Vahur Afanasjev | |
Birth Name: | Vahur Laanoja |
Pseudonym: | Vahur Afanasjev DJ Jumal (DJ God) Vahur [€] Afanasjev |
Birth Date: | 24 August 1979 |
Birth Place: | Tartu, Estonia |
Movement: | Tartu Young Authors' Association |
Vahur Afanasjev (born Vahur Laanoja; 24 August 1979 – 10 May 2021) was an Estonian novelist, poet, musician and film director best known for his novel Serafima and Bogdan a story following the lives in a village of Russian Orthodox Old Believers on the shore of the lake Peipus from the end of the World War II to the nineties. The novel won the 2017 Estonian Writers' Union's Novel Competition.[1]
Afanasjev graduated from the University of Tartu in 2002, majoring in economic policy. He was a member of a literary group called Tartu Young Authors' Association since 1998, and a member of the Estonian Writers' Union since 2006.[2] He worked as a journalist, media analyst, copywriter, creative director, and PR officer.
From 2005 to 2010, Afanasjev lived in Brussels, Belgium. He summed up his life as a euro official in the European Economic and Social Committee in his 2011 travelogue My Brussels.[3]
He was awarded the Baltic Assembly Prize for Literature in 2021. He died unexpectedly on 10 May 2021.[4]
Afanasjev's last completed works were published posthumously, these include the collection of poems Tuulevaiksed aastad (2021) and a novel Rail Baltic ehk kelmitants vanaisa sarvedega (2022).[5]
Afanasjev began his writing career with poems and lyrics in 1995. In 1997–98, he published three poetry collections on the internet. His first poems were published in the Estonian literary magazine Vikerkaar in 1998. He published poetry books, short stories, and novels. His works have been published in several collections of various authors in English, Finnish, Russian, Romanian, Dutch, and Hungarian.[6]
Poetry:
Novels:
Other Prose
Non-fiction:
Honorary Citizen of Peipsiääre parish, with a badge of honor.[8]
His style was described as socially critical magic realism flavoured with obscurities. His characters included parasite worms, murderers, corrupted journalists, robots, and lonely gay men. "...2008 saw the publication of his short novel Cosmos. This is a peculiar tale that could be characterised as Brokeback Mountain meets Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas."[9]
In addition to his writing, Afanasjev made electronic music (project tra_art), punk-like electric guitar rock, blues and country (project Kurluk Ulica), and experimental noisepop (project Kannibal Elektor).
A CD of tra_art was published with Vahur Afanasjev's book Kanepi Kirik (2002). Two of his recordings were on a CD of singing writers.[10]
He also wrote lyrics for Orelipoiss, Skriimsilm, and Päris Anny.
Afanasjev made experimental short films since 2006, and used photos and Microsoft PowerPoint in film production. In June 2008, he presented his autobiographical documentary film Where Dreams End and was threatened with a court case concerning it. The film had its official premiere at the Eclectica festival.[11] In April 2009, Afanasjev finished production of a documentary film called Rong Way about the complicated train travel between Estonia and Western Europe.[12]