Natalka Sniadanko Explained

Natalka Sniadanko
Native Name Lang:uk
Native Name:Наталка Володимирівна Сняданко
Birth Date:20 May 1973
Alma Mater:University of Lviv
University of Freiburg
Birth Place:Lviv, Ukraine
Nationality:Ukrainian

Natalka Volodymyrivna Sniadanko (Ukrainian Наталка Володимирівна Сняданко) is a Ukrainian writer, journalist, and translator. She won the Joseph Conrad Korzeniowski Literary Prize in 2011.[1] [2]

Biography

Natalka Sniadanko was born in Lviv, Ukraine, where she currently resides and has lived for most of her life. Sniadanko studied Ukrainian language and literature at the University of Lviv and Slavonic and Renaissance Studies at the University of Freiburg.[3] She co-created an all-female literary group called ММЮННА ТУГА together with Marianna Kiyanovska, Mariana Savka and others.[4]

Her debut novel, Collection of Passions (Колекція пристрастей), was published in 2001. She has written seven novels. Her novel Frau Müller Does Not Wish to Pay More was nominated for BBC Ukraine's Book of the Year. Sniadanko's works have been translated into eleven languages, including English, Spanish, German, Polish, Hungarian, Czech, and Russian.

She translates novels and theater plays from German and Polish into Ukrainian.[5] [6] Sniadanko has translated the works of writers including Franz Kafka, Max Goldt, Gunter Grass, Zbigniew Herbert, Czesław Miłosz.

As a journalist, her work has appeared in Süddeutsche Zeitung and in translation in The New York Times, The Guardian, The New Republic, and The Brooklyn Rail.[7] [8] In The New Republic, Sniadanko wrote about the start of the Euromaidan at Maidan.[9]

Sniadanko appeared in the television documentary Mythos Galizien – Die Suche nach der ukrainischen Identität.[10] In June 2020, Natalka Sniadanko was included in the long list of Central European literary awards "Angelus" for the book Frau Müller Does not Wish To Pay More.[11]

Notable works

References

  1. Web site: NATALKA SNIADANKO Editions. 2021-02-26. TAULT. en-US.
  2. News: KOTSAREV. Oleh. 27 December 2011. For innovative forms and breaking the stereotypes. The Day (Kyiv). 28 February 2021.
  3. Web site: Natalka Sniadanko — internationales literaturfestival berlin. 2021-02-26. www.literaturfestival.com.
  4. Web site: Savka Maryana . 2022-02-26 . PEN Ukraine . en-US.
  5. Web site: Natalka Sniadanko. 2021-02-26. Center for the Art of Translation Two Lines Press. en-US.
  6. Web site: Snyadanko Natalka. 2021-03-01. PEN Ukraine. en-US.
  7. Web site: The Passion Collection, or The Adventures and Misadventures of a Young Ukrainian Lady InTranslation. 2021-02-26. intranslation.brooklynrail.org.
  8. Web site: 2015-08-04. Lit As Last Bastion: Natalka Sniadanko On Suppression, Solidarity & Language In Ukraine. 2021-03-01. Electric Literature. en-US.
  9. Sniadanko. Natalka. 2014-03-07. I Have Seen Bravery, and Death, in Ukraine. The New Republic. 2021-03-01. 0028-6583.
  10. Web site: Natalka Sniadanko. 2021-03-01. IMDb.
  11. Web site: Zaxid.net . Львівська письменниця Наталка Сняданко потрапила до лонг-листа премії Angelus . 2022-05-15 . ZAXID.NET . uk.