The Prague Post - Milan Kundera: the unbearable lightness of decluttering

EUR -
AED 4.265159
AFN 76.639662
ALL 96.681745
AMD 442.700018
ANG 2.078632
AOA 1064.831173
ARS 1691.318867
AUD 1.770409
AWG 2.093083
AZN 1.96581
BAM 1.956459
BBD 2.339458
BDT 141.935382
BGN 1.957152
BHD 0.437774
BIF 3442.991454
BMD 1.161211
BND 1.507595
BOB 8.026636
BRL 6.191696
BSD 1.161576
BTN 104.502863
BWP 15.523097
BYN 3.371978
BYR 22759.741147
BZD 2.336047
CAD 1.62389
CDF 2572.082951
CHF 0.933457
CLF 0.02735
CLP 1072.912521
CNY 8.210345
CNH 8.206942
COP 4428.139882
CRC 571.982884
CUC 1.161211
CUP 30.772099
CVE 110.808624
CZK 24.143322
DJF 206.370767
DKK 7.468638
DOP 73.446289
DZD 151.315078
EGP 55.165548
ERN 17.418169
ETB 179.400306
FJD 2.636177
FKP 0.877902
GBP 0.879606
GEL 3.129468
GGP 0.877902
GHS 13.206336
GIP 0.877902
GMD 84.768308
GNF 10092.487689
GTQ 8.897998
GYD 243.009792
HKD 9.039275
HNL 30.602312
HRK 7.53766
HTG 152.001218
HUF 380.755954
IDR 19299.621826
ILS 3.777705
IMP 0.877902
INR 104.409209
IQD 1521.612724
IRR 48916.025116
ISK 148.600153
JEP 0.877902
JMD 186.092706
JOD 0.823277
JPY 181.060122
KES 150.202754
KGS 101.547907
KHR 4650.526998
KMF 492.353259
KPW 1045.06684
KRW 1705.680251
KWD 0.356457
KYD 0.968018
KZT 588.898293
LAK 25202.275151
LBP 104016.253671
LKR 358.704691
LRD 205.595737
LSL 19.892203
LTL 3.428755
LVL 0.702405
LYD 6.329133
MAD 10.747922
MDL 19.728478
MGA 5196.706335
MKD 61.650774
MMK 2438.845241
MNT 4129.590122
MOP 9.315319
MRU 46.226577
MUR 53.578233
MVR 17.894208
MWK 2014.161349
MXN 21.245603
MYR 4.798703
MZN 74.163689
NAD 19.892203
NGN 1680.644098
NIO 42.743667
NOK 11.781638
NPR 167.203461
NZD 2.026279
OMR 0.446481
PAB 1.161581
PEN 3.917553
PGK 4.924659
PHP 68.122486
PKR 328.133417
PLN 4.236203
PYG 8055.714462
QAR 4.245431
RON 5.089706
RSD 117.407749
RUB 89.991212
RWF 1690.054928
SAR 4.35897
SBD 9.549596
SCR 17.127075
SDG 698.53144
SEK 10.963414
SGD 1.50648
SHP 0.871209
SLE 26.649753
SLL 24350.017838
SOS 662.611862
SRD 44.754824
STD 24034.729082
STN 24.507942
SVC 10.163512
SYP 12839.498649
SZL 19.88853
THB 37.217399
TJS 10.726822
TMT 4.064239
TND 3.422953
TOP 2.795918
TRY 49.263693
TTD 7.874518
TWD 36.470741
TZS 2861.823796
UAH 49.122275
UGX 4152.363426
USD 1.161211
UYU 45.625767
UZS 13817.656012
VES 286.808933
VND 30626.947589
VUV 142.073249
WST 3.251776
XAF 656.172454
XAG 0.019947
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.138232
XCG 2.093369
XDR 0.816029
XOF 656.183759
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.774685
ZAR 19.887438
ZMK 10452.296017
ZMW 26.686763
ZWL 373.909559
  • RBGPF

    1.2200

    79

    +1.54%

  • NGG

    -0.0900

    75.56

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    0.8960

    48.086

    +1.86%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    39.68

    -0.1%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    13.83

    +0.22%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    57.88

    -0.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.2

    -0.39%

  • CMSC

    0.0020

    23.322

    +0.01%

  • BP

    -0.2150

    36.295

    -0.59%

  • RIO

    -0.1600

    71.81

    -0.22%

  • BCC

    -0.4950

    74.635

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.73

    -0.36%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    90.46

    -0.07%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    16.32

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    0.2150

    12.345

    +1.74%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    23.15

    -1.47%

Milan Kundera: the unbearable lightness of decluttering
Milan Kundera: the unbearable lightness of decluttering / Photo: Radek Mica - AFP

Milan Kundera: the unbearable lightness of decluttering

Milan Kundera has had a bit of a clear-out after his wife had a dream.

Text size:

The author of "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" has gone full Marie Kondo, emptying the shelves of his Paris apartment of 3,000 of his own books.

The legendary Czech novelist has given his massive collection of author copies in scores of languages to a new library in his home town of Brno.

The epic decluttering was inspired by the writer's wife Vera Kunderova, who said the late American author Philip Roth came to her in a dream and whispered the idea into her ear.

"The decision was clear. There was no doubt," Kunderova told Czech radio. "There was no choosing."

"I prepared the whole thing and Tomas Kubicek (from Brno's Moravian Library) simply... boxed up all the books and took them away," she added.

Although she did have her doubts when movers left. "Sadness came when the shelves were empty so I put out some chestnuts and other small things I used to buy at the Picasso Museum (in Paris).

"I couldn't stand the emptiness so I started to put silly things on the shelves."

The new Milan Kundera library opened in Brno last week on Kundera's 94th birthday. Fittingly for a literary joker, he was born on April 1.

- A kind of homecoming -

"Milan was born in Brno, this is a symbolic act, he's returning to Brno," his wife said.

Kundera left communist Czechoslovakia for France in 1975, having falling out of favour with the authorities after the Prague Spring reform movement was crushed by Soviet-led armies in 1968.

The ageing novelist -- who rarely speaks in public -- has had an often complicated relationship with his homeland.

His wife, a literary agent, said the new library will help bridge that gap. "He may depart, but he will live on in Brno. People will go and meet him. The house where he was born is 10 minutes from the library."

"It will serve above all students and researchers, but also anyone who wants to reflect on Kundera's work," Kubicek, head of the Moravian Library, told AFP.

The new library houses Kundera's drawings, newspaper articles on his work, but also the 17th-century original of an essay by the French philosopher Montaigne, signed by the author and bound in calf skin, which Kundera received as a prize.

"There's so much material and we can't display everything. He received an awful lot of prizes and they are also a part of the library. We'd need a hall for that," said Kubicek.

The library will also organise lectures and expert debates with the help of an advisory team that includes French playwright Yasmina Reza and Frankfurt Book Fair head Juergen Boos.

Kundera's critics say he turned his back on fellow Czechs and dissidents following his exile in France. He only regained his Czech nationality in 2019.

In 2008, a Czech magazine accused him of being a police informer under communist rule, which he denied as "pure lies".

Kundera stopped books he wrote in French from being translated into his native language.

But Kubicek said that Kundera's supposed rift with his homeland was "a big Czech myth".

"When people in France speak critically about Kundera, they are talking about his novels, while here all the criticism is down to balcony gossip," he said.

"People here don't talk about his texts or ideas. It would be nice if the library changed that."

R.Rous--TPP