Zuzka Zguriška Explained

Zuzka Zguriška
Birth Date:13 April 1900
Birth Place:Myjava, Austria-Hungary (now Slovakia)
Nationality:Slovak
Death Place:Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic)
Occupation:novelist, playwright, translator, actress
Genre:novel - fiction

Zuzka Zguriška (13 April 1900 – 24 September 1984), born as Ľudmila Šimonovičová, married Dvořáková, was a Slovak novelist, play-writer and translator, and occasional actress.[1] Zguriška is a belated representative of classical Slovak Realism.[2]

Biography

She was born in a family of teachers and education acquired within Myjave, Modra, one year passed in Himmelkrone (Bavaria), later studied at the teachers' college in Hungarian Hódmezővásárhelyi from there to cross at a teacher training college in Serbian Subotica, finally she graduated in 1920 at the Institute of Education teachers in Brno. From 1920-24, she worked as a teacher at Myjave, she married and moved to Bratislava, where she lived until 1945. During World War II, he graduated from the Philosophical Faculty of Comenius University, Department of Philosophy and Art History. In 1945, she moved with her husband in Prague. In the years 1949-1951, worked at the Barrandov Studios as a film scriptwriter, then devoted to literature. In 1960, she was awarded the title deserved artist.

Creation

Her first work published in 1922 in the Slovak daily and gradually began to contribute to other magazines and newspapers (Workers Newspaper, Živena, Elan, Slovak Perspectives et al.). Also he cooperated with the Czechoslovak Radio, which regularly has published her work, pay and the theater, but for health reasons refused a permanent contract, although it has had great success as an actress (she performed in Slovak National Theatre). In his literary works he tried to introduce distinctive world Myjava Kopanice, which was administered from the humorous page. In short literary forms he caught a lot of pages characteristic of life in his native land, painted a lot of interesting characters, and also used a lot of humorous events. When writing based on their own knowledge and experiences.

Works

Further reading

References

  1. http://www.litcentrum.sk/39892 Litcentrum
  2. A History of Central European Women's Writing, edited by Celia Hawkesworth, Palgrave Macmilian, 2001, pp. 287.