Ilma Rakusa Explained

Ilma Rakusa
Birth Date:2 January 1946
Birth Place:Rimavská Sobota, Slovakia
Nationality:Swiss
Genre:Prose, poetry
Notable Works:Mehr Meer (2009)
Awards:
Years Active:1971–present

Ilma Rakusa (born 2 January 1946) is a Swiss writer and translator. She translates French, Russian, Serbo-Croatian and Hungarian into German.

Biography

Ilma Rakusa was born in 1946 in Rimavská Sobota, Slovakia to a Slovenian father and a Hungarian mother. She spent her early childhood in Budapest, Ljubljana and Trieste. In 1951, her family moved to Zürich, Switzerland.[1] Ilma Rakusa attended the Volksschule and the Gymnasium in Zürich. After the Matura, she studied Slavic and Romance Languages and Literature in Zürich, Paris and Leningrad between 1965 and 1971.[2]

In 1971, she was awarded a doctorate for her thesis titled Studien zum Motiv der Einsamkeit in der russischen Literatur, about themes of loneliness in Russian literature. From 1971 to 1977, she was a Wissenschaftlicher Assistent at the Slavic Seminar at the University of Zurich (UZH). From 1977 to 2006, she worked at UZH as a .[2] [3]

In 1977, Rakusa authored her first book, a collection of poems titled Wie Winter. She has since published numerous collections of poems, collected short stories and essays. Rakusa works as a translator from French, Russian, Serbo-Croatian and Hungarian into German.[1] She has translated works by authors including the French novelist Marguerite Duras, the Russian writer Aleksey Remizov, the Hungarian author Imre Kertész, the Russian poet Marina Tsvetaeva and the Serbo-Croatian Danilo Kiš.[4] Rakusa also works as a journalist (Neue Zürcher Zeitung and Die Zeit).[1] Rakusa's novel Mehr Meer (2009) has been translated into many languages and received the Swiss Book Prize in 2009.[4]

Rakusa has been a member of the Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung since 1996[1] and the jury of the .[2] In 2010/2011, she was a fellow at the Berlin Institute for Advanced Study.[1]

Today, Ilma Rakusa lives as a freelance writer in Zürich.[2]

Awards and honors

Bibliography

As editor

Translations into German

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 18 October 2016 . Ilma Rakusa . 6 October 2020 . www.geisteswissenschaften.fu-berlin.de . de.
  2. Web site: Ilma Rakusa . 6 October 2020 . www.heidelberg.de.
  3. Web site: Ilma Rakusa . www.ilmarakusa.info . de .
  4. News: Breidecker . Volker . 30 December 2015 . Die Fahrende. Ilma Rakusa, die große Europäerin der Literatur, wird 70. . de . 14 . . 300.
  5. Web site: Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding . City of Leipzig . 9 December 2016.
  6. Web site: 12 November 2015 . Ilma Rakusa erhält Manès-Sperber-Preis . 3 October 2020 . . de-AT.
  7. News: 9 May 2019. Kleist-Preis für Schweizer Schriftstellerin Ilma Rakusa. Die Welt. de. 3 October 2020.
  8. News: 3 December 2009 . Zuglärm und Orgelklang. . 2 . . 49 . 6 October 2020 . de.