Margarita Karapanou Explained

Margarita Karapanou
Birth Date:1946 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Athens, Greece
Death Place:Athens, Greece
Occupation:novelist
Nationality:Greek
Period:1976 - 2008

Margarita Karapanou (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Μαργαρίτα Καραπάνου; 19 July 1946 – 2 December 2008) was a Greek novelist, most known for her first novel, Kassandra and the Wolf.[1] [2] Her novels have been translated into many languages.[3] [4]

Life and career

Margarita Karapanou was born in Athens, Greece, the daughter of novelist and dramatist Margarita Liberaki and Giorgos Karapanos, a lawyer and poet. Her parents divorced and her mother moved to Paris shortly after she was born. Karapanou grew up in both Athens, with her maternal grandmother, and with her mother in Paris.[5] [6] She studied philosophy and cinema in Paris, and nursery school teaching through distance education in London. In Paris, she was friends with Marie-France Ionesco, the daughter of Eugène Ionesco.

Karapanou worked as a nursery school teacher and also at a private kindergarten.[7] She struggled with bipolar disorder throughout her life.

Kassandra and the Wolf was translated into English by Nikos C. Germanacos and published by Harcourt Brace in 1976 before it was published in Greece.[8]

Her own translation into French of her 1985 novel The Sleepwalker won the Prix du Meilleur livre étranger in 1988.

Her diaries, Η ζωή είναι αγρίως απίθανη: Ημερολόγια 1959-1979 (Life Is Wildly Improbable: Diaries 1959-1979), were published in November 2008, shortly before she died of respiratory problems on 2 December 2008.

Works

Novels

Other

In anthologies

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Comparison of modern Turkish and modern Greek Literature with psychoanalytic approaches: Mother – daughter relationship and the maternal image in Sevim Burak and Margarita Karapanou's works. İstanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi. 2012. Thesis. en. Angeliki. Melliou.
  2. Web site: Dyck. Karen Van. 2019-07-16. Three Sisters, Three Summers in the Greek Countryside. 2020-08-04. The Paris Review. en.
  3. http://www.greece2001.gr/writers/MargaritaKarapanou.html Μαργαρίτα Καραπάνου - Έκθεση βιβλίου της Φραγκφούρτης 2001 - Ελλάδα τιμώμενη χώρα
  4. Web site: Margarita Karapanou. Clockroot Books. 27 June 2015.
  5. Web site: THE CRITICAL FLAME :: George Fragopoulos on Margarita Karapanou. 2020-08-05. criticalflame.org.
  6. Iakovidou. Sophie. 2018-05-10. The Author as Reader: the case of Margarita Karapanou. Modern Greek Studies (Australia and New Zealand). en. 18. 1039-2831.
  7. Book: Wilson. Katharina M.. Women Writers of Great Britain and Europe: An Encyclopedia. Schlueter. Paul. Schlueter. June. 2013-12-16. Routledge. 978-1-135-61677-9. en.
  8. Plum. Hilary. Dimitrakaki. Angela. Emmerich. Karen. Germanacos. Nick. Michalopoulou. Amanda. Van Dyck. Karen. 2011. "I run with the future ahead of me and the cops behind me": A roundtable on Margarita Karapanou. en. 23. 10.7916/D8J38RTX.