Velvet Revolution pushed the Communists from power and Kundera’s nation was reborn as the Czech Republic, but by then he had made a new life – and a complete identity – in his attic apartment on Paris’s Left Bank.

To say his relationship with the land of his birth was complex would be an understatement.

He returned to the Czech Republic rarely and incognito, even after the fall of the Iron Curtain.

His final works, written in French, were never translated into Czech.

The Unbearable Lightness Of Being, which won him such acclaim and was made into a film in 1988, was not published in the Czech Republic until 2006, 17 years after the Velvet Revolution, although it had been available in Czech since 1985 when a compatriot founded a publishing house in exile in Canada.

The novel topped the best-seller list for weeks and, the following year, Kundera won the State Award for Literature for it.

Kundera’s wife, Vera, was an essential companion to a reclusive man who eschewed technology – his translator, his social secretary, and ultimately his buffer against the outside world.

It was she who fostered his friendship with Roth by serving as their linguistic go-between, and – according to a 1985 profile of the couple – it was she who took his calls and handled the inevitable demands on a world-famous author.

France Obit Kundera
Milan Kundera’s writings were banned in Czechoslovakia after the Soviet invasion of Prague in 1968 (Pavel Vacha/CTK/AP)

The writings of Kundera, whose first novel, The Joke, opens with a young man who is dispatched to the mines after making light of communist slogans, were banned in Czechoslovakia after the Soviet invasion of Prague in 1968, when he also lost his job as a professor of cinema.

He had been writing novels and plays since 1953.

The Unbearable Lightness of Being follows a dissident surgeon from Prague to exile in Geneva, Switzerland, and back home again.

For his refusal to bend to the Communist regime, the surgeon, Tomas, is forced to become a window washer, and uses his new profession to arrange sex with hundreds of female clients.

Tomas ultimately lives out his final days in the countryside with his wife, Tereza, their lives becoming both more dreamlike and more tangible as the days pass.

Jiri Srstka, Kundera’s Czech literary agent at the time the book was finally published in the Czech Republic, said the author himself delayed its release there for fears it would be badly edited.

“Kundera had to read the entire book again, rewrite sections, make additions and edit the entire text. So, given his perfectionism, this was a long-term job, but now readers will get the book that Milan Kundera thinks should exist,” he told Radio Praha at the time.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Joe Biden

Gaza protesters target White House dinner but Biden focuses on Trump

Tornado damage

Residents sift through rubble after tornadoes demolish homes

Cambodia Explosion

Munitions explosion at Cambodian army base kills 20 soldiers

TRIDENT MISSILE  First flight test of the D-5 LE subsystem in a Trident launched from the USS Tennessee on 22 February 2012.

UK to deploy high-tech hypersonic missile to catch up with Russia and China by 2030

Rapist movie mogul Harvey Weinstein has been taken to hospital in New York - days after his rape conviction in the state was overturned.

Rapist Harvey Weinstein rushed to hospital from prison after New York conviction quashed

Sexual Misconduct Harvey Weinstein

Harvey Weinstein taken to hospital following his return to New York from jail

Yemen Israel Palestinians US

Yemen’s Houthi rebels claim downing of US Reaper drone

TikTok star Om Fahad has been shot dead outside her home in an apparent assassination.

TikTok star Om Fahad shot dead outside home in apparent assassination

Peter Smith

Pictured: British victim of shark attack who is fighting for his life after being mauled in the Caribbean

Russia Shooting

Russia arrests another suspect in concert hall attack that killed 144

Netherlands King’s Day

Revellers dress in orange to celebrate Dutch king’s birthday

Israel Palestinians Campus Protests

US student anti-war protesters vow to continue demonstrations

Severe Weather Midwest

Tornadoes flatten homes in Nebraska and leave trails of damage in Iowa

Israel Palestinians Hamas Interview

Hamas reviewing Israeli ceasefire proposal as possible Rafah offensive looms

Russia Ukraine War

Russia renews attacks on Ukrainian energy sector as Kyiv launches more drones

APTOPIX US China Blinken

Blinken ends latest trip to China with visit to Beijing record store